Reading in Home Education Volume I continues. It is of great help to me and I think would be of great help to any new parent, not just one who would homeschool or homeschool using Charlotte Mason’s method.

Okra in the garden.
The Short Summary of Home Education Volume – I, published on the Ambleside website, from Charlotte Mason in Modern English says this:
Charlotte discusses the use of training in good habits to replace undesirable tendencies in children. Automatic habits remove many stressful decisions from the child, making life easier and smoother since a child with good habbits will be well-behaved. In adulthood, the properly trained habits that were acquired in childhood will prevent pitfalls that many people fall into.

It’s a work day, but I steal away into the garden for a few minutes.
I wish I’d read Charlotte Mason’s works when my first child was a baby. My own beliefs mesh with hers in theory because I feel that we should look daily to whether or not, and how, God’s Word is fitting into our lives, but reading Charlotte Mason’s Home Education is helping me work things practically into our lives when it comes to daily training and home education, to help form good habits and take our lives seriously.

Picking green beans yesterday.
Do you want an example of how this has spoken to me?
My children are getting older. I have a 21-year-old living at home. He has been working and is about to attend a local college. We probably set into him the majority of what we could set into him as far as a belief system and right-wrong when he was under the age of 5 or 6, but I don’t think it’s ever too late to work on habits. He’s legally a grown man, of course, but I still have a voice and he still has ears.
He tends to be messy with his papers — mail, receipts, so I am trying to help him form better habits with that.

John and Michaela act silly while snapping beans.
I have an 18-year-old who is finishing up the last bit of his homeschool work and basically has graduated from our homeschool. He’s a good fellow, but he likes to stay up too late.
My 15-year-old son and my 11-year-old daughter are still forming habits as they go through adolescence. What is it about adolescents that makes them want to stay up late? They fall right in with their older brother and they would all stay up too late.
If I say, “Don’t stay up too late,” and make it, “because I said so,” it goes over like sandpaper. But if I remind them that they can be of no help to their family or to their community if they stay up too late and sleep the morning away, then it puts emphasis on this: I am, I can, I ought, I will. It puts an emphasis on duty. With gentle reminders, I can see it working.

Still being silly, but the beans got snapped.
Charlotte Mason wrote that there was a Code of Education in the Gospels, “expressly laid down by Christ.” She said to pay attention to three commandments given regarding “these little ones.”
- Offend not
- Despise not
- Hinder not
When I first read it, I thought it might be a point we would disagree on, but I read on. She noted that these verses can be taken beyond being applied to an adult who has become like a little one and applied to raising these souls sent to us to raise, remembering their duty to live with the knowledge that they will return to God.
She said, “…we offend them, when we do by them that which we ought not to have done; we despise them, when we leave undone those things which, for their sakes, we ought to have done.”
She talks about how mothers instinctively remove literal objects from the way of a toddler learning to walk. Why, then, would we let our “no’s” to a child be weak and something to be toyed with in regards to bigger things — things regarding character? If a mother laughs at wrongs, if she teaches her child that he can tease her “no” into a “yes,” and that he can get away with doing what started out as unacceptable, then he has learned that he can do wrong and get away with it. She has then offended, or placed a stumblingblock in his way.
I’ll close with one more quote:
…who has not met big girls and boys, the children of right-minded parents, who yet do not know what must means, who are not moved by ought, whose hearts feel no stir at the solemn name of Duty, who know no higher rule of life than ‘I want,’ and ‘I don’t want,’ ‘I like,’ and ‘I don’t like’? Heaven help parents and children when it has come to that!
I hope I have sounded “harpy” this morning. Just wanted to share these Charlotte Mason thoughts and quotes that are really helping me to help my children in their educational process.
Happy Friday!
Lynn