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Charlotte Mason Curriculum

Charlotte Mason

was Simply Brilliant

Charlotte Mason was a brilliant woman, and her methods of teaching writing surpass those of today. Today the Common Core is the latest approach being pushed upon teachers, students, and parents. With all of the education, training, and modern technology that exists today, this modern approach of teaching writing does not equal the methods used by Charlotte Mason.
Over 100 years ago, a single woman, a teacher of children and other educators, Charlotte Mason established a method of teaching children that didn’t frustrate the children, that didn’t overwhelm them, and didn’t underestimate them.Even though Ms. Mason didn’t have the modern advantages that today’s leaders in education have, she managed to teach children, meeting them at their level while simultaneously challenging them to excellence.It didn’t involve computers, and it didn’t involve a committee of individuals voting on a random set of skills. Ms. Mason’s focus was simple. She allowed children to deal with real world ideas, presented in an age appropriate manner.

 

The Charlotte Mason Method

 

Ms. Mason’s approach to education involves more than a curriculum. Her method of teaching children involved a few guiding principles.

  • Close up observation and study of God’s creation to the benefit of the mind, body, and soul
  • Ideas over facts
  • Quality over quantity
  • Habit training for both parents and children
  • Meeting children where they are
  • Challenging children to excellence
  • Letting children engage directly with information as soon as they are ready
  • Words, words, words

Implementing the Charlotte Mason Method

Because the Charlotte Mason method is more of an approach,  focused on ideas rather than facts, it can be difficult for today’s homeschoolers to blend modern curricula with Charlotte Mason’s methods. This difficulty is especially evident in elementary and middle school.

 

For example, most modern curricula designed for elementary students ask them to write sentences about imaginary events or about their experiences. While these programs can be helpful, they don’t allow students to identify the areas in which they need to grow. Why?

WITH MODERN WRITING PROGRAMS,
CHILDREN’S WEAKNESSES OFTEN OVERSHADOW THEIR STRENGTHS!

  • Some children have more difficulty with spelling.
  • Some children have more difficulty with grammar.
  • Some children have more difficulty with recalling information.
  • Some children may have difficulty with the physical act of writing.

 

Focusing on Reading, Writing, and ‘Rithmetic

 

Remember the old saying–reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic? During the elementary years, the skills of learning the 3 R’s should be the primary focus of a child’s education.

While modern government schools are centering their students’ education on test taking, a Charlotte Mason approach focuses on allowing children to master the skills of learning before forcing them to deal with facts. And because the approach allows them to deal with real world ideas, children learn to grapple with these ideas in an age appropriate manner, teaching them to reason and think while they develop the academic skills they need for high learning.

Why is Teaching Writing So Hard?

One of the most difficult challenges that educators face is teaching students to write.  The reason is that the study of writing involves multiple steps that children are expected to grasp simultaneously–at least with curricula based on modern techniques.

Math is automatically broken down into topics–addition, subtraction, multiplication, etc. Reading is also broken down into natural topics segments–vowels, consonants, syllables, phonics, etc. Writing, on the other hand, involves a sequence of steps that many modern educators fail to realize.

 

The Writing Steps that
Modern Educators Have Forgotten

Learning to write is a multi-step process for everyone. Learning to write involves:

  • Having ideas to write about
  • Knowing how to convey those ideas in words
  • Knowing how to physically form the letters that make up the words that convey the ideas
  • Knowing how to properly punctuate those ideas so that others read what you meant

To successfully teach children how to master the above steps, Ms. Mason developed a 3 step process to teach writing.


Step 1: Narration
–having ideas to write about and knowing how to convey those ideas in words

The fundamental principle upon which the Charlotte Mason method of instruction is built upon is narration. Narration is the act of retelling. Children learn to write by retelling narratives that they read in history, science, and literature, preferably from reading selections which are thought provoking, enlightening, and engaging.

Step 2: Copywork–learning how to physically form the letters that make up the words that convey the ideas

Ms. Mason taught children to write via copywork. Her primary objective was to teach the children proper penmanship. But over the years, the benefits of copywork have proven to be far greater than simply handwriting exercises. By engaging in copywork, children digest the style of more seasoned, talented writers, and by doing so, they learn to create complex sentences.

Step 3: Dictation–knowing how to properly punctuate those ideas so that others read what you meant

A primary component of the Charlotte Mason Method of instruction is studied dictation. Studied dictation is different from traditional dictation because students actually study the models before they write them from dictation. This process has many benefits for younger students.

  • It teaches them to identify words they don’t know how to spell.
  • It teaches them to learn how to self-edit. Over time they will begin to know their weaknesses and work on ameliorating them before they write.
  • It teaches them to actively study punctuation as part of the writing process rather than as a separate topic.

The Writing Through History series encourages and demonstrates studied dictation. Students needing more practice may use their copywork models for studied dictation. For more advanced students, a separate selection of dictation models are included in the appendix.

A Charlotte Mason Writing Curriculum

Writing from History

Step 1: Narration–having ideas to write about and knowing how to convey those ideas in words

Because children are going to absorb what they are exposed to, the Writing Through History series exposes children to some of the best literature from ancient, medieval, early modern, and modern history. Because children learn what they read and what they read helps shape who they will become, the Write from History series includes educational, engaging, uplifting, and inspirational selections from history.

Step 2: Copywork–learning how to physically form the letters that make up the words that convey the ideas

The copywork models in the Writing Through History series, which are true font models that teach proper penmanship, were selected because they demonstrate sentence structure and style. Children study and imitate some of the best authors from history.

Step 3: Dictation–knowing how to properly punctuate your ideas so that others read what you meant

The Writing Through History series provides children with models to be used for studied dictation. With studied dictation children learn how to convey ideas and how to properly punctuate their writing.

 

With the Write from History Series

Teach Writing, History, Handwriting, and Grammar

 

The Writing Through History series is a writing curriculum organized around the four year history cycle. The program comes in two levels. Level 1 is flexibly designed for children in grades 1 through 3, and level 2 is flexibly designed for students in grades 4 through 6.

This series teaches writing via oral and written narrations, copywork, and studied dictation. By using historical narratives, children are given interesting and important stories to narrate. By way of copywork, these same students learn to put words on paper, mechanically and stylistically. And via studied dictation, students learn to identify their weaknesses, self-edit, and properly punctuate their writing.