Method Archives - Ambleside International https://amblesideschools.org/tag/method/ Tue, 26 Nov 2024 21:44:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://amblesideschools.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-Skylark-RGB-32x32.png Method Archives - Ambleside International https://amblesideschools.org/tag/method/ 32 32 213948178 Ambleside Method FAQs https://amblesideschools.org/ambleside-method-faqs/ Fri, 12 Jan 2024 18:18:55 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1922 The Charlotte Mason-inspired Ambleside Method is unique and countercultural. We are not like even other Christian schools. The Ambleside vision is to renew Christian education across the globe with our Holy Spirit-infused model of education.

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Ambleside Method FAQs

The Charlotte Mason-inspired Ambleside Method is unique and countercultural. We are not like even other Christian schools. The Ambleside vision is to renew Christian education across the globe with our Holy Spirit-infused model of education. Please take a look at the questions below and the answers we provide about how we differ, and why. We hope they give you food for thought as you make profound educational decisions for your children. And if you have additional questions that you would like us to answer, feel free to reach out any time!

Why does your mission statement call for the renewal of Christian education, rather than just for the renewal of education in general?

By the renewal of Christian education, the intention is to revive an authentic Christian philosophy of education with the pedagogical practice informed by the philosophy. It is not just the teaching of another worldview; it is the teaching itself which is founded/established upon the worldview. Every educational system has an underlying philosophy informing its pedagogy. The models of education we have grown up under are largely products of the Enlightenment.

 

One thinks of Locke, for whom knowledge was the sensible apprehension of data which one mastered. The human mind was considered a blank slate. The process of education consisted of data and technique being transcribed on to the blank slate, beginning with the young child through adulthood. Another Enlightenment thinker, Rousseau, believed human persons have innately within them all they need, and the role of education consisted of self-expression and self-discovery. These philosophies are the foundations of the two primary systems of behaviorism and constructivism that underlie education today.

 

In their experience as K-12 students and in their university training, the great majority of Christian educators have been educated according to behaviorist and constructivist principles. These secular principles have informed their philosophy and pedagogy, their individual practice on to which Bible class, prayer, and the entire syllabi are simply added.

 

Every philosophy of education involves both an anthropology (an understanding of the nature of persons, including student and teacher) and an epistemology (an understanding of the nature of knowledge and its acquisition). The pedagogical practice in most Christian schools is based upon a secular anthropology and epistemology. While there may be uniquely Christian content (Bible class, chapel, etc.) and faithful Christian teachers, still the fundamental pedagogical practice remains the same as the secular school down the street.

 

Distinctly different from either behaviorist or constructivist pedagogies. Charlotte Mason based her pedagogy on the conviction that all True, Good, and Beautiful Ideas are but expressions of the Eternal Logos. Therefore, all coming to know Truth is a coming to know something of the work of God. The preeminent teacher in an Ambleside classroom is the Holy Spirit.

 

Every worthy idea, whether in grammar or history, poetry or science, reveals some aspect of our Creator. Therefore, it is the well-chosen text that is the focal point in an Ambleside classroom, be it a classic book, a math algorithm, a work of art, a science diagram, or a musical composition. The teacher’s role is to direct the student’s attention to the mind of the author, artist, composer, algorithm, and so on.

 

Given this power of mind, it is essential that every student independently perform the act of knowing. Nothing can be truly learned by teacher activity alone. The primacy is with the student, who must perform the act of knowing. The teacher is not to be a lecturer. It is not her responsibility to write on the alleged “blank slate” of a student’s mind.   Rather, the teacher must be the facilitator of a mind-to-mind meeting between students and ideas presented in a well-chosen text.

How does an Ambleside education differ from other models of education such as the classical, Christian education?

The term classical is claimed by schools as unique and diverse as the numerous Christian denominations. Perhaps the primary point of unity is that in most classical schools, fundamental learning objectives are divided according to three proposed stages of learning; the grammar, logic, and rhetoric stages. These proposed stages define the kinds of learning to be expected and are alleged to build upon one another.

 

Ambleside insists that every grade incorporates all three of these aspects of learning and that students in kindergarten and first grades can grasp not only facts but also a broad array of ideas and compose their own cogent responses to them. At Ambleside, children of all ages are seen as having a great capacity. What distinguishes the young from the old is not capacity but experience and needed background.

 

Classical schooling often begins with the quantifying of student skills and abilities. Some will only accept students of “above average” ability, at age five! When students of “normal” or “below average” ability are accepted, children are assessed and grouped into ability levels. What does a five-year-old begin to believe about herself when she is placed in the lowest reading group and continues year after year, without the expectation of real growth and without the kind of support that transforms weakness to strength?

 

An Ambleside education begins with the conviction that Children are Persons1, that every child defies our capacity for measurement. Other school models would not argue with this foundational truth at face value, but in the application of this principle they veer in the wrong direction. At Ambleside, teachers are keenly aware of each student’s strengths and weaknesses, but no child is ever defined or labeled by his or her weaknesses. Students are not grouped according to ability, for Ambleside recognizes that optimal growth for all occurs when the strong and weak face life together.

 

In most classical schools, one finds the same competitive grind that is present in traditional public and private schooling. Students strive to win awards, get the highest grades, be the best, and outperform their peers, and they tend to live in a high-anxiety, competitive atmosphere, rather than in a high-joy, life-giving atmosphere. Some play to win the competition. Others refuse to play the game.

 

Ambleside considers this competitive structuring of school life to be very counterproductive. The brain works 30% better when it’s running on joy rather than anxiety. Students at Ambleside are not complacent but possess a fervency that is born of the joy and delight of learning and growing together.

 

Christian classical schools have as central to their mission the formation of the minds and hearts of students. But beyond the use of inspirational classical texts in the older grades and the use of classroom management techniques to order student behavior, most classical schools have little understanding of dynamics of human formation.

 

At Ambleside, there is a very clear, applied philosophy of human transformation. The tools of atmosphere (culture), discipline (the intentional training in habit), and living ideas (the intrinsic relations of persons and things) form a mutually reinforcing triad of human transformation.

 

1 See blog on Children as Persons.

How do you evaluate your students without grades or competition?

In most schools, assessments take the form of assigning a grade to some form of work.  The validity of this kind of assessment is very questionable. Often what is being assessed is the ability to take the test or complete the assignment, not knowledge. Then, there’s reporting; if a parent gets a document that says A, A, B, B, A, A, the parent really does not know what this means. What do students know? What do they not know? How are they growing? How are they not growing? The traditional report card does not answer these questions. More problematic still is the fact that what a community values becomes the focus. If getting the grade is the value, students undervalue the learning itself.

 

Ambleside believes that a teacher gains real knowledge of her students’ growth in learning by attending to every bit of work a student does, both orally and in writing. Students’ knowledge and understanding is continually assessed in every class. Teachers frequently call upon every student, ensuring active participation by all. Records are kept of student responses, both oral and written. Because class sizes are limited to sixteen, teachers know their students intimately. They know their capacities, where they are strong and where they are weak. Ambleside focuses on accountability for growth, giving consistent feedback, in a small class size, which allows for relationships with one another and the subjects studied.

 

Students use copybooks in many subjects, including Bible, composition, history, grammar, literature, mathematics, science, transcription, etc. These can be referenced at any time for accuracy, neatness, and thoroughness. Rather than filling out worksheets with true and false, matching, or multiple-choice questions, students tell what they know both in word and illustration.

 

This kind of global focus gives a much more accurate assessment than a percentage of correct answers on the weekly test for which they crammed. Twice a year, Ambleside parents receive a 12-14-page written report on their child detailing growth and need for further growth in both the varied content studied and relational maturity.

How does the role of a teacher in an Ambleside School differ from that role in other schools?

At Ambleside, teachers are given twelve to sixteen disciples for the year. The teacher’s primary responsibility is formation in the largest sense of the word. Formation includes the relationship with science, history, literature, and art, but it also includes much more. It includes the kind of person you’re being in relationship to self, others, and God. Teaching is both a ministry of discipleship and instruction in the formation of habits of skill and knowledge, equipping them for learning for a lifetime.

 

In many schools, teacher roles are departmentalized. An eighth-grade literature teacher might have a hundred or more students. This makes discipleship quite impossible. At Ambleside, elementary and junior high students have a primary teacher with whom they spend most of the school day. Ambleside high schools use a team approach to discipleship, with primary teachers meeting regularly to discuss how the growth of each high school student can best be facilitated. Limiting class size to sixteen makes this possible.

 

Most teachers, with all good intentions, find it difficult to support students who are weak or who lack understanding in a particular field of knowledge, because they have not been trained in the art of bringing up a student in academic work or behavior. This common teacher weakness is often not addressed in education classes or at schools in general.

 

Because of this lack of understanding, students are divided into groups according to ability, specifically in disciplinary subjects such as reading and mathematics, making it easier for both the teachers and the students. Under such conditions, students have reason to equate challenge with failure in a particular area of study. More often than not, the student never rises above the lifelong struggle in those subjects. They hardly ever overcome it. At Ambleside Schools, teachers are instructed to support weaknesses in students’ knowledge and abilities through practice which is purposeful.

Our college system is predicated on standardized entrance exams. Are your students prepared to take those exams?

Because they are so well educated, Ambleside students have tended to do exceptionally well on standardized tests. Just given the breadth of their studies and curriculum, their vocabularies and math skills tend to be far above the norm. The rigorous thought they have learned helps prepare students for varied aspects of learning. And because of Ambleside’s focus on “soft,” relational skills, Ambleside graduates tend to shine even more brightly in the interviews many colleges require.

 

In terms of practical preparation, Ambleside high schools offer after-school workshops to prepare for standardized tests. A teacher stays with students and helps with the practice and instructs in the varied kinds of testing. Ambleside recognizes that standardized tests are a hoop through which college-bound students must jump and prepares them to jump well.

Do you have a STEM focus at an Ambleside School?

We have a broader than “STEM” focus, one that builds on these topics and also includes the arts, literature, and music. One of Ambleside’s fundamental convictions is that a broad curriculum inclusive in science, mathematics, technology, and mastery of the humanities prepares one for all kinds of relationships in a wide curriculum.

How can the ideas of a 19th-century British educator be relevant today?

Charlotte Mason gave expression to truth, in much the same way that the 1st-century ideas of a man from Tarsus, or the 5th-century B.C. ideas of a man from Athens, or the 5th-century ideas of a Bishop from Northern Africa, might be relevant in the 21st century.  They are relevant because they give expression to truth, and truth is timeless and always relevant.

 

Charlotte Mason built a pedagogy on a philosophy of education shaped by a Christian anthropology, convictions regarding who the student is and who he/she is becoming. She also makes specific claims about the nature of knowledge and learning, claims that fit with a Christian epistemology (philosophy of knowledge).

 

Distinctly different from modern and post-modern philosophies of education, Charlotte Mason believed that all True, Good, and Beautiful Ideas are but expressions of the Eternal Logos. Therefore, all coming to know Truth is a coming to know something of the work of God. The preeminent teacher in an Ambleside classroom is the Holy Spirit.  Every worthy idea, whether in grammar or history, poetry or science, reveals some aspect of our Creator. Therefore, it is the well-chosen text that is the focal point in an Ambleside classroom, be it a classic book, a math algorithm, a work of art, a science diagram, or a musical composition. The teacher’s role is to direct the student’s attention to the mind of the author, artist, composer, algorithm, and so on.

 

Given this power of mind, it is essential that every student independently perform the act of knowing. Nothing can be truly learned by teacher activity alone. The primacy is with the active, not passive, student, who must perform the act of knowing. The teacher is not to be a lecturer. It is not her responsibility to write on the alleged “blank slate” of a student’s mind. Rather, the teacher must be the facilitator of a mind-to-mind meeting between students and ideas presented in a well-chosen text.

Do your schools have sports teams?

Ambleside promotes lifelong sports, the kinds of activities that don’t require a large team and one can do for most of one’s life. Some of our schools have track and field, swimming, golf, tennis, and cross-country skiing. We don’t have a football or baseball team, even though we are not opposed to these activities. Some of our schools field basketball teams at times, but it’s for the joy of the sport and for the physical conditioning that comes along with them. We don’t have high competition in terms of trying to beat everyone else. It’s for the joy and love of the sport and for the building of healthy bodies. We do have Ambleside Schools who have won state championships in golf, tennis, and cross country, but that’s not a goal.

Ambleside Schools International’s Mission Statement mentions the renewal of Christian education. What is your critique of Christian education, and what about it needs to be renewed?

After looking at dozens of different Christian schools, Ambleside’s founder, Maryellen St. Cyr, failed to find anything which could be described as a consistent educational philosophy and applied pedagogy. She saw a Christian understanding of God presented in Bible classes and chapel services, but the same pedagogical practices found in secular schools. All too often, children were not treated as persons but instead as products. Teachers were trying to get through in the best way they knew, but if the children displayed any weakness, they were rarely given the needed support. Instead, students were placed in the lowest reading group or taken to the lowest math class. Students rarely grew out of their weaknesses; rather, they were identified by them. Those who were strong stayed strong. Those who were weak, stayed weak.

 

There are many sincere and committed Christian teachers in private and public schools. One must not underestimate the power of such a teacher being the fragrance of Christ in any school. However, people do what they know, and most educators at Christian schools have been educated in a reductionistic system grounded in a secular anthropology and epistemology. In most cases, if one videotaped what was happening in the 4th grade Christian school classroom and then went down the street to the public-school class from the same socioeconomic grouping and videotaped that class, they would look largely the same. What was being done would be largely the same in both. While most Christian schools have in their mission statement a noble vision, there’s little thought on how that might actually be worked out in the classroom.

 

When Ambleside’s founder began to read Charlotte Mason, her eyes were opened to a whole new approach, one built on a philosophy and practice of education that is grounded in the truths that the child is a person and that we have been given three tools – atmosphere, discipline, and life – to educate the child.

What do you mean by the phrase a living education?

What Charlotte Mason meant by a living education is the conviction that our minds require nourishment in the same way our body does. Minds are not just products, but they’re dynamic, alive. A living education seeks to provide what a living mind needs to flourish. Charlotte Mason talks both about living books as a gateway to the mind and about living ideas in these living books, which furnish the mind with nutriment, real food for its growth and learning. There’s reciprocity in a living education; both teacher and students share in accessing the text in similar and diverse ways.

How would one distinguish one of these living books that Charlotte Mason referenced?

Living books are idea-rich, inspirational in language, thought, and picture.  They participate in the transmission of the True, Good, and Beautiful. They are formative in ways of thinking and being, facilitating a mind-to-mind engagement with the author. They are potent.

 

If a book is not living; it is twaddle, a thing void of inspirational ideas. If a story does not capture the mind such that one idea gives birth to another idea and then another and another, it is lifeless, possessing nothing that engages the heart or the mind of the reader. This is not to suggest that living books lack humor, suspense, sadness, and exhilarating plots. But there is so much more, and the author engages readers through artistry in the use of language and the elements of literature.

 

During Charlotte Mason’s life, children’s literature was not so common as today. Books were not as available. Parents and teachers read books to their children and students. They read books filled with living ideas, books like Robinson Crusoe. And the books spoke into the lives of readers. The children became accustomed to well-crafted language and inspirational ideas. Today, we underestimate the capacity of a young child to share in an author’s profound thoughts and to use an author’s language after listening to a story. Children used to be fed from the earliest years on a diet of living ideas. Today, too many only offer children twaddle.

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Equipping Students to Grapple with Tough Questions https://amblesideschools.org/equipping-students-to-grapple-with-tough-questions/ Fri, 05 Jan 2024 20:23:15 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1906 In considering their children’s education, parents often ask themselves “what kind of person do I want my child to be like when he or she turns 18?”

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Equipping Students to Grapple with Tough Questions

In considering their children’s education, parents often ask themselves “what kind of person do I want my child to be like when he or she turns 18?”

 

At Ambleside, we recognize that education is something much more than building a resume, gaining job skills, or becoming a “productive member of society,” however desirable these might be. Rather, the gift we give every child is that they might become the man or woman our Father in heaven intends.

 

I was privileged to witness firsthand what that looks like at a picnic at the Iwo Jima Memorial in Arlington, Virginia. That, by the way, is my favorite spot in the Washington DC area; from it, you can see the Monuments, the Capitol, Georgetown, and the National Cathedral, while lounging in the cool grass.

 

In a previous career, I served on Capitol Hill. One of the staples of Washington tourist life, often coinciding with the blooming of the Cherry Blossoms, is student tours to our nation’s capital. Every Congressional office hosted groups, showed them the Capitol building, explained how a bill becomes law, and answered questions from these leaders of the future.

 

Needless to say, the students did not always pay close attention. Some were simply uninterested. Many were glued to their phones. Others were cynical in their questions.

 

But the Ambleside Member School whose picnic I attended that day, Calvary Schools of Holland (Michigan), was completely different. After a nice meal – and an improvised, student-led game of capture the flag in which everyone willingly participated – the teachers gathered the students in a large circle to discuss their impressions of the Holocaust Museum they had toured that morning.

 

Each student shared his or her thoughts – not out of compulsion or begrudgingly but wrestling with the deepest questions of our time! We all recoiled when considering how the most advanced and sophisticated society of the time – the country that gave us Goethe and Schiller and Beethoven and Bach – could give itself over to the throes of mass hysteria and nihilism and seek to exterminate an entire race of people, not to mention the fact that that race is God’s chosen people?

 

These students seemed to grasp the enormity of that exercise. They were polite, respectful, articulate, sad … they shared ideas, emotions, feelings, theories.

 

One of the hallmarks of the Ambleside Method of education is the use of narration, whereby the student reads a text once and then “tells back” what he or she has read. The same applies to the observance of works of art and of nature; students are able to pull so much detail from a highly developed habit of attention through this method.

 

That, too, was readily apparent from the discussion. The Museum contained a number of works of art illustrating the devastation of the Holocaust. The careful observation by these students, conveyed respectfully and thoughtfully, with plenty of time to ponder, yielded a treasure trove of insights.

 

It was as if I was witnessing a graduate level seminar in moral philosophy, ethics, and logic; not in a self-absorbed, pretentious, or cynical way, but rather with open minds, seeking the leading of the Holy Spirit.

 

Most school groups skip the Holocaust Museum and instead opt for something a little lighter and more interactive, like the Spy Museum. Nothing wrong with that outlet, mind you, but the willingness to grapple with the most difficult questions of our time, under the leading of the Holy Spirit, is a touchstone of our model.

 

If fact, I would humbly posit that any Christian parent who saw what I did would send their children to an Ambleside school!

 

Ambleside is based on the philosophy of Charlotte Mason, a British educator who believed that education involves three primary aims:

 

1.      Cultivating the Knowledge of God

 

Of the three sorts of knowledge proper to a child, the knowledge of God, of man, and of the universe, — the knowledge of God ranks first in importance, is indispensable, and most happy-making.1

 

Let them grow up, too, with the shout of a King in their midst. There are, in this poor stuff we call human nature, founts of loyalty, worship, passionate devotion, glad service, which have, alas! to be unsealed in the earth-laden older heart, but only ask place to flow from the child’s. There is no safeguard and no joy like that of being under orders, being possessed, controlled, continually in the service of One whom it is gladness to obey.2

 

2.     Transforming Disposition to Character

 

The child brings with him into the world, not character, but disposition. He has tendencies which may need only to be strengthened, or, again, to be diverted or even repressed. His character — the efflorescence of the man wherein the fruit of his life is a-preparing — is original disposition, modified, directed, expanded by education; by circumstances; later, by self-control and self-culture; above all, by the supreme agency of the Holy Ghost, even where that agency is little suspected, and as little solicited.3

 

3.     Establishing Many Relations

 

We consider that education is the science of relations, or, more fully, that education considers what relations are proper to a human being, and in what ways these several relations can best be established; that a human being comes into the world with capacity for many relations; and that we, for our part, have two chief concerns––first, to put him in the way of forming these relations by presenting the right idea at the right time, and by forming the right habit upon the right idea; and, secondly, by not getting in the way and so preventing the establishment of the very relations we seek to form.4

 

They [children] come into the world with many relations waiting to be established; relations with places far and near, with the wide universe, with the past of history, with the social economics of the present, with the earth they live on and all its delightful progeny of beast and bird, plant and tree; with the sweet human affinities they entered into at birth; with their own country and other countries, and, above all, with that most sublime of human relationships––their relation to God.5

 

I started this piece by asking what we, parents, want for our children. In a way, though, we are also asking what we want for ourselves. Because, in the end, don’t we all want to be able to pay closer attention to the working of the Holy Spirit, to be able to hear and discern the Holy Spirit’s teaching, wisdom, and guidance in each part of our own lives as we seek to make sense of this life? Come, Holy Spirit, come.

 

Dean Peterson
Executive Director

1 Charlotte Mason, Philosophy of Education (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1989), 158.
2 Charlotte Mason, Parents and Children (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1989), 57.
3 Ibid., 23.
4 Charlotte Mason, School Education (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1989), 65-66.
5 Charlotte Mason, Philosophy of Education (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1989), 72-73.

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Video Series Part 11. Chapter Eight: Worthy Work https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-11-chapter-eight-worthy-work/ Fri, 03 Nov 2023 19:25:44 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1807 Worthy work is intrinsically satisfying. Students gain the satisfaction of knowing and of work well done. Well-intentioned adults may inadvertently contaminate the learning atmosphere by using artificial rewards and incentives, which demean the joy of knowing and diminish the student’s capacity for intrinsic motivation.

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Video Series Part 11. Chapter Eight: Worthy Work

Worthy work is intrinsically satisfying. Students gain the satisfaction of knowing and of work well done. Well-intentioned adults may inadvertently contaminate the learning atmosphere by using artificial rewards and incentives, which demean the joy of knowing and diminish the student’s capacity for intrinsic motivation. Artificial incentives communicate to students that it is impossible to enjoy history, mathematics, science, and literature in and of themselves; they indicate to the student that “real life” is to be found in the incentives, such as the “Fun Friday” or other rewards. Ambleside teachers foster students’ affections for worthy work and the satisfaction and joy of learning.

 

In Part 11 of our video and discussion guides, Bill St. Cyr distinguishes the importance of calling a child up to worthy work and the detriment of its opposite.

Here are some excerpts from the Charlotte Mason volume Towards a Philosophy of Education that give some insight to the idea of work.

 

The Way of the Will. We may offer to children two guides to moral and intellectual self-management which we may call ‘the Way of the Will’ and ‘the Way of the Reason.’

 

The Way of the Will: Children should be taught (a) to distinguish between ‘I want’ and ‘I will.’ (b) That the way to will effectively is to turn our thoughts away from that which we desire but do not will. (c) That the best way to turn our thoughts is to think of, or do some quite different thing, entertaining or interesting. (d) That after a little rest in this way, the will returns to its work with new vigour. (This adjunct of the will is familiar to us as diversion, whose office it is to ease us for a time from will effort that we may ‘will’ again with added power. The use of suggestion as an aid to the will is to be deprecated, as lending to stultify and stereotype character. It would seem that spontaneity is a condition of development, and that human nature needs the discipline of failure as well as of success.)

 

The great things of life, life itself, are not easy of definition. The Will, we are told, is ‘the sole practical faculty of man.’ But who is to define the Will? We are told again that ‘the Will is the man’; and yet most men go through life without a single definite act of willing. Habit, convention, the customs of the world have done so much for us that we get up, dress, breakfast, follow our morning’s occupations, our later relaxations, without an act of choice. For this much at any rate we know about the will. Its function is to choose, to decide, and there seems to be no doubt that the greater becomes the effort of decision the weaker grows the general will. Opinions are provided for us, we take our principles at second or third hand, our habits are suitable, and convenient, and what more is necessary for a decent and orderly life? But the one achievement possible and necessary for every man is character; and character is as finely wrought metal beaten into shape and beauty by the repeated and accustomed action of will. We who teach should make it clear to ourselves that our aim in education is less conduct than character; conduct may be arrived at, as we have seen, by indirect routes, but it is of value to the world only as it has its source in character.

 

Every assault upon the flesh and spirit of man is an attack however insidious upon his personality, his will; but a new Armageddon is upon us in so far as that the attack is no longer indirect but is aimed consciously and directly at the will, which is the man; and we shall escape becoming a nation of imbeciles only because there will always be persons of good will amongst us who will resist the general trend. The office of parents and teachers is to turn out such persons of good will; that they should deliberately weaken the moral fibre of their children by suggestion is a very grave offence and a thoughtful examination of the subject should act as a sufficient deterrent. For, let us consider. What we do with the will we describe as voluntary. What we do without the conscious action of will is involuntary. The will has only one mode of action, its function is to ‘choose,’ and with every choice we make we grow in force of character.1

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider:

 

  1. In modern classrooms, how does atmosphere get contaminated?
  2. What does Mason say about the difference between I want and I will?
  3. How do artificial rewards and incentives reinforce in students that which they desire rather than that which they will?
  4. Talk about the effect that artificial rewards and incentives can have on a student’s capacity for intrinsic motivation and the implications of that.
  5. How do these attacks on the students’ will affect their character?
  6. How do we as parents and educators turn out persons of good will?
  7. What are ways we can influence the children to choose well?

 

1 Charlotte Mason, Towards a Philosophy of Education, 128-129.

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Video Series Part 10. Chapter Seven: Cultivating Tastes https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-10-chapter-seven-cultivating-tastes/ Fri, 27 Oct 2023 18:34:06 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1800 In prior times, children grew up with a mind to work—it was breathed in by the atmosphere of the home. Many children and many duties required many hands. As society has changed, however, much of our work is accomplished outside of the home, and parents labor in workplaces unseen by their children. Taking this into account, it is important to be purposeful to train a child in a view toward work.

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Video Series Part 10. Chapter Seven: Cultivating Tastes

In prior times, children grew up with a mind to work—it was breathed in by the atmosphere of the home. Many children and many duties required many hands. As society has changed, however, much of our work is accomplished outside of the home, and parents labor in workplaces unseen by their children. Taking this into account, it is important to be purposeful to train a child in a view toward work. Charlotte Mason gives us several principles in training children to work well.

 

In Part 10 of our video and discussion guides, Charlotte Mason describes this idea of cultivating tastes as developing a penchant for ways to live a full and free life.

Time-table;Definite Work in a Given Time1–– In the first place, there is a time-table, written out fairly, so that the child knows what he has to do and how long each lesson is to last. This idea of definite work to be finished in a given time is valuable to the child, not only as training him in habits of order, but in diligence; he learns that one time is not ‘as good as another’; that there is no right time left for what is not done in its own time; and this knowledge alone does a great deal to secure the child’s attention to his work…. The sense that there is not much time for his sums or his reading, keeps the child’s wits on the alert and helps to fix his attention; he has time to learn just so much of any one subject as it is good for him to take in at once: and if the lessons be judiciously alternated––sums first, say, while the brain is quite fresh; then writing, or reading––some more or less mechanical exercise, by way of a rest; and so on, the program varying a little from day to day, but the same principle throughout––a ‘thinking’ lesson first, and a ‘painstaking’ lesson to follow,––the child gets through his morning lessons without any sign of weariness.

 

Training in Attention––It is evident that attention is no ‘faculty’ of the mind; indeed, it is very doubtful how far the various operations of the mind should be described as ‘faculties’ at all. Attention is hardly even an operation of the mind but is simply the act by which the whole mental force is applied to the subject in hand. This act of bringing the whole mind to bear, may be trained into a habit at the will of the parent or teacher, who attracts and holds the child’s attention by means of a sufficient motive.

 

Attractiveness of Knowledge––Of course, the most obvious means of quickening and holding the attention of children lies in the attractiveness of knowledge itself, and in the real appetite for knowledge with which they are endowed. But how successful faulty teachers are in curing children of any desire to know, is to be seen in many a school room.

 

Training in the WillBeing Self-Compelled2––As the child gets older, he is taught to bring his own will to bear; to make himself attend in spite of the most inviting suggestions from without. He should be taught to feel a certain triumph in compelling himself to fix his thoughts. Let him know what the real difficulty is, how it is the nature of his mind to be incessantly thinking, but how the thoughts, if left to themselves, will always run off from one thing to another, and that the struggle and the victory required of him is to fix his thoughts upon the task in hand. ‘You have done your duty,’ with a look of sympathy from his mother, is a reward for the child who has made this effort in the strength of his growing will. But it cannot be too much borne in mind that attention is, to a great extent, the product of the educated mind; that is, one can only attend in proportion as one has the intellectual power of developing the topic. It is impossible to overstate the importance of this habit of attention. It is, to quote words of weight, “within the reach of everyone, and should be made the primary object of all mental discipline”; for whatever the natural gifts of the child, it is only so far as the habit of attention is cultivated in him that he is able to make use of them.

 

A Reason for Weariness––If it were only as it saves wear and tear, a perpetual tussle between duty and inclination, it is worthwhile for the mother to lay herself out to secure that her child never does a lesson into which he does not put his heart. And that is no difficult undertaking; the thing is, to be on the watch from the beginning against the formation of the contrary habit of inattention. A great deal has been said lately about overpressure, and we have glanced at one or two of the causes whose effects go by this name. But truly, one of the most fertile causes of an overdone brain is a failure in the habit of attention. I suppose we are all ready to admit that it is not the things we do, but the things we fail to do, which fatigue us, with the sense of omission, with the worry of hurry in overtaking our tasks. And this is almost the only cause of failure in the work in the case of the healthy schoolboy or schoolgirl: wandering wits hinder a lesson from being fully taken in at the right moment; that lesson becomes a bugbear, continually wanted henceforth and never there; and the sense of loss tries the young scholar more than would the attentive reception of a dozen such lessons.

 

A Child should Execute Perfectly––No work should be given to a child that he cannot execute perfectly, and then perfection should be required from him as a matter of course. For instance, he is set to do a copy of strokes, and is allowed to show a slateful at all sorts of slopes and all sorts of intervals; his moral sense is vitiated, his eye is injured. Set him six strokes to copy; let him, not bring a slateful, but six perfect strokes, at regular distances and at regular slopes. If he produces a faulty pair, get him to point out the fault, and persevere until he has produced his task; if he does not do it to-day, let him go on to-morrow and the next day, and when the six perfect strokes appear, let it be an occasion of triumph. So with the little tasks of painting, drawing, or construction he sets himself––let everything he does be well done. An unsteady house of cards is a thing to be ashamed of. Closely connected with this habit of ‘perfect work’ is that of finishing whatever is taken in hand. The child should rarely be allowed to set his hand to a new undertaking until the last is finished. The Habit of turning out Imperfect Work. ––’Throw perfection into all you do’ is a counsel upon which a family may be brought up with great advantage. We English, as a nation, think too much of persons, and too little of things, work, execution. Our children are allowed to make their figures or their letters, their stitches, their dolls’ clothes, their small carpentry, anyhow, with the notion that they will do better by-and-by. Other nations––the Germans and the French, for instance––look at the question philosophically, and know that if children get the habit of turning out imperfect work, the men and women will undoubtedly keep that habit up. I remember being delighted with the work of a class of about forty children, of six and seven, in an elementary school at Heidelberg. They were doing a writing lesson, accompanied by a good deal of oral teaching from a master, who wrote each word on the blackboard. By-and-by the slates were shown, and I did not observe one faulty or irregular letter on the whole forty slates. The same principle of ‘perfection’ was to be discerned in a recent exhibition of schoolwork (held throughout France. No faulty work was shown, to be excused on the plea that it was the work of children.

 

Ye Are not Your Own3––But if children are brought up from the first with this magnet––’Ye are not your own’; the divine Author of your being has given you life, and a body finely adapted for His service; He gives you the work of preserving this body in health, nourishing it in strength, and training it in fitness for whatever special work He may give you to do in His world,––why, young people themselves would readily embrace a more Spartan regimen; they would desire to be available, and physical transgressions and excesses, however innocent they seem, would be self-condemned by the person who felt that he was trifling with a trust. It would be good work to keep to the front this idea of living under authority, training under authority, serving under authority, a discipline of life readily self-embraced by children, in whom the heroic impulse is always strong. We would not reduce the pleasures of childhood and youth by an iota; rather we would increase them, for the disciplined life has more power of fresh enjoyment than is given to the unrestrained. Neither is it lawful for parents to impose any unnecessary rigors upon their children; this was the error of the eighteenth century and of the early decades of our own age, when hunger, cold, and denial, which was by no means self-denial, were supposed wholesome for children. All we claim is that every young person shall be brought up under the sense of authority in the government, management, and training of his body. The sense that health is a duty, and that any trifling with health, whether vicious or careless, is really of the nature of suicide, springs from this view––that life is held in trust from a supreme Authority.

 

Question and Thoughts to Consider:

 

  1. Why is a set work for a set time an important principle to consider? What would have to change for you and your child to institute this principle in the home?
  2. Think for a moment of a time that you gave focused attention. What characterized this time?
  3. What does Mason say about attention which is contrary to modern thought on attention?
  4. Charlotte Mason instructs parents and teachers to teach children what is natural to human beings. Regarding self-compelling power, what is natural to human persons? How might we instruct children to have this power in their own lives?
  5. What is the habit of perfect work? If perfect work is the mean, what are the excessive and deficient areas that parents/teachers need to be aware of in this instruction?
  6. How does Mason show potential and capacity of persons through this habit of perfect work?
  7. Talk about authority and duty and how this principle relates with work.

1 Charlotte Mason, Home Education, 8-9.

2 Charlotte Mason, Home Education, 145-147.

3 Charlotte Mason, School Education, 103-104.

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A Poetry Lesson https://amblesideschools.org/a-poetry-lesson/ Fri, 21 Jul 2023 19:26:06 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1649 As an Ambleside teacher, preparing and teaching a lesson is a lesson itself — a great adventure that takes the teacher on his or her own path of discovery. We search, we read, we consider, we ponder, we reflect, we gain insight … we’re inspired. In the preparing and planning we grow and learn ourselves. The text is the teacher, and the teacher is taught. And each subject has its own distinct path of learning.

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A Poetry Lesson

relationship, n. the way in which two or more people are connected, or the

way they behave toward each other; the way in which things are connected

or work together1; late 14c. as “act of telling or relating in words,” from

Anglo-French relacioun,2

 

If I had to describe Charlotte Mason and her philosophy of education in just one word, it would be ‘relationship.’ She is all about relationship:

 

Relationship with ideas

with nature

with people

with history

with science and mathematics

with poets and their poems

with composers and their music

with artists and their work

ultimately and miraculously,

these relationships are gained through connections and associations

with God Himself,

Holy Spirit.

Through these many and varied relationships

spanning all earthly realms,

we come to know our Creator

our King,

And in our attending, we find His gifts to us:

Treasures of wonder, joy, beauty, and Light,

sorrow, mourning, mercy, and peace.

 

Charlotte Mason thought of poetry as “perhaps, the most searching and intimate of our teachers;”

 

to know about such a poet and his works may be interesting, as it is to know about

repoussé (hammered metal) work; but in the latter case we must know how to use

the tools before we get joy and service out of the art.

 

Poetry, too, supplies us with tools for the modelling of our lives,

and the use of these we must get at for ourselves.

 

The line that strikes us as we read, that recurs, that we murmur over at odd

moments — this is the line that influences our living, if it speak only

 

     “Of old, unhappy, far-off things,
      And battles long ago.” 3

 

A couplet such as this, though it appears to carry no moral weight, instructs our conscience more effectually than many wise saws (sayings). As we ‘inwardly digest,’ reverence comes to us unawares, gentleness, a wistful tenderness towards the past, a sense of continuance, and of a part to play that shall not be loud and discordant, but of a piece with the whole. This is one of the ‘lessons never learned in schools’ which comes to each of us only as we discover it for ourselves.

 

Many have a favourite poet for a year or two, to be discarded for another and another. Some are happy enough to find the poet of their lifetime in Spenser, Wordsworth, Browning, for example; but, whether it be for a year or a life, let us mark as we read, let us learn and inwardly digest. Note how good this last word is. What we digest we assimilate, take into ourselves, so that it is part and parcel of us, and no longer separable.4

 

The English writer, philosopher, and art critic John Ruskin, whom Charlotte Mason greatly admired and often quoted, also had his thoughts about poetry …

 

“It seems to me, and may seem to the reader, strange that we should need to ask the question, ‘What is poetry?’ Here is a word we have been using all our lives, and, I suppose, with a very distinct idea attached to it; and when I am now called upon to give a definition of this idea, I find myself at a pause … In general, people shelter themselves under metaphors, and while we hear poetry described as an utterance of the soul, an effusion of Divinity, or voice of nature, or in other terms equally elevated and obscure, we never attain anything like a definite explanation of the character which actually distinguishes it from prose. I come, after some embarrassment, to the conclusion that poetry is ‘the suggestion by the imagination of noble grounds for the noble emotions.’ …

 

I mean by the noble emotions those four principal sacred passions, Love, Veneration, Admiration, and Joy (this latter especially, if unselfish); and their opposites — Hatred, Indignation (or Scorn), Horror, and Grief — This last, when unselfish, becoming Compassion. These passions in their various combinations constitute what is called ‘poetical feeling’, when they are felt on noble grounds, that is, on great and true grounds. Indignation, for instance, is a poetical feeling, if excited by serious injury; but it is not a poetical feeling if entertained on being cheated out of a small sum of money. It is very possible the manner of the cheat may have been such as to justify considerable indignation; but the feeling is nevertheless not poetical unless the grounds of it be large as well as just.”5

 

As an Ambleside teacher, preparing and teaching a lesson is a lesson itself — a great adventure that takes the teacher on his or her own path of discovery. We search, we read, we consider, we ponder, we reflect, we gain insight … we’re inspired. In the preparing and planning we grow and learn ourselves. The text is the teacher, and the teacher is taught. And each subject has its own distinct path of learning.

 

With the mind contemplating these rich and wonderful ideas, the teacher sets her feet on the path to acquaint the students with a particular poet such as Gerard Manley Hopkins. She sets her task to engage imaginations with his work and seek those noble grounds for the noble emotions.

 

Born in 1844, Hopkins wrote poetry as a young schoolboy and into his school years at Oxford University. He entered the Jesuit Order to begin studies for the priesthood. As a Jesuit, he gave up writing poetry because he believed that writing poetry would distract him from his priestly life. Fortunately, his Jesuit superiors encouraged him, and he felt free again to continue to write his poetry.

 

The poet spent much time in nature where he could see and hear more clearly without worldly interruptions. As he walked, his mind relaxed, and he received the messages in the trees and the birds and the sky and the earth. He kept a ‘notebook.’ He was ever watching. He took notice and cared. He had a questioning mind — a mind that pursued knowledge and wondered. And he certainly stopped to smell the roses. In so doing the poet encountered the Wordsmith — the Author Himself — in His most vibrant awe-inspiring variations. He gained new eyes to see and new ears to hear because of this connection — this relationship.

 

On our quest to form a relationship with Hopkins through his works, we read some of his notebook entries — descriptive phrases and words, his notes for poetry and the first drafts of many verses.

 

These are just a few:

(Early Diaries)6

 

April 14. Moonlight hanging or dropping on treetops like blue cobweb … Also the upper sides of little grotted waves turned to the sky have soft pale-colored cobwebs on them, the under sides green.

 

Note that the beaded oar, dripping, powders or sows the smooth with dry silver drops.

 

Easter 1866. Drops of rain hanging on rails, etc. seen with only the lower rim lighted like nails (of fingers). Screws of brooks and twines. Soft chalky look with more shadowy middles of the globes of cloud on a night with a moon faint or concealed. Mealy clouds with a not brilliant moon. Blunt buds of the ash. Pencil buds of the beech. Lobes of the trees. Cups of the eyes. Gathering back the lightly hinged eyelids. Bows of the eyelids. Pencil of eyelashes. Eyelids like leaves, petals, caps, tufted hats, handkerchiefs, sleeves, gloves. Also of the bones sleeved in flesh. Vermilion look of the hand, held against a candle with the darker parts as the middles of the fingers and especially the knuckles covered with ash.

 

The wind, that passes by so fleet,

Runs his fingers through the wheat,

And leaves the blades, where’er he will veer.

Tingling between dusk and silver.

 

slippery slop, slabby (muddy), slidcy perhaps slope, but if slope

is thus connected what are we to say of slant?

 

The sparky air

Leaps up before my vision, — thou art gone.

Moonlight hanging or dropping on treetops like blue cobweb.

 

The students went home that day with the assignment to find a quiet space outdoors where they could sit and listen and see and reflect upon or ‘inwardly digest’ Hopkins’ notes and then to write their own. Here are just a few of these:

 

The rain falls heavily, splashing against my roof as a soft, rhythmic drumming. It fogs my window … fogging the window in a sparkling glistening wall. All is blurred, but in a shimmering, tranquil way. The lights in my room send beads of light sparkling around my room. A faint rainbow appears, basking over the grassy hill across the street. The clouds shift, and the rainbow vanishes. The sun peeks out between the clouds, and the raindrops sparkle like millions of diamonds.

*     *     *     *     *

The city is busy now that it is noon. Business meetings … people coming and going, towering like bees going in and out of their hive. All the store shops and bakeries are full of people. It is almost Christmas, so toy shops are busy, like in summer when many people go to the beach … all together. The city is asleep. It is 1:00 a.m.; but tomorrow is Christmas Eve. A very special day. They better get ready!

*     *     *    *     *

Water shimmers in sunlight.  It comes in many different forms: liquid, ice, vapor. In its forms it displays beauty. The snow looks so pure.  Vast oceans of water stretching over miles of sand glisten reflecting the sunlight.  After the rain comes a rainbow reminding us of God’s promise to us. The steam coming off hot pavement rises slowly looking like waves on the ocean. The rain waters plants to help give life. Water cascading down waterfalls sounds like chimes or laughter from small children.  Water cleans things making them fresh. It renews animals and humans alike with its fresh taste.

*     *     *     *     *

In listening to the students as they read their compositions the next day, the teacher recognized that a sacred transaction had taken place. The noble ideas of Love, Veneration, Admiration, and Joy had entered the minds of these children. Connections were made. Relationships formed. The next hope was that these would linger and become fortified in time. And Charlotte Mason encouraged us that this is so. One idea begets another and another … We must always consider what ideas we are taking in … What relationships are we forming?

 

By Shannon Seiberlich

Director of Community Relations and former Ambleside teacher

1 Cambridge Dictionary, s.v. “relationship,” accessed April 4, 2023, https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/relationship

2 Harper Douglas, “Etymology of relationship,” Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed April 4, 2023, https://www.etymonline.com/word/relationship.

3 William Wordsworth, “The Solitary Reaper,” Poetry Foundation, accessed April, 4, 2023. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45554/the-solitary-reaper

4 Charlotte Mason, Ourselves, Book II (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., 1989) 71.

5 Levi, Olma C. “Ruskin’s Thoughts on Poetry.” Source: The Sewanee Review, Vol. 31, No. 4 (Oct., 1923), pp. 426-445. The Johns Hopkins University Press, URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/27533697.

6 Storey, Graham. “The Journals and Papers of Gerard Manley Hopkins. Oxford University Press, 1959, https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.460186/2015.460186.The-Journals_djvu.txt

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