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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

Great and helpful article Catherine! I thought I would share this tidbit about Susan Wise Bauer, which I think she should really have put in the preface to her Well-Trained Mind (which every parent I have encountered finds inspiring yet daunting, and at times discouraging). This is from her book "Rethinking School":

"I am a writer, so grammar is particularly important to me. I drilled my kids in grammar from first grade on. We did grammar drills and grammar exercises. We memorized grammar rules. We diagrammed sentences. We never did not do grammar.

So on the first day of seventh grade, I pulled out the previous year's grammar book for quick review.

My son looked at me like a newborn fawn contemplating a bow hunter. He remembered nothing.

"How can you not know what a noun is?" I demanded.

"Well," he said, "maybe it's because we've never really done grammar before."

This anecdote is the perfect balm for any homeschool anxiety. If this can happen to Susan Wise Bauer, then we certainly can feel at ease :)

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Rachael Ringenberg's avatar

I really understand these feelings and am sympathetic to both approaches because I was essentially unschooled until 8th grade--no one asked me to write a single line until 8th grade. And I’m now obsessed with writing. But I enjoy having my kids in the classical conversations weekly one-day curriculum because they seem to love a bit of memorized knowledge now and then (as do yours, from the stories!). I love them both! It’s been important for me to note that I (ME) take pleasure in the academic theory side of homeschooling (which SWB represents for me) but that doesn’t necessarily mean anything for what my kids need/want.

Entirely anecdotally I am with my family right now on the lake and was reflecting with my mom about how much “school” my youngest brother did before 7th grade. She says he did almost none, indeed much grade level reading was beyond him until that point, and he didn’t take to math at all. His only “academic” interests were three dimensional art projects and listening to books read aloud. Now he’s in his 20s and primarily reads economic study summaries and political science for fun. You can’t make this stuff up!

As far as how to help yourself relax I would take at least a two week holiday from trying to do anything. Let it all go and sit back and watch what happens anyway. I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised by all the good that happens. Just keep on noting what they ask questions about so you can circle back later.

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