
Teaching Many
by Marilyn Boyer
1/8/2007
Life
is very busy in our home. Rick and I are the parents of 14 children,
ages 31-7 yr. old. We only have nine living at home now, as four are
married and Josh was promoted to heaven a few years ago. All of our
married children still live in town and now we have four (soon to be
five) grandchildren. Life, as I said, is busy, but very rich . We are
very blessed.
We've been home educating since 1980. We've just completed our
twenty-sixth year . I've been frequently asked how is it possible to
home school so many at the same time? Our school day is generally a
three hour period in the morning, although sometimes the older
children will have reading to finish up in the afternoon. Presently,
our house has three rooms in close vicinity of each other, which we
utilize during the morning schooling time. The dining room table is
where those writing do their work. The living room is where those sit
who are reading and the kitchen table has traditionally been the
center for the preschoolers and toddlers who are working on their
projects. By the way, I have special learning activities for
preschoolers, which I save only for use during school time , so they
look forward to using them. They are things like flannelgraphs,
learning puzzles, shapes to glue on paper, magnetic dolls, weather
boards, shapes to outline, special markers and preschool workbooks,
learning clocks, etc. I am the coach, assigner, corrector, and concept
explainer. I juggle my time between those needing help. When one is
doing handwriting, for example, I am free to help another with math.
Halfway through school time , we take a snack break and I spend
special time with my preschoolers. When someone is reading history,
I'm helping another with grammar. Each child is allowed to proceed at
their own rate in each subject. For example, one who is gifted in math
might be a "grade level" or two ahead, age-wise‚ but slower in
grammar skills. God created each child uniquely and what is right for
them is right.
My
oldest son, now holds a position on the county Board of Supervisors,
was fascinated with history from the time he was a very little boy. In
first grade, he read the fourth grade history book from cover to
cover- eight times! Math, on the other hand, was never a big interest
to him. He did it only because I required it. His desire is to be
statesman- a godly politician who doesn't compromise on his stand for
truth in government.
My
now twelve year old son, Tucker, who was slow to take off with
reading, will figure out extremely difficult math problems in his
head! Then, when he gets the answer, he'll try to figure out how many
other ways he can arrive at the same answer. He thinks and sees math.
He never ceases to amaze me. His frustration, however, is the English
language , which is not exactly the most logical language in the
world. When he learns a rule, then come the exceptions. A couple of
years ago, in exasperation, he stated, "Maw, the guy who made up the
English language had a pencil in one hand and a jug in the other."
He's reading now and sometimes he does it just for fun!! I thought the
day would never come, but he is brilliant in math! That's how God made
him. God made each one uniquely and it's part of His perfect plan to
help them fulfill the special plan He has in store for each one in
life. You have to learn not to fret arbitrary standards set for the ‚
"average
child". Until his reading skill progressed enough, I would read his
history and science to him each day, and he has great retention. He
also listened to every G A Henty book on tape available as he would
play and he has tremendous vocabulary skills. So , by the time his
reading is up to his knowledge level, you'll never know he was ever "behind"
in reading. He wasn't , just on God's time table for him.
Learn to master the books, instead of letting the books master you.
Pick and choose and don't feel like you have to do every last problem.
For instance, every math curriculum I've seen has too many problems
each day. When I assign work, I will circle 10-15 problems to be done
each day. If they can do them and understand them, there is no need to
do 30 of the same thing. That just frustrates most kids. If they
understand, we move on to the next lesson tomorrow. If they are
struggling, we stay till they get it! When children are young, I will
often let them answer questions orally. Kids can think so much faster
than they can write. I do require some neat handwriting each day, but
in small amounts when they are young, to learn neatness. If given too
much, they tend to just try to get it done, instead of striving for
excellence. Again, each child is different. My oldest daughter loved
to write. She would begin each day just listing all her assignments ,
just because she enjoyed writing. In her spare time, she'd write lots
of stories. She practiced different styles of handwriting just for
fun. The point is, feel free to guide each one in what is right for
them. Just because a curriculum says to do it one way, don't feel
bound by it. Every child excels in something. Maybe, it's even
hands-on things like building or working with wood. With academics
being done by noon, we use the afternoon for exploring their own
interests. My second son who wasn't a book worm like his older
brother, would be motivated to get his book work done so he could work
on his bookcase building business in the afternoon. My oldest daughter
was a Creative Memories consultant in her high school years. While
some children will choose to read all day long, others will want to
start a business, or build a treehouse, or raise chickens or rabbits.
When those individual interests crop up, find an outlet to allow your
child to pursue them.
Tuck will have a consuming interest in different subjects for a
while , satisfy his interest, and then pursue something else. Two
years ago, he wanted to do a science experiment every day!! Whew! Was
it ever hard trying to come up with new experiments. We never did
manage to do one every day, but he did a bunch. We have about every
science experiment book out there. Then it was birds. He made bird
feeders to suit certain types of birds, purchased the seeds that those
kind of birds like to attract them and then watched them as they would
build nests and raise families outside his bedroom window. This year,
he's growing raspberries and has a very tasty crop. He also began a
business making leather belts and nearly any hour of the day, you may
here the boom of his tooling hammer as he creates a new design. Now,
he's been after Dad to help him build a treehouse with all kinds of
neat features and a barrel seat so he will have a quiet place to sit
and read!! Gotta encourage that one!
One of the biggest joys of
homeschooling is watching those God-given interests crop up and being
there to supply the books, materials, etc to let your children pursue
their interests. The academic bookwork is only a part of true
education. Real education takes place all day long, our entire lives.
The joy of home educating is the parent-child relationship and the
child-family relationship. I love what my son Matt said when I was
quizzing him about why he was glad to have been homeschooled. He said,
"One advantage was getting to really know your family, instead of just
meeting up with them in the evening." It's being together as a family,
letting each pursue their God-given interests while instilling in them
a sense of mission to strive to accomplish great things for God. It's
walking through life with your eyes on Jesus and your arm around your
kids. It's growing and learning and serving together. May God bless
each of you as you invest your life in the treasures God has given
you- your children.