God Schooling: How God Intended Children to Learn
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About this ebook
The prospect of taking on full responsibility for your child’s education can seem daunting. But with a little advice, some preparation, and knowledge of what God says in His Word about it, the rewards can vastly outweigh the challenges.
God Schooling guides readers through both secular and Christian thought on child development and education methods, as well as Bible references that show us how God wants our children to be raised and educated. Homeschooling parent Julie Polanco also shares her own stories and advice based on nearly fifteen years of homeschooling her own children.
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Lots of good things to meditate on for any homeschooler.
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God Schooling - Julie Polanco
PART 1
Dispelling Myths
Chapter 1
Biblical Support for Natural Learning
When I first decided to homeschool my kids, I had no idea what it would be like, but I was sure it was going to be great. I had visions of obedient, respectful children who were so excited to learn, they hung on to my every word and couldn’t wait for the next new topic. I poured over curriculum catalogs and magazines, my mind whirring with all the possibilities. Everything looked so attractive and promised hours of learning adventures. Everyone promised that their product would create a love of learning in my children, that it would be easy to do, that my children would be successful, and on and on.
I have to admit that I am a sucker for glamorous advertising. I loved books and nifty paper crafts so much, I wanted to believe that what they said was true. Maybe you have done this, too. I chose activities based on what I thought would be fun, what I enjoyed doing, and if I liked it, surely, the kids would like it. Right? Oh, sure. I read some books on learning styles, and I even read some books on different methods of homeschooling. There were elements of Charlotte Mason that I liked, and there were elements of classical education that I liked. I thought that unit study was a great idea, too. The only method that I definitely stayed away from was textbooks.
In spite of all my enthusiasm, things were not all rosy and wonderful. By the time my oldest daughter, Tiger, was seven years old, I was beginning to burn out already. I had been in the habit of spending hours poring over catalogs and websites trying to find the perfect books and activities. I spent my free time writing up objectives, lessons, questions, crafts, and more. I invested so much of myself in trying to come up with the perfect teaching materials, but when I would try to present everything I had so painstakingly prepared, I was faced with…
Moans and groans. Hawk and Tiger talking at the same time and laughing while I was reading. Stick figures and sloppy coloring instead of neat work (Tiger’s drawings that she did on her own were amazing, but she never put in that kind of effort for me). Slumping in the chairs, laying on the table, making noises with their mouths, their feet, their hands. I would go to the bathroom and when I would come back, they would have disappeared. Can you relate?
When Butterfly was born, I felt I could no longer do this and needed a curriculum. Well, that was not the answer, either. In the next year, Hawk refused to do any lessons I asked him to do. I am not saying that he didn’t learn anything; he just didn’t want to learn anything from me. I took it personally. Who did he think he was trying to exert some control over his own learning? I saw him as a disobedient little boy, and I am ashamed to say that he spent far too many days looking at the wall. I had tried bribery with candy and other treats, but he didn’t care. He didn’t care about looking at the wall, either. At first, I thought that was what I needed to do. A child must learn obedience, right? Except that my discipline wasn’t working. He was detaching from me and acting out in other ways.
He was not the only one who exhibited problems. My daughter, Tiger, talked to me about her dreams less and less and was bordering on depression, and the baby, Butterfly, was challenging. I hadn’t even been parenting that long, I hadn’t even been homeschooling that long, and everything seemed to be unraveling. God, didn’t you call us to homeschool? Didn’t you make it abundantly clear? If we’re supposed to homeschool, then why isn’t it working? I thought that doing Your Will would give me joy. I don’t have any joy. I want to give up, and if you don’t do something, I’m putting them in school next year. He answered my cry, but not in the way I expected. I had hoped that He would make my children more obedient to my plan. Instead, He led me on a journey to make me more obedient to His plan.
He led me on a journey to re-examine my goals, my relationships, everything. It has not always been an easy journey, but God is a patient and loving teacher. He made sure that I learned what I needed to learn (and continue to learn still). Where he led me was to a life without school, what many would call an unschooled life. The things that he taught me along the way, the things I discovered through prayer and experience, are recorded for you here. Join me on my journey where I finally found joy and peace.
Enslavement Versus Freedom
One of my favorite verses from the Bible regarding natural learning, or what some call unschooling, is Galatians 5:1: It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.
Paul was writing regarding the legalistic religious requirements of his day. We are not only free from religiosity but anything that can become religious or dogmatic.
Curriculum can be a great tool as long as it does not become our religion. What do I mean by that? Anything that we follow just for the sake of following it, anything that we become so dedicated to that we feel like a failure if we don’t follow its dictates, anything that enslaves us with its rules, can become our religion. Curriculum is meant to be a guide to help us accomplish our goals. The curriculum is not the goal. Too many times I have heard moms say something like, Well, Michael is still in third grade this summer because we didn’t finish the curriculum.
Whoa! The curriculum has usurped the family’s goals or become the family’s goals. These moms have become slaves to their chosen curriculum; it has become their religion.
In my own journey, as I said, I started out creating my own unit studies but, when my third child, Butterfly, was born, I felt I needed a curriculum. All the time I was using this curriculum, neat ideas for things to do with my three small children kept floating into my head. Hey, remember that article you saw about the egg floating on the water? That would be really fun to try. Hey, there’s a neat website about dead logs. You should check it out and take them out to the woods. Today would be a great day to visit the arboretum. Weren’t you going to make a cave diorama with little bats and stuff?
As fun as they sounded, I sadly ignored them, rationalizing that I was distracted and that I needed to finish the curriculum first. I condensed it a bit, but I was determined that because I had spent $300 on it, I was going to finish it. Even though it was not appropriate for my four-year-old, Hawk, even though my seven-year-old, Tiger, was getting tired of it and only put in a half-hearted effort, I was going to stick with it and finish. I had allowed it to take control of my home, and it had become a religion to me. However, I did not learn my lesson at first. I bought the curriculum several times over the course of the years, but used it for shorter and shorter periods of time. It was like the devil was putting doubts in my ear, whispering, Gee, it’s going to be hard to get to the library every two weeks or so. Maybe you should get a curriculum and save yourself the trouble. Yeah, it’s a few hundred dollars, but what’s your time worth? You could use it again or sell it later. Come on. It looks so fun.
I became enslaved to the fears that drove my decision. Maybe you have some of these fears. I was afraid that my child wouldn’t measure up next to her public-schooled peers. I feared the close scrutiny of relatives. I feared that she might have gaps. I feared I wasn’t challenging her enough and that I wasn’t doing enough. If she didn’t understand something that was commonly taught to her peers, then I worried that there was something wrong with her or that I was doing something wrong. I wanted so badly to do everything right and I was so afraid that I was doing everything wrong. It was such an incredible burden that it finally sank me into depression. It was then that God gave me a vision of what it could be like.
Be Still and Know I am Lord
He began to speak to me about homeschooling and the first thing He said was, Be still and know that I am Lord.
Does my story sound like your story? Are you in that place where you are desperately searching for a different way? Do you feel restless and uneasy, burdened by worries and fears? Be still. Know that He is Lord. Know that He is Lord. Know that He is Lord. Do you really truly believe that God is Lord of your life or do you say it with head knowledge, not heart knowledge? Do you truly know that you are not the lord of your life? Do you truly understand what being lord means? These words spoke directly to my heart because I have struggled with control in my life. God spoke truth into my circumstances.
Because all my life I had always felt like everything I did was for someone else’s approval and someone else’s agenda, I was desperately trying to gain control of something and that something ended up being my children. In all my life, I felt that I had never done anything just because I wanted to. Even the choice to homeschool was for the benefit of the children, at first. I had to give up the dream of graduate school and endure the pain of ostracism because now I was just a housewife. I had to admit to God that I was resentful and controlling. He began to show me all the blessings of being at home, that He loves me, that all that has happened in my life has been turned to good, and that I need to fully surrender to Him to be able to fully receive His joy. And, as often happens when we abandon ourselves to Him, he gave me back my dreams. He enabled me to take freelance writing projects and to write this book. Now, I am writing more books under my own name and as a ghostwriter.
It took several weeks of meditating on what it means to be still and know God to begin to fully comprehend what He was saying to me. When it started to sink in, my burden began to feel lighter. Joy and peace slowly started to seep into my heart. He began to lead me toward becoming more relaxed in my homeschooling approach. He put in my heart a desire to serve other Christian women who felt led in the same way. Suddenly, I had companions in my journey that I didn’t have before. He began to direct me to websites and blogs about a lifestyle of learning, relaxed homeschooling, and Christ-led unschooling. As I relaxed, he showed me, through the children themselves, how He leads them to discover his truths.
May 14, 2007
Today, I just let them play outside all day. It was hot, and I just felt like giving them a break. They came up with plenty of their own learning experiences, though. Tiger made several attempts to figure out how to make a bucket of water tied to a string dump its load into a bowl waiting below, for instance. They pretended to be cells and put stickers on themselves to represent DNA.
July 2, 2007
The kids got up late. In fact, I had to wake Tiger up. That was fine, though, because she stayed up late asking me questions about God and the why of it all. We went to Fullersburg Woods with another homeschool family, and we were there for 2 hours doing the longest trail they have. They saw butterflies, frogs, a heron, fish, cicadas, other insects, and of course, many trees and plants. They poked around in the water, climbed trees, looked into likely animal homes, and other stuff kids do in the wild.
Many of us start homeschooling in a spirit of fear, as I was describing earlier. We are afraid that the school environment will harm our child, we are afraid that the schools aren’t doing enough for our child, we are afraid that our child won’t have an edge when it comes to college, and on and on.
Jesus said, Come to me all you who are weary and burdened and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.
(Matthew 11: 28-30). His yoke is to simply follow him. That is what He told all of His disciples: Follow me.
There are no other requirements. But when we follow Him, He says, Love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.
(Matthew 22: 37). These two verses taken together mean that I can come before Him, lay down my worries and my fears, sit at His feet with complete and utter devotion, and simply obey.
Simply obey. What does that mean? When Jesus was at the home of Mary and Martha in Luke 10:41-42, Martha was distracted by all the preparations, and she got angry because her sister, Mary, wasn’t helping her. Instead, she was sitting at the feet of Jesus. Jesus basically said that Martha worried too much and should sit at his feet, too. Obeying means that we keep our eyes on Him, not on the distractions of this world, not on all the preparations that we supposedly need to be doing. If we are walking closely with the Lord, He will show us exactly what to do at exactly the right time.
An example that comes to mind is something that happened recently in Tiger’s life. Tiger is now eighteen and, in her last year of high school, she took a class at the junior