A friend's daughter is collecting books to sell for a fundraiser. Our homeschool year is getting closer to ending & there are many books to return to a kind aunt who lent them. Even more books to sell. Some books to keep.
Happy memories attached to many. The places the books have taken us are so easily recalled, memories of warmth & goodness washing over our souls.
My mom read aloud to us a lot when we were kids. The Trumpet of the Swan, Stuart Little & Charlotte's Web by E.B. White. All the 'Little House' books by Laura Ingalls Wilder.
I always liked to read.
Without the distractions of screens & with free time that in today's world seems in danger of becoming extinct, I explored any book we had at home. At church. At my grandparent's farm, making my way to the Back Chamber, hot with the summer sun, thumbing through old books & choosing one to settle in with, even if for only the afternoon.
The school library. 3rd grade is the first time I remember being able to check books out of the library. I was so disappointed when I was told that there was a limit to the number of books one could check out! Nancy Drew & The Hardy Boys & probably whatever was suggested as I was never a very independent child & not prone to exploration.
And Scholastic books orders. All the way through junior high. I chose some duds & chose many that became favorites. Louisa May Alcott & Elizabeth George Speare & Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry and I have no recollection of the clutter of choices saturated in celebrity & popular movies that I see reflected in some of today's book order forms. (Yes, even homeschoolers can order from Scholastic!!)
I loved some of the books we were assigned to read in school: Where the Red Fern Grows (Wilson Rawls),1984 (George Orwell), Rumble Fish (S.E. Hinton), The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald), Of Mice & Men (John Steinbeck), To Kill a Mockingbird (by Harper Lee) and 10 Little Indians (Agatha Christie).
However, my reading really couldn't hold a candle to my older brother, Marvin's reading. In this childhood before the internet & before 'summer reading' book lists & without frequent trips to the library, this internal, self-driven, maybe first-born part of him sought out Good Books. Tolkien & I don't know what else because I was busy reading my Lurlene McDaniel light fare.
Light fare or not, with some lack of self-awareness, on I read. I really am so glad that we did not have cable television & that home computers & cells & devices & the internet were something for the future. Ironically, (because I'm a sun-shunner these days), I spent hours in our Canadian rocker, tilted back with legs propped up in a most unladylike fashion, making dents in the wall behind me, basking in the sun, reading. And reading and reading.
For this post I am speaking of fiction & its role in our lives. However I will add that children's literature as a whole is quite literally one of my favorite things. Also, I greatly enjoy biographies & parenting books & magazines & online articles too! But for me, Historical Fiction rose to the surface. Many of my favorite books are historical fiction. I just love it!!
Some of my favorites are:
Little Women & Eight Cousins by Louisa May Alcott
My Brother Sam is Dead by James Lincoln Collier
any Bodie & Brock Thoene books
"Mark of the Lion" series by Francine Rivers
The Witch of Blackbird Pond & Calico Captive by Elizabeth George Speare
Naturally, I read to my children plenty when they were preschool age, (and beyond.) I was a stay-at-home mom, (praise the Lord!), and what we had was TIME. Story Time at Borders w/ Gibran. Story Time at the Bangor Public Library. (Except for my babysitting days! Micah was a few months old & Noelle was two & Lily was three & Grace was five & it was too much for me!!) Time to snuggle in bed & read. No where to go & no where to be & so much time to play & read. (Hmm.. this sounds a bit like homeschooling!! Sort of!!)
When I married my husband our children were entering grades one & two, and Micah was 4 years old. Noelle attended private school & D attended public. Both had some reading homework most days. It had never occurred to my husband that kids would want to read at home, outside of school. That they should read & that perhaps if they were made to read that they would want to. We worked out the kinks & reading, sometimes mandatory, became something important in our home.
Are we ever too old to be read aloud to? I don't think so. Following my mom's example we read many books aloud as a family. Being intentional. Okay, D is here Saturday, Sunday, Tuesday & Wednesday nights. But Wednesday nights are AWANA, so that leaves three nights to read. We too read through all the "Little House" books & Eight Cousins & Rose In Bloom & several of the "Chronicles of Narnia" (C.S. Lewis) books & more.
Reading certainly isn't a homeschooling 'thing'. However, when you homeschool, School melds with Home melds with Life & Learning, (without the restrictions of 'schooling'). A literature-based education. Time. Time to read. Self-awareness to allow interests to naturally come to the surface, and again- time- to pursue them. Reading, and for these purposes, reading fiction, has been a key part of our School-y, Home-y, Learning Lives.
7-year old Micah, laying on Mrs. Janet's bed w/ rocks & crystals & plants all around him, while Sister had piano & violin lessons, reading Harry Potter & the Goblet of Fire (J.K.Rowling).
9-year old Noelle reading My Side of the Mountain (Jean Craighead George) & dreaming about living in the woods, alone, for awhile.
Tea Time. Our on & off again respite, usually for reading aloud & drinking tea & maybe eating snacks. Our first ever Tea Time book was Little Men by Lousia May Alcott & Micah was 6 years old & Noelle was 8 & the wording was sometimes antiquated but we hung on to every word, wondering what would happen with Dan. Other tea time favorites are the "All of a Kind" books by Sydney Taylor & Mandy by Julie Andrews Edwards.
Reading in boxes. Reading on the roof. Reading on the lawn. Reading by the fire, with a baby goat in your lap & maple sap simmering on the stove.
My 7-year old girl, sitting on the couch, reading Marley & Me (John Grogan) while the tears ran. World Opened Up. Books, the medium for exploration of LIFE!
http://carmelhillbillies.blogspot.com/2014/05/literature-fair-home-education-post.html
A neat reading experience for Noelle, in days gone by, has been to read the 'American Girl' books, series written about each American Girl doll, historical fiction. Each doll has 6 books. Noelle read the books for: Samantha, Kirsten, Addy, Felicity, Josefina, Molly, Kit, and Kaya, among other ones put out by American Girl. So that's 48+ books. These are great stories, teach lessons, and include interesting historical information. Tying fun activities with these books is easy.
Some of Noelle's favorites are all that I have mentioned here, plus The Giver by Lois Lowry.
Doing the Magic Tree House books & the passport was one of the best things & favorite things we ever did with homeschooling. If you are unfamiliar with the books, they follow the adventures of Jack & Annie. When I read the first one, I was not impressed! It was so simple! However, the books grow with the reader & the plot lines get better & more involved & the books get longer.
In addition to our History text this year, Micah explored the themes of WWII through a fictional, literary perspective. This was a great experience as well. It may have been 3rd grade when Micah read Number the Stars by Lois Lowry. And he has taken in a lot of information about WWII, as that is an interest of his. However, this experience allowed him to explore WWII from many angles- yes, in the ghetto of Warsaw, but also in the Caribbean & in the Japanese-American internment camps. In fact, Micah's "Letters About Literature" entry this year was written to Yoshiko Uchida, author of Journey to Topaz, exploring the themes of what governments do vs. who a people group are & allowed for some deep reflection on racism & how this presents, present day. The other books he read for this unit were:
The Cay by Theodore Taylor
Under the Blood Red Sun by Graham Salisbury
The Man from the Other Side by Uri Olev
Stepping On the Cracks by Mary Downing Hahn
Journey to America by Sonia Levitin
Rose Blanche by Roberto Innocenti & Christophe Gallaz
The Whispering Town by Jennifer Elvgren
Is it Night or Day by Fern Schumer Chapman
Some of Micah's favorites are:
Percy Jackson series by Rick Riordan
Chronicles of Narnia series by C.S. Lewis
The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
Homer Price by Robert McCloskey
Even today, as I write this, my lovies are snuggled together, reading. Noelle is reading Brown Girl Dreaming by Jaqueline Woodson. She is preparing for an upcoming literature fair and she plan to talk & write about the civil rights movement & racism. I can hear them reading excerpts of their books to each other. Pure sweetness.
In conclusion:
1. Always have tissues, a water bottle & a book with you. Always.
2. It is very fun & worth the time to watch the movie after you have read the book. We have spent many, cozy evenings, snuggled under a blanket, watching a movie about a book that Noelle read, hearing about the differences between the book & the movie.
3. Check out "Letters About Literature", an annual school or library-sponsored reading & writing contest for students in grades 4-12. Or you can enter individually, like we have. It is also a 'favorite' experience of mine from our homeschooling years.
4. When I have a hard time finding books that interest Micah, and he doesn't have any leads on what he wants to read, I make him read 60 pages. If he doesn't like it after 60 pages, he usually doesn't have to read it.
5. Read aloud to your kids!!
6. Allow time for reading. Turn off the devices!
7. Read to your kids often, and when they are older, they will read to you!
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