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A Delectable Education Charlotte Mason Podcast

Episode 10: Things, the Materials of Education

A Delectable Education Charlotte Mason Podcast

Nicole Williams

Education

4.91.1K Ratings

🗓️ 17 September 2021

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary


We think of school as paper, pencils, and books, but Mason's delectable feast included innumerable other learning opportunities. We try to hit the highlights here of the vastly underrated world of things that can be considered critical to the well-rounded education.

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"The children I am speaking of are much occupied with things as well as with books, because 'Education is the Science of Relations,' is the principle which regulates their curriculum; that is, a child goes to school with many aptitudes which he should put into effect. So, he learns a good deal of science, because children have no difficulty in understanding principles, though technical details baffle them. He practises various handicrafts that he may know the feel of wood, clay, leather, and the joy of handling tools, that is, that he may establish a due relation with materials. But, always, it is the book, the knowledge, the clay, the bird or blossom, he thinks of, not his own place or his own progress." (Vol. 6, p. 31)

"At the same time, here is the mother's opportunity to train the seeing eye, the hearing ear, and to drop seeds of truth into the open soul of the child, which shall germinate, blossom, and bear fruit, without further help or knowledge of hers." (Vol. 1, pp. 44-45)

"At any rate he should go forth well furnished because imagination has the property of magical expansion, the more it holds the more it will hold." (Vol. 6, p. 43)

"The work is arranged on the principles which have been set forth in this volume; a wide curriculum, a considerable number of books for each child in the several classes, and, besides, a couple of hours' work daily, not with Books but with Things." (Vol. 3, p. 271)



 

If you would like to study along with us, here are some passages from The Home Education Series and other Parent's Review articles that would be helpful for this episode's topic. You may also read the series online here, or get the free Kindle version from Fisher Academy.

School Education (Vol. 3), Chapter 21

Towards a Philosophy of Education (Vol. 6), Book I, Sections II and III



 

The Last Child in the Woods, Richard Louv

(Contains affiliate links)



 

Example of a P.U.S. Time-table

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Join me and other Charlotte Mason educators by going to a

0:04.6

delectable education.com slash Patreon. I started listening to this

0:09.4

podcast five years ago and I knew it was the way I wanted to homeschool my kids.

0:14.1

The Patreon group has been an added blessing this year.

0:17.2

The wise writings of Liz, Emily's lesson plans and Nicole's nature videos really helped me each week to keep doing this method day

0:24.7

in and day out. You sharing this podcast could inspire other families to educate

0:29.6

wise and virtuous children and to affect the change we greatly need in this coming generation.

0:35.0

My name is Dallas. I live in Omaha Nebraska and I'm a proud supporter of

0:40.5

AD through Patreon.

0:50.0

Welcome to a Delectable Education, the podcast that spreads the feast of the Charlotte Mason method. I'm Emily Kaiser and I'm here as always with Liz Kattiril and Nicole Williams.

0:56.7

And we've spent the last four weeks talking about what most people equate with the

1:01.3

Charlotte Mason education, living books and narration.

1:06.0

But as I hinted at the end of the last episode, we also have this third thing that often gets overlooked.

1:12.8

And I think it might be because of its very specific

1:16.8

and explanatory title.

1:18.6

Things!

1:19.6

Oh, that's what she called it. Books and things. So Charlotte Mason education is a feast and there is more than books in the feast. Miss Mason believed in educating the whole person and the whole of the

1:36.4

brain needs to be involved in learning. Listen to what Charlotte Mason says here.

1:41.8

The children I am speaking of are much occupied with things as well as with books

1:46.2

because education is the science of relations, is the principal which regulates their curriculum.

1:52.1

That is a child goes to school with many aptitudes which he should put into effect.

1:57.0

So he learns a good deal of science because children have no difficulty in understanding

...

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