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The Top Ten Places We’ve Taken the Kids (So Far!)

We take the kids as many places as possible within our work and school schedule and other commitments (sports, activities, etc.). Some are just nearby museums or historical sites and some are major vacations.  All of them add to our educational experience, but some stand out more than others as favorites.

I’m sure this list will change because in the next fifteen months we have plans to visit a whole lot of new places, including Niagara Falls, the Grand Canyon, Legoland, and Disneyland.

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Memory Work: The Foundation of a Classical Education

Confession: Although I’ve considered myself a classical educator for eight years now, I did not come around to the full importance of memory work in elementary school until three years ago. Finally, the light bulb went off and I got it. You can’t skip the memory work and call it Classical.  We did SOME memorization but not enough and honestly, I was overwhelmed with figuring out what to memorize.

Why? Because the very foundation of a classical education involves working with a child’s abilities at each stage. And young children are especially good at memorizing facts. When we wait until high school to ask a student to memorize the countries involved in a war, it’s a lot harder than when ask the same of a seven year old.

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Mule-Drawn Canal Boat: Toledo, OH

Possibly one of our most unique field trip experiences was taking a ride on a mule-drawn boat. We weren’t completely sure what to expect but it was an overall pleasant day.

The boat ride on the canal itself was the start of the adventure.  While on the boat, the staff became a living history exhibit and talked to us as though we’d traveled back in time. They were very entertaining as the boat, being pulled by two mules, slowly made its way down the canal.

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Plymouth Rock: Plymouth, Massachusetts

One of the main themes of classical education is repetition. We re-learn things over and over and each time, hopefully, we understand it better and make more connections to others things we’ve learned. In elementary school, we do that through a three year cycle. Every three years, we start over at the beginning and re-learn the same things again. But we do different projects and we take different field trips and make it all interesting again. Plus, the kids are three years older each time and understand it a little better. One of the greatest things about this model is that all the kids can be learning the same thing. While my four year old might be learning to recite a short poem about the pilgrims, my ten year old may be writing a short, factual paper about the journey on the Mayflower. Meanwhile, my twelve year old is learning to write persuasive essays, so she could write an argument on whether or not the Pilgrims should even have come at all.  Their assignments are all different but we can all sit together and listen to The Story of the World chapter on the Pilgrims. Classical education draws us together as a family rather than segregating us by age and grade.  There is no “you are too little for this” and there is no “I’m too old for this.”

And because we can all learn the same things together regardless of our age, we can take really awesome field trips that are interesting to everyone because we are all focused on the same subject matter!

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R.E. Olds Museum in Lansing, MI

On our trip to Port Huron last month, we decided we wanted to stop somewhere fun about halfway to break up the drive. Plus we had all day and didn’t really need to get to Port Huron until 5pm or so.  I asked around for suggestions and the winner was to come up through Lansing instead of through Detroit and check out the R.E. Olds Museum.

Something you need to know about my family: we love museums. We go to as many as we can, as often as we can. Whenever someone says they just aren’t a “museum person” it makes me sad. It’s one of our favorite family activities–even my four year old tends to enjoy it (although he gets bored faster than the rest of us).

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Port Huron, Michigan (Or as we call it, Almost Canada)

My daughter competes in Bible Quizzing. It’s not something that is familiar to a lot of people and it seems to be something that mostly happens in the midwest region… A lot of her quiz meets are local and against local teams.  But she also travels to Invitational events–each year there are two in South Bend, one in Michigan, one local, and one in Canada (that’s next week and Momma is nervous!). My middle child also competes but he is in a  children’s league that is completely local.

We had really wanted to go to Canada with her. We were even going to pay the rush fee on our passports to get them in time. But work schedules didn’t work out in our favor. So we ended up taking time off to go the Michigan Invitational as well. It was held in Port Huron, which we now lovingly call Almost Canada.

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Home-Centered Education

I read a quote awhile back that said something to the extent of the proper way to home school is to think of home as your base, but the education should extend beyond the home, into the community and out into the world as a whole. Of course, I can’t for the life of me remember where I read that quote; I think it was in The Question by Leigh Bortins. But don’t quote me on that. 😉

Anyway, the idea is that home schooling should be home-centered but we should not treat it as a prison that we can never leave. I’ve always worked hard at getting us out of the house to do as many things as possible. Sometimes we just stay home for weeks on end, making our way through math and Latin. And sometimes we have so many field trips and weekend adventures planned that we don’t crack open a textbook at all. You never know what  a week of school will look like around here.

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