Passionate Homemaking

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Beginning Learning with Karis

baby care, book reviews, home education Add comments

Chrissy asks: I was curi­ous what kind of things do you do during the day with your little one. Do you work on any­thing edu­ca­tional or just teach her as you go.  Do you just let her be a little one with­out struc­tured learn­ing yet.  I am not for sure of her age.  Just curious?

Karis is cur­rently only 14 months, so I have not as yet sched­uled any struc­tured activ­ity time. As she becomes more inter­ested in read­ing together, I will be start incor­po­rat­ing more things this fall. She is not at that stage yet where she can sit still for very long peri­ods of time.

I love giving Karis a good amount of time to play by her­self near by me. While I am making dinner or such, she will be explor­ing. She loves learn­ing how to take things out of the cup­boards and draw­ers in the kitchen and put them back. This is all part of her learn­ing expe­ri­ence. It is also refresh­ing to allow her the oppor­tu­nity to enter­tain her­self with­out my con­stant involvement.

That being said, I am just begin­ning to use mate­ri­als such as Slow & Steady, Get Me Ready by June Ober­lan­der (thanks to Stephanie’s rec­om­men­da­tion), which has won­der­ful weekly activ­i­ties for ages 0-5. I have noticed that it assumes your child can walk at one year, week 1, which is really not that real­is­tic for Karis right now, so I have start­ing back in the 0-1 category.

Just yes­ter­day we sat down and played with dif­fer­ent con­tain­ers and lids and talked about taking the lids off and on, and which lids go on which con­tain­ers, and allow­ing her to take them off and on. This activ­ity was work­ing on such skills as match­ing, eye-​hand coor­di­na­tion, learn­ing to follow instruc­tions, etc. She really enjoyed it, but again, only lasted about 10 min­utes. It was a fun learn­ing activ­ity, and this book is full of simple activ­i­ties like these.

Karis is always play­ing in the same room while we have our family devo­tions and wor­ship time in the morn­ing, as we want to  plant the seeds of the gospel as early as pos­si­ble. I also try to read the The Jesus Sto­ry­book Bible to her while she plays beside me. This children’s Bible is excel­lent, but prob­a­bly more suited for a little older chil­dren, but just read­ing it too her is plant­ing those seeds. I love how each story in the Bible whis­pers Jesus’ name. The author uniquely writes and shows a little bit of God’s greater plan through every event in the Bible. It gives a beau­ti­ful under­stand­ing of God’s involve­ment through­out his­tory. I am learn­ing so much through this Bible!

Another resource I am excited about using is Mommy, Teach Me by Bar­bara Curtis. This is writ­ten by a Chris­t­ian home­school mother of twelve. The back cover describes it has a “user-friendly guide filled with hands-​on exer­cises that will release your child’s inde­pen­dence, sense of order, con­cen­tra­tion, self-​control, and other basic skills-​the kind of early expe­ri­ences that will give your child a life­time edu­ca­tional advantage.” I under­stand from others rec­om­men­da­tions that the author has a fun writ­ing still, and the book is very Christ-​centered.

Other than that, I am plan­ning on bor­row­ing a lot of books from the library for us to read together, and par­tic­i­pat­ing, as we are able, in the family story time events at our local library. I like the idea of a pro­vid­ing a vari­ety of dif­fer­ent learn­ing envi­ron­ments and the inclu­sion of other chil­dren and fam­i­lies. This could be a won­der­ful oppor­tu­nity to build rela­tion­ships with unbe­liev­ers in our community.

That is our plan for this next year. All in all our sched­ule will prob­a­bly include 15-30 min­utes of learn­ing time in the morn­ing, and then another 15-30 min­utes of fun read­ing time some other time during the day, and then alot of time to play, explore and learn on her own!

For fur­ther rec­om­men­da­tions, visit Stephanie @ Keeper of the Home, and her excel­lent list of resources for lit­tles. This pro­vides a lot of good ideas as Karis gets older.

I would love to hear of any other rec­om­men­da­tions or ideas for begin­ning preschool edu­ca­tion? Please share!


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13 Responses to “Beginning Learning with Karis”

  1. Casey Says:

    We use Slow and Steady Get Me Ready and we really like it! My girls are ages 4, 3, and 18 months. I also use Lead­ing Little Ones to God. It is prob­a­bly a little old for a 14 month old but I strongly rec­om­mend it for when your daugh­ter gets older! I know i have some other book titles that would be of help for a 14 month old but I can’t think of them right now off the top of my head!

    Any­ways, your blog is won­der­ful and I am glad to have found it!

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  2. Jessica Says:

    Thanks for the great resource ideas! I’ve been enjoy­ing your blog and all the great infor­ma­tion. I have a 12 mo. old boy so I find you have lots of timely infor­ma­tion for our family of three.

    Soli Deo Gloria!

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  3. Stephanie @ Keeper of the Home Says:

    Thanks for the links, Lind­say! :)

    We also use and love the Jesus Sto­ry­book Bible- it is such a beau­ti­ful way to show kids the unity of scrip­ture and how cen­tral the Gospel is to every­thing.

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  4. Lanette Says:

    We started using Slow and Steady when our second was three, and now we’ve used it from the begin­ning with our third, who is four months. We like it a lot. I don’t do every­thing, and we don’t do it all as writ­ten, but it’s a great help in under­stand­ing and prac­tic­ing developmental/educational play. We did read when our girls were your daughter’s age, but only simple Bible sto­ries and short, short books - mostly board books that had one word or one phrase per page, so that not much atten­tion span was required. A book that con­tains about one stanza of a nurs­ery rhyme or some­thing com­pa­ra­ble is about right, I think. My daugh­ters enjoyed look­ing at the pic­tures and point­ing things out when asked ques­tions about the pic­tures and so on as much or more than the actual words. We are also big fans of the explor­ing her world mode of learn­ing. We learned from John Rose­mond to baby proof as best we could and set the baby loose to explore on her own. They start out explor­ing near you, and work their way out over time. John Rose­mond also encour­ages read­ing (either fif­teen min­utes or half an hour a day start­ing from age six weeks or even ear­lier). He rec­om­mends read­ing things that have rhyme and/or rhythm, since the baby can hear and enjoy that even before the words are mean­ing­ful. I’ll have to check out the Jesus Sto­ry­book Bible. We’ve always used the NIrV Read with Me Bible, mostly because the sto­ries are fairly accu­rate and my hus­band loves the pic­tures :-) Ours recently bit the dust, though, when our ancient, pre-​children, pre-​marriage cat that can barely get around any­more threw up on it.

    Timing is an impor­tant issue in read­ing with small ones. When they’re raring to go is not the time. When they’re tired but not exhausted is a good time to curl up in mommy’s lap while mommy reads…

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  5. Kate Says:

    When I got pre­gant w/my first baby, I told my close friends and family that for the baby shower, we $don’t want the normal gifts. I heav­ily dis­like reg­istries, and refuse to ever have one. (mainly because you can’t find what you want!)

    So in lieu of gifts, I had asked that every guest bring their favorite book when they were a child. So we have tons of books, and I started read­ing to my chil­dren before they were born. That and listen to clas­si­cal music.

    So my sub­se­quent births, I asked for no shower. We had a huge get together after the baby was born to wel­come their arrival. Typ­i­cally that was around 6 weeks.

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  6. Chrissy Says:

    Thanks so much for shar­ing. I let my 13 month old play and explore and I never really pushed my other kids either and they all are very bright. Thanks for all the resources I am excited to check into them. As always I love check­ing your blog. I was excited to see my ques­tion answered. Thanks for taking the time!

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  7. Colleen Wachob Says:

    Thanks for the fun ideas! I have a two year old and a seven-​month old, and we have recently begun using the “Five In a Row” series. They have great kids lit­er­a­ture ideas along with fun activ­i­ties for kids of all ages, and include Bible pas­sages and thoughts to go along with each new book. The Before Five in A Row book is for chil­dren ages 2-4, and we have invited a friend to our home twice a week for some low-​key story and craft time together. It is a little chaotic and def­i­nitely not espe­cially aca­d­e­mic, but we have a great time get­ting our little ones together for early learn­ing at home.

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  8. Sara B Says:

    I agree that you have some great resources! You would prob­a­bly also really enjoy The Tod­dler Busy Book and a blog called Chas­ing Chee­rios. (sorry don’t have the link handy)

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    Lindsay replied on July 10th, 2008:

    Thanks for the rec­om­men­da­tions. My SIL has rec­om­mended the Preschooler’s Busy Book (which is in the same series) before and I scanned through it and it looked like so great ideas for cre­ative fun activ­i­ties for tod­dlers. It looks like the Tod­dler Busy Book is for younger ages (1 1/2 to 3 yrs), so I may just have to add that to my list of resources. Thanks!

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  9. Lauren Says:

    I came across your web­site for infor­ma­tion on kefir and then noticed this page. I home­school my 6 chil­dren, ages 3 - 16 and have done so from the begin­ning. Years ago we made a “Mama & Daddy Tape” for our younger ones which is a record­ing of us going over man­ners, char­ac­ter traits and verses, the alpha­bet, count­ing to 50, and songs that we made up to scrip­ture. We play it for them while they play or do cer­tain activ­i­ties. Taping your­selves read­ing sto­ries can be a nice for them as well, but not to replace time read­ing to the kids.

    We, also, have con­tin­ued to make up songs, we call Memory Verse Songs, to verses from Scrip­ture which we felt would be ben­e­fi­cial to learn (for all of us to learn)! They now know over 50 Memory Verse Songs, some of which are entire psalms. This is an easy way for young chil­dren to learn Bible verses. We still start out our morn­ing devo­tions with these songs.

    We also start out our day with Cal­en­dar time, using a large cal­en­dar poster (from edu­ca­tional supply stores) with cut out dates that have fun pic­tures (we cut out slits on the poster on each square/day and attach with paper clips). I’ve made up songs for the days of the week and the months of the year. This time gives more expo­sure to let­ters and num­bers as well as learn­ing prac­ti­cal infor­ma­tion. They then have a Bible story/lesson and either I or one of the older chil­dren play a file folder game with them, cov­er­ing let­ters, sounds, num­bers, Bible infor­ma­tion, etc. We learned to make file folder games from Jan Vree­land (http://​familylearning1.tri​pod.​com/​i​n​d​e​x​.html). Click on Online Cat­a­log and select Preschool for file folder games you can pur­chase very cheaply. You will need to cut some things out to com­plete the games, but this gives you a way to get started. They have a book “Games - Tools for Learning” which explains much more about game for­mats. She also does all-​day work­shops to really help you grasp game-​making. We have loved using our file folder games. All of our kids still play them.

    Hope this helps. And for the record, I’m not that musi­cal, although my hus­band plays the guitar, so just about anyone can make up songs the way I did.

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  10. M.I.A in Minnesota Says:

    Oh, I just love this age where every­thing is so new and excit­ing to our little tots! My hus­band is a ele­men­tary teacher. All through­out his col­lege edu­ca­tion and con­tin­u­ing edu­ca­tion he was taught that having a solid read­ing foun­da­tion is the best thing you can do for your child’s learn­ing career. You cannot start too early or read too much. Not to men­tion it’s a great time to take a breather and bond with your child. A great resource book my mom gave us is “Honey for a Child’s heart” by Gladys Hunt. She writes about how impor­tant it is to be read­ing to our chil­dren. She rec­om­mends many many chris­t­ian and clas­sic chil­drens book to take the guess work out of it for us. A great resource when your daugh­ter gets a little older. Read read read! :) As one of your other read­ers men­tioned above, putting things to music is very fun for kids and it sticks in their heads. We’ve over used our Hide ‘Em in your Hearts cd’s. Does anyone have any good rec­om­men­da­tions for any other musi­cal scrip­ture cd’s that aren’t cheesy?

    On another note, do you or anyone out there know of a good preschool home­school­ing pro­gram I can use for my 4 year old daugh­ter? She has been through two years of preschool already(just because I was teach­ing her older sister and of course she needed to be involved too!) I’m start­ing to run out of cre­ative ideas for her because she’s such a smart little stinker. I would love a bible based cur­ricu­lum if you have any sug­ges­tions. Thanks. Keep up the good work!

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    Lindsay replied on August 6th, 2008:

    I have heard good reports about the Five in A Row cur­ricu­lum. They have a set called Before Five in A Row that is for preschool­ers. I would rec­om­mend look­ing into this course.

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    M.I.A in Minnesota replied on August 7th, 2008:

    Thank you Lind­say for your reply. A friend of mine
    from church rec­om­mended this cur­ricu­lum too but I
    couldn’t remem­ber what the name of it was. So
    thanks for the reminder! I will check it out.

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