Category Archives: introduction

First day of School?

first day of school 1980As THOUSANDS of children head off to school today, it’s a great time to remember what that institution is… it’s ONE of the venues your child attends where they learn. Your home, the world, their friend’s house, the shops… the park, the beach, the *insert here* is another. LEARNING happens regardless, no matter where they are.

However, schools deliberately try to make children learn, and this doesn’t always work… which would be fine except schools ALSO test your child’s learning. That brings stress into learning. Tutoring YOUR own child can help to reduce that stress. It can improve test results, make learning easier and school more enjoyable. Tutoring is ‘assisting a student to understand what HAS been taught’, not teaching from scratch.

As you kiss them goodbye and then wait until you see them again, see if you can remember what it’s like to be excited to go school…. remember that first flush of new pencils and new school bag…. those new books!!!! The anticipation was INTENSE, hey!!!!

Then came the stress and then the boredom…. between the stress and boredom IS WHERE YOU FIT IN!!!! Catch them at the first sign of stress and help them to cope… that’s what tutoring REALLY does.

Happy to answer any questions you have, your questions may help others. Hope today is AWESOME for everyone!

What we do…. and then some

In the wee small hours…before crashing into bed (probably literally at this stage) I’m reminded that I need to share more of what we actually do with home education if this blog and my website link are to be in anyway useful.

Well their dad was a blacksmith when she was born!
 
Oh wow… that foil covered shield looks shiney!
Battle time… the only time they fight!

 

  • Monday Morning Meetings… we gather and go over what each of my munchkins want to do with their week academically, socially, inside, outside… what ever really. Then I raise the topics of what I feel would be good to cover and we discuss all of what we’ve raised. From this we write up a plan of things I need to do, they need to do, places we need to go, things we need to buy etc. Usually we come up with other things during the week but I have a written record of the conversation so I can monitor what is going on during the week, make comments, suggestions, give reminders etc. This process works best for us and stops us falling into the common unschooling trap of everyone going off to do their own thing, nothing gets done, gaps in sequential learning develop and well… we genuinely miss each other! It may seem strange, but when we’re off doing our own thing we may not see each other all day! Now that both of my children are capable of independent research they get heavily invested into what they are doing. Another aspect is Continue reading

Listen to our children, observe and understand them

In the last post we covered observing children as they go about learning. In this post we will extend that observation into all areas of our children’s lives. You may think that you don’t have time to watch your child but once you start you’ll find that less and less time is needed. Let’s use an example.
Do you remember when you first met your child? There was a time when they took up your whole day. motherhood in 2001Because you had to you got to know when they were hungry, soiled, bored, tired and their patterns of temper, attention and hopefully sleep! Their patterns may have changed over the years but they are still there if you take the time to observe. You probably already know that your teen is a night owl or that you can’t expect your young child to stay awake too long at night. Even as adults we can get irritable when we are hungry, it’s just human nature.
Now let’s have a look at your child’s usual week, as there is generally a recurring pattern due to their timetable of commitments. Sleep, eating,  regulation of time with daily duties such as school or extra curricular activities, or even engrained habits of checking emails, switching on iPods or regular texting times play their part in ‘regulating’ your child. It’s their way of forming habits. Once you know your child’s habits you’ll know when they are the most alert, when they are generally the most tired/hungry and therefore moody and also when they are choosing to do a task or when they are being forced to do a task. This is a key point. If you know when your child is doing something because they want to, but at times it seems as though they don’t it could be because they just don’t feel like doing it at that time of the day or week but they have already programmed themselves with the habit of doing it. They may not have lost total interest in a subject, it’s just that their enthusiasm for it is not in line with their energy.
There are not many of us who really enjoy the repetitive job of cleaning, attending boring classes or

cleaning time

doing homework. Our children show their emotions more freely than us and although it may entice us to feel frustrated with them, or at them, they are only saying what we would probably feel if we were in their shoes. Yes, I don’t want to clean this messy room either, but I will because… well why? Why do you clean? Why are you the responsible one? It’s because it’s expected and you are used to it. Also you know that no one else will do it for you.
Now we’re getting right into the low motivation end of childhood. For all their get up and go we also have times when our children just won’t get up and go and do anything! If you put in the time and effort to observe them as learners, observe their routines, become more accustomed to ‘their perspective’ in life and truly try to walk in their shoes, you can be in the prime position to help your child. It’s certainly not an easy task and will require you to leave your ego at the door! This time of observation is not the time to think of what you would do in their shoes. It’s only through building up the genuine love you have of them and accepting them for who they are, just as they are that you can see them clearly. No judgement and no advice, just observation.
At the end of the day they will keep growing and one day go. When they do what will they do? Who will they be? Will they be living their life to please other people and repress themselves only to feel always a little less than truly happy? This doesn’t have to be their future. The first key point mentioned above is to ‘know’ your child through observation. The next key point is to get to know them from their own observation. Discussion, communication, time together will make any situation change. You are by far the most important person in their world. We are still very much creatures of habit and as we like our structure, stability, regular food and shelter we also like to know we are wanted, loved and that those people who chose to have us still want us, like us and are very much interested in our lives.  Your child could be struggling with a foreign language course that you have no idea how to help them with but by being interested, open, observant and making it about ‘them’ and not you, they will naturally try that bit harder and with their lessons in Swahili, course book and tape you don’t actually need to speak the language it’s self. Here is an example:
Child sits down at the dining table ready to do Swahili language homework. Looks at book, flicks though without actually reading, makes a ‘humpf’ sound and closes the book looking around the room.
You could say “Get on with it” “Have a go” or many other well meaning motivating statements but the child is clearly saying “I’m really not interested in this and I can’t do it easily and I really don’t want to do it” So why not just ask the question “Are you finding it hard to get started?” Even if your child answers back in a short ‘yeah’ noise you could ask “Why?” Now you can sit back and listen. Avoid giving advice and just wait until they slowly come up with ideas themselves. Just as with a shoe that needs tying a bow what needs to be done will come to the child eventually, even if it’s a phone call to a friend from their Swahili class for advice. You should always try to avoid doing things for your child that they can do for themselves. If you do butt in and take over the message they receive is that you don’t have the confidence in their ability to do it themselves.
Confidence in ourselves as parents and our children’s confidence in themselves, without unnecessary boasting can leave us all to feel free and comfortable in helping others. Home Education Week celebrates not only people’s choice to educate their own children but the amazing communities that help each other all over the world. Home educated children are well known to be generally confident, social and able to make friend’s easily. This is due largely to them not having peer pressure to deal with, having multi aged friends to learn from (older children have been there, done that and they can be good role model’s in turn for their younger friends). The other reason home educated children tend to be so well adjusted socially is because they have dialogue with their parents daily about things that matter to them. In short they tend to feel ‘listened to’ on a daily basis.
 Making ‘listening to our children’ a part of our daily routine can bring back the enthusiasm for wanting more in life, more from ourselves and more learning that can so easily slip away in over scheduled lives. One day off work and school, just staying home may seem incredibly drastic, but if it is doable take a chance! Stopping the machine just for one day so everyone can catch up with themselves and each other could make a huge difference.  The key is listening, not talking, fixing, directing or ‘teaching’. Tutoring your child is like being their aid, always there if they need you but more than often they want to drive their own life and their own learning experience. You just help out when they feel they can’t do something by observing whether or not they really can’t do it, helping with the minimal of fuss or reminding them, lovingly, that they can do it themselves.

Swahili language book image courtesy of worldnextdoor.org

Observe your child as they learn

Yesterday we touched on the subject of kindness as November 13th was World Kindness Day. One of the kindest things parents can do is to observe their children and try to work out what they are doing, thinking and feeling from the child’s perspective. It’s only once you are within that prime zone of understanding what they are doing and why that you can purposefully help them. Barging in without this knowledge is interference; whether good or bad, it is driven by the parent’s desire to take over and not the desire to help the child to help themselves.
Independence is not something that can be taught theoretically, it must be experienced. Slowly with sometimes hundreds of errors we gradually become more and more independent away from our primary caregivers. By observing this phenomena with your own child you can see it at work. Take tying a shoe lace for an example. At first the child may want to do it themselves but due to time restrictions it is done for them over and over again until this pattern is engrained and the child becomes accustomed to it. No longer do they try to do it themselves or even desire to. That desire is replaced by an expectation that it will be done for them. This is a step ‘away’ from independence.
Of course we don’t actually want our children to become more dependent on us. The thought of having our adult children never going to work, not paying their bills on time or even bringing home their washing at the age of 35 isn’t necessarily what we as parents desire when we look at the 5 year old child not tying their own shoe laces but it can very well be a potential outcome. It is only through allowing our children to learn themselves, to teach themselves during these formative years that they grow the mental muscles involved with learning. If we fast forward to the future we may find an adult who finds a sense of liberation after years of having things done for them, who is certainly very eager to be independent, but this often comes after years of frustration during their childhood.
An opportunity to have a happy childhood free of trauma was an aim that was mentioned in the last post in this series. As it is the second day of Home Education Week it seems fitting to take time to observe your child doing a task that they find difficult. The aim is to try and understand what they are doing, what their reasoning is, what they may be thinking and feeling as well as staying out of the way and not interrupting. It’s helpful to grab a piece of paper and a pen, or some quick recording device. Write down as plainly as possible what they are doing.
Example:
Amy is sitting at a table using a pencil to draw a circle on a piece of paper, her left hand is holding the paper steady. She has drawn about 14 circles and then colours in one that is a very good circle.
This may have taken 5 minutes to observe and may seem very simple. Here we see Amy using a pencil to  draw a circle. That doesn’t appear very exciting. It doesn’t have to be exciting though, it is the work going on underneath the surface that is exciting for Amy. The concentration, the ability to hold the paper steady at the same time as improving a drawing technique. The ability to criticise her own work and choose a circle that most closely matches a perfect circle. She is demonstrating ability and understanding, desire to learn and ability to learn. In this one simple act the parent can observe their child teaching themselves something that interests them and getting better and better at it.  It doesn’t matter how old Amy is, how well Amy draws compared to same aged peers or that the circles are not perfect, all that matters is now the parent is in a zone of understanding what their child is learning about, what the child’s aim is and what the purpose is; drawing better circles.
No matter how badly the child is performing the task resist the urge to help. The only time help should be given is when immediate danger is present. Also resist the urge to praise when a child completes the task. Keep observing to see whether or not your child is happy with their work. You may be surprised to see the child abandon the task once it’s done, or smile to themselves or unravel all of their work only to start again.  Why would this happen? If you don’t know then do an observation and try to work it out. Your child is an amazing teacher. You may even find that the praise they give themselves is building self esteem or that unravelling their work is the reward as they can now complete the task again without the errors.
Generally speaking the younger the child the more often they will repeat the task. Building connections in the brain is complex and physical work. In the next blog post we’ll go into helping your child to take on new learning and to take on difficult work they may be avoiding, whether it is reading, writing, maths, calculus or washing their own clothes! We will also discuss how you can know nothing about a subject yourself yet be in the prime position to help them forge ahead with their understanding of that subject.

This time for sure… passion for education is just something we have!

So once again we are experimenting with ‘what works for us’. Since the birth of my first child I have put all that I had learnt (from teaching, tutoring and babysitting) into a fast paced practice, being both proactive and patiently observant!

I’ve taken my ability to help friends, family and ‘strangers on the street’ with my advice on how to help their children achieve educationally, to a more professional stage, launching http://www.tutoryourownchild.com.au/ in July 2007. Since then I have changed from loving the life of having an online business, juggling a busy schedule that also accommodated home educating both of my children (I have two children), which was the motivation for starting my own business. Recently we have been ‘enjoying’ the daily trips to two separate schools and with some time free during the day I’m now writing a book, which has a more user friendly not to mention quick and handy approach to helping parents and caregivers than my hour long consultations.

The decision to enter my children ‘back’ into school was based on an opportunity for them to attend two excellent local schools (a public school and one of the two Montessori Preschools in Newcastle). I have known about these schools for many years and being able to move and live locally was an opportunity too good to miss out on! It’s rare to have schools ‘fit well’ with how your children learn ‘naturally’.

Natural learning is what we, as a family, are about. That is our choice, based on … well, our children! I have the pleasure of living with a very caring and intelligent duo who know themselves well. Although only 7 and 4 they are independent, from making their own breakfast in the morning to putting themselves to bed at night, and they are still as interested in experimenting, spontaneous learning and finding out why ‘by discovery’ as ever!

Before I read anything about Maria Montessori I was raising my daughter along the same method, based on what I have found works in ‘best practices’. Being a Primary teacher I’ve been very fortunate to learn how we learn… and I’m still surprised that Montessori isn’t taught as standard training given that her method has over 100 years of proven history and results.

Although this has been a fruitful year of learning in itself, we have once again discovered that ‘self education’ suits our family best (in particular my eldest child). So from next year onwards we are committing to Home Education permanently. This was a commitment that I had made and have always had at the back of my mind that we may return to it. It’s not something that has happened overnight, but rather has been 4 years in the making. It may not be for everyone, and I hope that by reading our blog others may learn about this ‘easily achievable’ choice – as it IS a choice available for EVERY parent/caregiver. You certainly do not need to be a qualified teacher to home educate your own children JUST as you didn’t need to be a lactation consultant to feed your baby or a Nurse to bath and change them either. All it takes is a willingness to learn and a commitment to continuing the hands on parenting often only enjoyed with pre-school children.

I hope that this blog, which will be about our journey as a family to educate our own will help other parents to have more courage when helping their children with their learning. We are going to be sharing one model, but it is my hope that through example we may pass on information that could be useful for anyone in any situation. This includes anyone home educating/schooling, parents that help with homework or anyone bewildered and wanting to help their child achieve socially and academically.

I’ve had the delight to tutor children since 1990, and there are MANY things that I have learnt from my students. The first gem I’m going to include in this week’s blog, the first of many, is that you DON’T NEED to know everything about a subject in order to tutor it. I once tutored a young girl in Japanese and French (as well as about 7 other subjects!) We had a brilliant year together and her marks in Japanese alone jumped from the low 70′s the the high 90′s! And I don’t speak more than a few words of either to this day! (I know the word for old woman/grandmother in Japanese because that is what my student jokingly called me!) It’s not about what YOU know as a tutor, because a teacher has already ‘given a lesson’ at school. There are already books with the information in them. As a tutor you are a ‘guide to THEIR learning’… any good guide watches that the person travelling is having fun, avoiding pot holes in the road (or the occasional boulder) and in general that the young adventurer is ‘gaining’ something from the experience.

The next time you sit down to help with your child’s homework, ask them “what do you want me to do?” and with some relaxed good humour, let them take the lead… it’s their learning after all!

Good luck, and if you have any enquires or questions please feel free to comment on this blog… our answers together may help others!