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April 17, 2018 by Karen Canon

Snakes in Ireland and Other Thoughts on Composition

Snakes in Ireland and Other Thoughts on Composition - Charlotte Mason Educational Retreat
Original photo by Nheyob – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=39732088. Modified by Karen Canon.

‘Composition’ comes by Nature.––In fact, lessons on ‘composition’ should follow the model of that famous essay on “Snakes in Ireland”––”There are none.”

While researching online for a talk last fall, I had revisited some notebooks belonging to Eve Anderson (1931-2004), a graduate of Mason’s teacher training college. In a box, alongside her Book of Centuries and Nature Note-Books, were notes she had kept from her college days. They kept notes? Yes! It seems they did. Another former student, Joan Fitch, said:–

“We had a lecture, principles of education or history, and then a member of staff giving this would leave the room and we had a quarter of an hour in which to write a report on this lecture. This was, in a sense, the narration method which could be done by children in writing if need be.”

She goes on to say:–

“This was never a criticism, it was a report, an account of, but in our own words, as the children, for instance, were asked to narrate a passage in their words.”

One such report in Ms. Anderson’s notebook is under the heading, ‘Composition.’ It appears within a series of lectures on the ‘History of Education’ and ‘Education in England.’  Appearing alongside a report on Exams under the general heading of ‘P.U.S.’ (Parents’ Union Schools), these two reports provide a point of comparison between traditional approaches and Mason’s method in the P.U.S.

I transcribe her report (below) as it reads in her notebook. These notes are not a polished report by any means; they are a record on paper of her impressions as allowed in the brief time allotted following a lecture.

It may be fitting to keep in mind that Eve Anderson was a student at the House of Education some thirty years after Mason’s death. Changes were afoot, especially after the Second World War. In their diaries, students observed changes at the college; changes with mixed implications. In 1948, one student remarked,–

“We had an innovation this term, a mixed dance for students who were allowed to invite any male friend they wanted.”

Another noted that by 1946 most students went home for their summer half-term break, rather than stay at Ambleside. Mason had deliberately chosen Ambleside for the location of her school, in part to impress a new way of living upon her students and to open up new avenues of pursuits. One could argue that long breaks could impact habits newly formed and paramount to her unique approach.

My purpose in this article isn’t to detail these Post-WWII changes nor to speculate on their impact but they are worth consideration as we read Ms. Anderson’s report on the teaching in her time on composition. More can be read about Mason’s ideas on composition in Home Education and School Education.


Composition

Form I. Children have oral compositions in the narration of tales.

Form II. Have compositions.
IIb. Can start compositions and if they are very slow they may narrate the rest of the composition if they have a lot to say. Choose stories from terms reading, therefore they have some knowledge on subject; they must have plenty of material to work on.  Avoid abstract subjects and those that need generalization and criticism. Do not teach composition; just give the child material to work on. Teach them full-stops and capital letters after but not paragraphs. Avoid the use of slang.

Subjects. Stories from:–

  1. Age of Fable.
  2. History
  3. Geography
  4. Story about a picture they have done.

First attempt at working poetry to be done in metre of poem read.
Can sometimes have imaginary subjects by the end of 2A.

Form III.
Subjects from term’s work, and current affairs.
Write letters.
No special lessons on composition.
They have more subject matter. Subjects should be varied. Write a scene for acting from a term’s book.
Letters of invitation or thanks or descriptive letters.
Subjects for imagination every now and then.
Topics of day
Occasionally own choice. Give them several days to think about it.
Citizenship gives scope. Paragraphs should be insisted on.

Form IV.
Begin to do real teaching.
Children who have read a lot will not need much teaching.
Punctuation and paragraphs.
Lessons on composition about 2 a term. Give concise description.
Compositions on Literature. Essays set on Bacon’s, Pope’s, Lamb’s etc.
There is a book to help teacher.
Tell them 5 processes in writing of essay:–

  1. Think
  2. Make an analysis of thoughts.
  3. Develop analysis into an outline.
  4. Write the essay.
  5. Read it through.

Must give at least 5 minutes to think first.
Give them lesson on different kinds of essays, descriptive, imaginative, concrete subject, topical subject, conversational, abstract.
Get them to suggest subjects.
An oral lesson on opening sentence to essays. Read them good opening sentences.
Criticize a little beginnings offered by one another.
Also consider endings.
Use of reported speech. __replied, shouted, whispered, hinted etc. instead of always ‘said’.
Enlarge vocabulary. Useful for conversation.
Lesson on description – e.g. an old sailor, do it aurally, a good meeting place, an outline of the conversation with sailor.
Pay attention to adjectives.
Building up of an essay—‘blood sports’—introduction on popularity, various kinds. one in particular. controversy on subject, writer’s own thoughts.
These lessons help with arrangement of ideas.

Poetry-4A. Look at metre of poems. Learn rules for metre.

Form V.
Introduction to précis writing, paraphrasing.
Blank verse and sonnet encouraged.


Sources:
Charlotte Mason College by J.P. Inman.
Home Education by Charlotte Mason, p. 243-247
“Notebooks from Eve Anderson” https://goo.gl/FffQKw, Box 162, Charlotte Mason Digital Collection, Redeemer University College.
School Education by Charlotte Mason, p. 178-181.
Transcript of Interview, Joan Fitch, Ambleside Oral History Group.

April 2, 2018 by Dawn Rhymer Leave a Comment

Something Beautiful

My family had gone skiing for the day, leaving me alone. My younger son expressed his concern again and again that I might be sad or I might get bored. I assured him again and again I would be okay.

Something Beautiful - Charlotte Mason Educational Retreat

My day started with goodbye hugs and kisses and a leftover burrito no one wanted. Coffee, devotions, and then I headed out to the barn. I did all the barn chores on my own, something I have not done in years. I did not rush to get through them, but I lingered with the animals. I forgot the beauty of the barn and the beauty of being alone, yet not alone, in the stillness of a gentle morning.

In our pragmatic society, beauty is often set to the side, and what a tragedy to our souls.

This quote is written in my notes from the 2016 Living Education Retreat, where I first “met” Jason Fiedler. He was the closing plenary speaker, and I suppose it was a bit of a one-way meeting. I left thinking, “Wouldn’t it be amazing if he would be able to speak at the Charlotte Mason Educational Retreat?” He and his wife drove away with my name on the list of attendees everyone received in their folders.

Move toward something and not away.

Jason’s plenary was in part responsible for the second CMER. The first CMER made its debut in February, 2016. But the planning team wasn’t sure what the future would hold. The attendance had been small; we didn’t break even; we were not known names in the Charlotte Mason community.

Your idea is worth a risk.

But we had a mission for the CMER: to build Community through a retreat more accessible to those living in the middle of our country; to provide Motivation by coming alongside parents seeking to use a Charlotte Mason education; to inspire self-Education with diverse topics and speakers; and to encourage Reflection through prayer, the Word, and purposeful times of quiet.

We own the failure, and we have very little to do with our success.

Most of the planning team was actually at the 2016 LER. As we drove home, with the providence of Jason’s words fresh on our minds, we made the decision to take the risk of a second CMER.

Others saw the amazing gift Jason has of speaking and connecting with the Charlotte Mason community, and he was invited to be a plenary speaker at the Charlotte Mason Institute Conference in 2017. Meanwhile, at the CMER, we continued to take risks, inviting Nancy Kelly to be our 2018 Plenary speaker and going under contract for the entire Hideaway Inn and Conference Center. We praise God, we had just enough registrations to cover our costs, and, with the support of our families, we committed to a fourth CMER.

There is nothing more important than the soul of your spouse.

It was my husband’s idea to extend an invitation to Jason to serve as our 2019 plenary speaker. My husband has had the privilege of reading through all of Charlotte Mason’s Volumes with Jason over the past two years as part of Art Middlekauff’s Idyll Challenge.

“Why don’t you ask Jason Fiedler?” was my husband’s simple solution.

“You actually know Jason???” Short of knowing my husband met once a month online with men all across the country to discuss the Volumes, I didn’t know much more about his reading group. I still had a very one-sided relationship with the Fiedlers. I sat next to Jason and his wife Amy during a book give-away at the LER in 2017, and Jason whispered an answer to me, allowing me to win all three Ourselves Volumes from Riverbend Press. It didn’t seem quite fair, but he had already won a book and couldn’t win again. Again, my name was on the list of attendees everyone received in their folders.

I just steal great ideas.

We hope you are able to join us at the 2019 CMER to hear the beauty of the words of Jason Fiedler, a father who is intricately part of his family’s journey of a Charlotte Mason Education, as he blesses our community with wisdom, laughter, and tears through his amazing talent as a speaker and story-teller.

What could be in something beautiful?


All quotes in italics are from my notes taken during Jason’s plenary at the 2016 LER.

March 17, 2018 by Dawn Rhymer Leave a Comment

Charlotte Mason Educational Retreat, 2019

We invite you to take part in COMMUNITY, MOTIVATION, self-EDUCATION, and REFLECTION and join us at the Charlotte Mason Educational Retreat, 2019.

WHO?

The CMER Team and the Aspen Grove Educational Community
with
Jason Fiedler

We are excited to announce the 2019 CMER Plenary speaker. We are thrilled Jason and his wife Amy have accepted our invitation to join us.  Jason has been a speaker at both the Living Education Retreat and the Charlotte Mason Institute Summer Conference.  Amy will be joining him for the opening plenary and will also be hosting break-out sessions.

Jason FiedlerJason Fiedler has always been a storyteller.  As a distracted child, struggling to find his place in a school system not conducive for a boy with undiagnosed learning disabilities, “storyteller” was rarely used as a positive label.  But now, as founding pastor of Water City Church in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, life revolves around telling the God Narrative – and helping others discover their place in it.  His wife of nineteen years, Amy, has been his patient tour guide on this Charlotte Mason journey that began in 2012.  It is his joy to be called “daddy” by their four children (ages 4 – 12).


WHEN?

Friday, February 8, 2019, to Sunday, February 10, 2019

WHERE?

Colorado Spring, CO
The Hideaway

The Hideaway - Charlotte Mason Educational Retreat
Photo courtesy of The Hideaway

INFORMATION

Registration for CMER 2019 will open in August.  At that time, cost, a schedule, session descriptions, and policies will also be available.

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