Me and My House musings is no longer here!

Please go to our new home ed blog place - http://frommeandmyhouse.com/blog-led

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Blogging Here and There

This blog hasn't worked for several months, so we have moved our
Lifestyle Education through Discipleship blog to:
http://frommeandmyhouse.com/blog-led
You can subscribe to receive the posts there into your email box. Do
not sign up here, as there will be no more posts added here. You can
continue to read past posts here until we get them all moved. [All previous posts (that are here) have been re-posted at the new site.]

Our other blogs and email newsletter links can be seen here:
http://frommeandmyhouse.com/mmhhome.htm

For me and my house,
At Jesus' feet,
Lisa ~ Me and My House ministries
http://frommeandmyhouse.com
Discipleship for Life!

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

testing

Blogger has not been working for this blog since January, and unable to help me get it up and working again. So I have started a new blog - with no outside hosting. See it here and bookmark it to read future posts. Sorry for the inconvenience.

Lisa

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

In the Meantime

Greetings from Me and My House,

Much of our Discipleship for Life™ teaching emphasizes the primary importance of renewing your mind. To truly learn, it is necessary to see from the viewpoint of Wisdom, to see the Big Picture, how things fit together. Biblical learning brings forth true Knowledge, Understanding and Wisdom. It paints a glorious and non-abstract picture of God and His World. (Of course, we cannot see God completely clearly, but we can know Him as He is.)

But we will not get this clear picture from the ways of the world that we have been taught. From it we will get an abstract, fragmented, unclear picture. The ways that seem right to the natural man not only lead to death, but also bondage, the inability to think and reason Biblically about life, this world and God.

But, where do we begin? We haven't learned this way. We learned by rote and drill - cram, test, crash and forget - with the emphasis on isolated facts, not unifying Principles. What do we do with our children while we are learning to teach them?

One way to approach this is to start or leave your children in the way of the past - rote and drill, learning individual facts for a test - while you begin to learn this new way. You can do this.

But I believe there is a better way, a way that begins to, step by step, lead them - and you - out of bondage and into Freedom and Simplicity™. These beginnings will ease them into a Biblically principled education for Discipleship for Life™.

As you are slowly learning, renewing your own mind, you can begin to teach them these same new ways. Line upon Line. Can we write perfect lesson plans? No. Can we teach them something? Of course.

I believe the place to start is not with "core subjects" or the "basics", though you could, but rather with the foundation for all our teaching, the Bible. God's Word is the primary thing we are commanded to teach our children, and what we are basing all other learning upon.

Begin studying the Bible with your children today, teaching what you learn. Whatever you have internalized from your own study for Biblical wisdom can be shared with your children, and you can teach them how to learn too. Begin to teach your children how to study the Bible. The most important thing you can teach your children is how to learn. You may not know this all yourself yet, but you can apply any part of it you know - in Bible study and other studies as well. Don't wait until you know it all, teach what you know.

Begin reading with your children, both the Bible and great living books - and discuss what you read. Not just you telling them what was there, but encouraging them to discuss what they saw in the reading.

Begin reasoning with your children. Ask them questions that require them to think. Ask questions that help them to see the connection of what they are learning to the whole of the subject, to the whole of God's plan.

Begin encouraging your children to reflect on what you (and they individually) read. Encourage them to look at it from God's point of view. Encourage them to look for how it relates to them. Encourage them to write down their thoughts.

You are wanting to begin the shift, in their minds and yours, to focusing on ideas before details, to seeing cause and effect, to placing everything they learn into a Biblical context. You want to plant small seeds that with nourishment will grow over time and produce a beautiful garden, rather than handing them an unrelated menagerie of cut plants that will soon whither and die.

If you will notice, in the things I recommended to do, just natural, very basic things, you will find the methodology of Biblical learning. In L.E.D. I teaching I term this methodology of Biblical learning "The 6 Processes of Learning. As stated by Rosalie Slater in the Principle Approach, this is 4 R-ing - Research, Reason, Relate, and Record. Neither is a step by step legalistic formula, but just a way to express the processes of thinking required to learn. There is more to learn of course, but with this you will be off to a great start in Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™.

To begin your own process of renewing your mind, you may want to consider the Freedom &Simplicity™ of Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™ seminar. It will be held live in North Platte, NE on June 9 or you may purchase it for electronic download on mp3 with bonus doc handouts and powerpoint presentations.

For Me & My House,
At Jesus' feet,
Lisa @Me and My House
Discipleship for Life!™

Blogging Here and There
Order Christian and Home Ed Resources Here

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

A Peek at Our Matthew Study

Greetings from Me and My House,

Our studies are a bit off kilter this year. We normally finish various topics at the same time, but this year they are staggered. A few weeks ago we finished our study in Matthew (which I said I would post on), and this week we are just finishing up our lapbooks of Gratefulness, after adding more to this study after my mmh newsletter went out.

Some key teachings we pulled out of our studies in Matthew are outlined below:


Big Picture from Matthew: The Kingdom of God
Chapters 1-4: It is Written, the Kingdom foretold
Chapters 5-7: Kingdom Teaching: as One having authority


Chapters 8-12: A Different Kind of Kingdom Advancing
Chapters 13 (-25): The Kingdom of Heaven is Like
Chapters 14-18: The Authority of the Kingdom
Chapters 19-20: Greatness in God's Kingdom
Chapters 21-23: The King of All Kings
Chapters 24-25: The King is Coming Back


Chapters: 26-27: The King's Sacrifice
Chapter 28: The King Reigns Within


Extra study: The Name


For Me & My House,
At Jesus' feet,
Lisa @Me and My House
Blogging Here
and There
Order Christian and Home Ed Resources Here

Thursday, January 25, 2007

History Lessons

Greetings form Me and My House,

I am all for Simplicity. I also want my children to learn to think and reason Biblically and be able to recognize internal worldviews that drive external actions. Therefore we do a lot of reading and discussing together.

We are currently reading through a couple of books that have chapter long biographies of key figures God used in HisStory. They are: God's Mighty Hand by Richard Wheeler from Mantle Ministries, and Trial and Triumph by Richard Hannula.

After we read each chapter together as a family, I have one of the children orally narrate the story for us. Narration sure beats typically tests in evaluating whether the child has been attentive to and understood what was read. After this re-telling, even the younger children should be able to understand the story, as it has been retold closer to their level.

Then we begin discussing the story, looking at key aspects and reasoning from the facts to the principles behind them. As we study these people we usually follow the format of a Key Individual sheet, looking at the influences in their life as well as their influences on others.

The first thing we look at in their history/background. This is pretty factual info. When and where did they live? What was it like? What was going on in the world and in their area? How was God preparing the world for their contribution?

Next we look at the influences in their life. What was their home life like? What role did church play? What education did they have? How did their friends, books, circumstances, and others influence them? We are having to start thinking about the facts we've read and reasoning from them.

Next we look at their character. This probably isn't spelled out in the story. We will have to think about attitudes, habits, disciplines, reputation, etc. to develop this area. This will take more thought and reasoning.

Last we look at their contribution to HisStory. Not only what did the person did, but again thinking it through. How did it serve, affect and influence others?

All these things can be easily discussed with children of all ages. Younger children will need more leading to reach conclusions, but that is what we are doing - teaching them to reason. Older children will be able to go into more depth. They can take these ideas we've discussed, do further research if desired, and write a composition on the person.

To close our study we add the person to our PIPEline of HisStory, both wall and notebook timelines.

For more on teaching HisStory, see our Freedom & Simplicity in HisStory guide. Info presented here is copyrighted material from that publication.

For Me & My House,
At Jesus' feet,
Lisa @Me and My House
Blogging Here
and There
Order Christian and Home Ed Resources Here

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

What's New for 2007

Greetings from Me and My House,



Wow, so much has been going on at our house. How about yours? Are the holidays finally over? I've taken our "down time" to do some web work. I've gotten many pages and sections reformatted and updated. Oh, and a while back I added another domain name. If you find all those dashes in me-and-my-house.org cumbersome, just use frommeandmyhouse.com They'll both take you the same place, as will b4God.org



I've also revamped one of my other blogs. It now corresponds with the from my heart to yours section of our webpages on Christian Keepers at Home and Good for You-Naturally! section on health and nutrition. It is called from me and I am beginning a 7 week series there on transitioning to a Good for You-Naturally! Lifestyle of Eating. Won't you join me?



For Me & My House,

At Jesus' feet,

Lisa     @Me and My House

Blogging Here

and There and anywhere

Order Christian and Home Ed Resources Here

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Books of Remembrance IV

Greetings from Me and My House,

Hmmm, I said I would wrtie a Part 4 to conclude this series on "Books of Remembrance", but I didn't write down what I planned to conclude with right away, and I now have no idea what it was. Let me think a minute, and review. In Part 1 we covered what a "Book of Remembrance" is and why to make them. In Part 2 we covered general questions about making BOR's. In Part 3 we covered the supplies needed. So that must leave the nitty gritty details for this Part 4 - How to actually MAKE the Book of Remembrance.

But before I get into that, 2 other things.
1) See my end of the year post over at my Clear Vision blog.
2) I did remember one supply I left out of Part 3, pictures. You may want to find or draw images to enliven your Book of Remembrance. You can draw your own pictures, cut or copy them out of books or magazines, or find online clip art to print out. Add them to the your mini-books and the BOR folder itself. These will all help enhance your BOR.

Now on to making mini-books and your Book of Remembrance:

A mini-book will be made anytime you have a piece of info to add to your Book of Remembrance. If you are teaching one point per day, and/or one theme per week, it won't be hard to determine the basic "what" you will put in your mini-book. How you want to state it and what form of mini-book you will put it in is where your/your child's creativity comes in.

You may state your main point of the lesson as a "title" for your mini-book, then include some of the details you learned aobut it. You may be state things you learned as questions and answers. In teaching by Biblical principles, many times our main point is followed up by examples/applications. We also many times are looking at the internal cause or meaning and the external action or effect. The choice is totally yours as to how to present what you have learned. Again, as I stated in Part 3, do not get hung up on some supposed right way of doing this and mimicing someone else's BOR. This is for what YOU learned.

Some mini-books have general limitations which will help you choose which mini-book to make. A single Match Book presents 2 pieces of information. A Tri-fold Book presents 3. And an Envelope Book presents 4. Flap Books and Layered Books can be varied greatly in number of ideas you can present in one. I made a proto-type folder of all the types of mini-books. My children are able to look at it to determine which type of mini-book best suits the material they want to add to their BOR.

Generally, throughout the lesson/week the children are encouraged to take notes - preferably in graphic outline (mindmapping) form. for example, our weekly (or longer) theme may be the Parables of Jesus. Each day we study a different parable, looking at the meaning. The children are noting what the parable was about, its Bible reference (Book, chapter and verses) and its meaning. At the end of the week/theme, they make their mini-book. A Layered Book or a Flap Book would both be good for presenting this theme with so many different details. On the outside they may write "Parables of Jesus" - perhaps here or on the first page giving the definition of a parable. Then on each flap or bottom of the layer giving the reference and/or the "name" of the parable. Inside they can tell (briefly) what it was and what it meant.

Or how about a biography you are reading. As you read, take notes on the person's history, influences, character, and contributions. If it is a part of another study, you may just want one mini-book on this person. Perhaps make a Quad Shutter Book (that closes) for this. Put the person's name, birth and death dates and their picture on the outside. On the 4 shutters inside list the 4 aspects of their life (above) or a quality from them in the person's life, then under each shutter write examples and details.

Perhaps you are doing a whole BOR on this one person. You can use one section of the BOR for each of the 4 aspects of their life, with 1-3 mini-books each. For example, in the History section you may want to do a Timeline Book of their life, perhaps another mini-book on their childhood and one on their adult life, or one on where they lived, or what their world was like then. On the Influences section you would put mini-books on their education and other key influences in their lives. I think of Helen Keller; you'd want a whole mini-book on Anne Sullivan. In the Character section perhaps you can identify 2-3 character traits that were prominent in this person's life and do a mini-book for each, giving examples from their life that show that character trait. In the Contributions section, you will put mini-books that demonstrate their achievements in life. For example, for George Washington perhaps you'd want a mini-book on his military contributions and one on his Presidential contributions.

These are all just very small tips of endless icebergs for creating mini-books themselves. Now, what do we do with them? We keep our mini-books in zip lock baggies until we are finished with our topic and ready to make our Book of Remembrance. As you make your mini-books, be thinking ahead as to how you want to lay them out. As suggested above you may want them organized into sections or a certain order. OTOH, perhaps they can be placed anywhere in the folder. Let your eye be your guide.

When you are ready to to your BOR together, fold your file folder into a shutter fold and start laying out your mini-books. Experiment until you like the lay-out, then glue them in. Make some sort of "cover" design for the outside of your BOR. You may not want it to be a folded mini-book, but perhaps a picture and title. You can glue on these aspects or just draw/write them on.

Too many mini-books to fit in your folder? Make extentions. You may need just one extra panel, or maybe you need a whole extra folder or more. No problem, Books of Remembrance are expandable.

In this series of articles I have only given you a taste of what can be done with Books of Remembrance. I plan to devote a whole session or two to this in our Freedom & Simplicity of Lifestyle Education through Discipleship seminar, late this spring in North Platte, NE. I hope you can join us.

But above all remember, we are children of the Creator Himself, made in His image. He has placed within each one of us creativity. How can you use yours to document your learning in Books of Remembrance?

For Me & My House,
At Jesus' feet,
Lisa @Me and My House
Blogging Here
and There
Order Christian and Home Ed Resources Here