United States 1 - High School:
This week Wyatt has been learning about The Second Continental Congress and the Declaration of Independence in history. He prepared to give a topic oral narration by listing topics as starting points for a new part of the narration in his US1 HOD History Notebook. Phrases of names, dates, places, etc. that were important were jotted down to help jog his memory. He then referred to these notes as he narrated orally. This activity has so many important skills in it! They are skills I used in college often, and I am glad he is leaning to utilize them already now. He now takes notes and refers to them as he speaks very naturally. It just flows, and he is at ease as he speaks. Another great activity is his responding in writing to critical thinking questions from
Great Documents in U.S. History. So much more depth is brought out from the readings by the pondering of these critical thinking questions. And then reading actual
Great Letters in American History alongside these assignments - well, what could be better than the actual letters, word for word, written by these amazing people from history themselves! It is like being transported back in time and really being able to 'know' that person through his/her very thoughts and words put to paper...
A Noble Experiment has Wyatt researching various court cases and their findings, and he finds it incredibly interesting. It appeals to his sense of right and wrong, and he is beginning to see the importance of being able to 'support' your opinion by citing the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, etc...
The US1 History Notebook is not just a place for Wyatt to record his thoughts and written answers. It is also a beautiful visual reminder of that which he is studying, and every picture, portrait, document, historic memorabilia, etc. has its purpose and is used in some way, shape, or form for assessing what he has learned. This week, after Wyatt watched his
American Testimony DVD, he referred to the beautiful pictures in his US1 History Notebook as he orally narrated about each portion of the DVD he'd watched. Being comfortable speaking while referring to diagrams, photos, documents - this is a key skill he'll need for whatever future job he will probably have. He is already becoming quite comfortable with it, and I can envision him giving a power point presentation with notes quite adeptly someday.
Being an accomplished writer that can convey thoughts and opinions clearly in an accurate interesting way - this is becoming a lost skill for many teenagers. NOT SO, with HOD! The steady diet of completing Charlotte Mason style written narrations inspired by reading timeless living books has made responding in writing to a topic quite easy for Wyatt. Now, this was not always so. I only have to pull out his beginning fledging written narrations from CTC to be reminded of how far he has come. But, oh, it is so exciting to me to see the progress! Where many high school students stare at the blank page with no confidence of how to begin, he can begin writing immediately. Why? Because having completed countless oral and written narrations in the past, he knows from experience one must THINK about what one is reading while one is reading it to be able to respond to it afterward. Pretty important stuff if you ask me.
So, oral narrations with index card planning, critical thinking questions, and written narration assessments all work together to help our dc learn to internalize and respond to what they have read in an active thoughtful way. So much better than completing a multiple choice quiz every time.
Wyatt is loving his living library book "Give Me Liberty." He also enjoys the journal follow-up he does after reading it each day. It allows him to personally respond to what he has read, while also encouraging the habit of watching for quotable passages as he reads...
Finally, here are some other snippets of Wyatt's week I snapped some pics of...
In Christ,
Julie