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The Christmas holidays abound with opportunities to
expose your children to some unique learning situations
and environments. With
already crowded holiday schedules, how do busy families
make time for one more thing? Planning is the key. Also,
you may want to reschedule some of your textbook work
for after the holidays. You are not neglecting it – just
rearranging your schedule to make the most of the unique
opportunities presented by the holidays.
Literature
Choose a classic literature
selection that is appropriate for the holidays. Here are
just a few ideas from which to choose. The reference
librarian in your public library can help you with other
suggestions.
- A Christmas Carol by
Charles Dickens
- The Christmas Box by
Richard Paul Evans
- The Gift of the Magi, a short
story by O. Henry
- The Book of Isaiah (in the Old
Testament)
Read one or more of these books
aloud, together as a family. With a little creativity
and imagination, you can make these very special times
and memories for your children. Last year, as a family,
we read The Christmas Box in one sitting,
gathered around the fireplace. We took turns reading
chapters, until the book was completed. Reading aloud
creates a unique, and rather unexpected, bond as you all
enjoy a literary work together.
I would recommend that everyone
choose the Book of Isaiah, or at least selected
portions, to read together as a family. Isaiah was a
brilliant author, employing a richness in his use of
language that is beautiful and inspiring. You can use
these readings of Isaiah during your family devotional
time.
For those of you traveling during
the holidays, consider listening to one of these books
on tape as you drive. Adults and children alike enjoy
being read to. Books on tape are a great way to redeem
the time as you travel down the road. These books have
great benefits, one being that you as the teacher can
stop the tape to point out literary devices, explain
vocabulary words, make editorial comments, and ask
questions to check comprehension and attentiveness.
Our family has listened to
countless books on tape as we have traveled. I can
remember one Christmas road trip when we listened to
O! Pioneers! by Willa Cather. When we arrived home
at 1:30 a.m. (we had run into an unexpected snowstorm),
we still had half of a tape left. We were exhausted from
a long trip and bad driving conditions, but that didn’t
stop the children from begging us to listen to the end
of the tape once we got in the house. What a great
family memory—five exhausted travelers lying on my son’s
bedroom floor by his cassette tape deck, spellbound by
good literature at 2:00 in the morning.
Regardless of how you choose to
incorporate special literature selections into your
family life during the holidays, don’t forget to
document this time in the literature portion of your
lesson-plan book. Home schooling avails itself to a
whole host of learning opportunities—learn to take
advantage of them. Your family will be the richer for
it.
Zan
Tyler is the Homeschool Resource and Media Consultant
for Broadman and Holman Publishers and Homeschool Editor
for lifeway.com. She and her husband Joe have three
children and have been home schooling since 1984.
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