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Thursday, May 4, 2006
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Notes on PNEU History Curriculum
In the PNEU schools,
English history and, as children grew older, the corresponding French
and world history, were studied in a cycle covering 4 years. A child
studied English and world history 3 times over the course of their PNEU
career. Ancient history was studied entirely separately.
All of the first 8 years (Forms I-III) studied the same period of history at the same time. Years 1-3 (Form I) read Our island story, Years 4-8 (Form II) used A history of England
by Arnold-Forster. At least 3/4s of the children beginning school
didn't begin their study of English history at the beginning, and
Charlotte Mason didn't feel that it mattered a bit. If a child remained
in the PNEU schools, eventually they would come to the end of a cycle
and finally begin at the beginning.
Once literature started to
be coordinated with history, different years read different books,
depending, I would imagine, on the children's readiness. For instance,
for the period 1649-1714, Year 4 read The children of the New Forest, Years 5-6 read Peveril of the peak, Years 7-8 read Old Mortality, The holy war, and Robinson Crusoe. Thus, children completing all 12 years at PNEU schools hadn't necessarily read all the same books.
In my compilation of the
PNEU curriculum, I did begin at the beginning with Year 1 and returned
to it in Year 5. The Literature portion of my compilation/synopsis is
still only in its 2nd draft, but in it I tried to list the books that
all the years would have been reading for any given period.
Years 9-12 (Forms IV-VI)
also covered all of English and world history, but in a slightly
different way. Years 9-11 (Forms IV-V) began at 1485 and followed a
3-year cycle. Year 12 (Form VI) always studied the medieval and earlier
periods. I don't know why this was so. Perhaps it was because the
corresponding literature presented linguistic challenges that were more
appropriate for older children or perhaps older children would have
been better able to deal thoughtfully with ways of living so different
from their own.
10:20:00 AM
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PNEU Bible Curriculum
Because I am Episcopalian, I was very interested in how Charlotte
Mason, a fellow Anglican, approached the teaching of the Bible.
I've put all the Bible passages covered through the years into one
sequence. I find it very interesting that she didn't introduce the more
"theological" parts of Scripture--the Epistles and the Prophets--until
quite late. For the first eight years or so, she focused on the
children's simply learning "the tale of the loving purposes of God from
the first days of our disobedience" (the Bidding prayer, from the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols)
The Bible Sequence is with the rest of the PNEU Curriculum.
7:49:23 AM
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Saturday, April 29, 2006
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PNEU Curriculum notes
The (v. 2) and (v. 3) after the name of a subject refer to which
version of my work is input. (v. 2) means second draft and (v. 3) means
third.
The main difference between the drafts is that, after I had input the
second draft, I checked every book mentioned in OCLC, the main library
cataloging database. At the time, I was living within walking distance
of a public university and could use its library. In the second draft,
the titles and authors of books are as they appear in the term
programmes. In the third, they are as given in library catalog records.
If there was a subtitle, I added it; if an author's birth and death
dates were available, I added them as well as the author's full name;
if subject matter wasn't clear from a title, I added a brief
description taken from subject headings or content notes; I also added
number of pages. An asterisk before a title in a (v. 3) section means
that I couldn't find an OCLC record for it and so information on it is
less detailed.
A smaller difference is that, in the third draft, I tried to move away
from dividing the work into 3 terms and to think of it as spread over
an entire year, but I haven't been entirely successful in this.
9:11:01 AM
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Thursday, April 27, 2006
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PNEU Curriculum
Although it is far from finished, I have decided to post my Charlotte
Mason/Parents' National Education Union (PNEU) curriculum project. I
have been working on it since 1998. The foundation is laid, the
superstructure is in place, most of the walls are up, but there is
still a lot of work to be done and I can only do it slowly.
In 1998, I ordered a number of the Parents' Union School term
programmes from the Armitt Library. When I discovered that they were
insufficient to answer all my questions, I ordered more. I am very
grateful to the Armitt for preserving this material and to Dr. John
Thorley for photocopying and mailing it to me.
I am working with programmes 90 through 100+ for Forms I-IV and
programmes 133-143 for Forms V-VI. The programmes for the lower forms
were published during the last few years of Charlotte Mason's life and
presumably reflect her latest thinking about her curriculum.
Unfortunately, there was not a long run of programmes for the upper
forms from this period; however, all that I know of Elsie Kitching's
(Charlotte Mason's successor) work convinces me that she was very loyal
to her mentor's practice and would not have made more than minor
changes. Some much later programmes that I scrounged from several kind
people have been helpful in clearing up confusing points.
I tried to compile the curriculum for each form, to discover how it
connects with the curriculums for previous and succeeding forms, to
write it up in a way that makes sense to people who are accustomed, not
to fluid "Forms" through which children move on the basis of ability
and achievement, but to fixed "Grades" through which children progress
by age, and to pare away unnecessary details that would distract from
its shape and flow. I tried to report without interjecting my personal
interpretations, but sometimes judgment was required in the interest of
simplicity or sense.
To me, this compilation is not an end in itself, but only a necessary
first step--learning exactly what Charlotte Mason did so that we, 100
years later, can begin to create on the basis of her experience and
insight a curriculum for all the children entrusted to us.
9:34:39 PM
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© Copyright
2006
Victoria Waters.
Last update:
6/1/06; 10:23:22 AM.
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