How do I get my child ready to face the challenges of this life?

Are they ready?

Your children, that is. 

Are your children ready for the future, whatever it holds? Are they ready for starting school in kindergarten? For middle school? For high school? And beyond?

Charlotte Mason (a British educator from 1842-1923) has a wealth of theory and practice to answer the question, “How do I get my child ready to face the challenges of this life?”

And you might be surprised at the simplicity of her answer. 

Mason’s writing is full of practical advice for home life with children. As leaders at a school implementing her methods, we have seen the benefit of those ideas in the classroom as we observe scores of children starting school in kindergarten, finishing 8th grade, and going on to high school, college, and careers.

Here are a few of her techniques that you can practice at home:

  • Value a schedule.  

We are all creatures of order and habit. Mason believed that we could ease life for our children in their adult years by “laying down the rails” for good living in their early days. A schedule is the best place to start that process with a child.

In the classroom, when children are starting school, the routine and schedule of the school day brings a predictable pattern and peace into the atmosphere, and the same thing happens in homes when a schedule is in place. Children thrive when there is little effort of decision around simple practices of living -- times for waking and sleeping, eating, playing, resting, and routines attached to those rhythms in the day. 

A schedule has benefits far beyond making life at home sane and manageable. It opens young minds to the idea of impersonal law and duty in a gentle and unobtrusive manner, which later bears fruit in obedience to authority. There is no “silver bullet” to responsive and obedient children, but a set routine and schedule go a long way toward forming a dutiful heart.    

  • Share work together.  

From the earliest days, children want to know they belong to a broader community. Working alongside a parent in a meaningful task is their first encounter with worthy vocation. Finding connection and joy while working invites a child into a lifelong enjoyment of effort and responsibility. 

Children delight in the adult duties of the household and want to be invited into the routine duties of daily living. Folding the laundry, putting away silverware, emptying trash cans, chopping vegetables, and pushing the mower can become joyful places to connect and form happy memories of steady effort and visible results.  

  • Spend time outdoors. 

In the wide open spaces of outdoor exploration, children begin the road to academic scholarship. The habit of attention – the most foundational for learning – is naturally cultivated when a young child follows a crawling insect into its hole or a floating leaf into the rapids. In unmanicured spaces, where there are trees to climb, mud to squeeze and acorns to collect, young children become scientists, and curiosity for “why?” lays the groundwork for all meaningful lessons from school books in their future days

It is a well spent afternoon to take children out of doors, rest under a tree, and let them run free in exploration and curiosity. Delight and wonder, fresh air and strong limbs, rest for the soul, communion with God are all good fruits of time in the field. 

  • Enjoy worthy books. 

Finally, enjoy reading a worthy book. Common joy around a book builds shared experience and relationships. Books become associated with contentment and connection when parents read aloud a worthy book to a child. 

In the evening reading time, parents have both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge is in choosing a book which both child and parent can find delight, which guards the experience from tired irritations. The opportunity is in sharing books that whet an appetite for good literature and snuggles that form memories of happy reading times together.  

At the end of the day, you’re not just starting school preparation with your child – you’re really getting your child ready for a full and meaningful life. All humans need daily doses of duty, connection, curiosity and shared joy to thrive. A few careful years spent in laying this foundation is a small price to pay for a long life of rich living and relating.   

If you have a new student entering kindergarten next year, sign up for our upcoming Kindergarten Open House. We are currently enrolling new students for kindergarten for the 2022-23 school year and have a few spots left in our classroom.

“The question is not––how much does the youth know? when he has finished his education––but how much does he care? and about how many orders of things does he care? In fact, how large is the room in which he finds his feet set? and, therefore, how full is the life he has before him?”

- Charlotte M. Mason

For the children’s sake,

Krise Nowak, M.Ed.

Head of School

Ambleside School