Friday, 19 December 2008

Self Education

The philosophical portion of our meeting in January is supposed to be spent discussing 'Self Education'. An intriguing topic for anyone involved in education of any sort.

With perfect timing, Christine has posted an item about Self Education on her blog, The Real Life Home, as part of her Charlotte Mason Basics series on Fridays. You might like to head over to The Real Life Home and have your appetite whetted for the meeting that's to come. As always, Christine is direct, humourous, and engaging, while offering lots of valuable insight into the subject.

Other than this, I'm pretty sure this blog will be quiet until after Christmas, or maybe into the new year, so, on behalf of the entire leadership team:

Blessed Christmas to all.

Tuesday, 16 December 2008

On Memorization

For anyone who has tried to memorize extended passages, be they Scripture, poetry, Shakespeare, or whatever, it quickly becomes clear that the "say a line over and over until you know it and then add another line" method really doesn't work. Nor does trying to cram it into the mind quickly before being 'tested' on it (as I and so many others I know did for English class and Sunday School); the words are there for the 'test' but fly out the window of the mind as soon as the direct attention to remembering is done.

This fall my children and I worked on memorizing a parable. Sixteen verses of Scripture. Not a huge chunk, by any means, but one of several longer portions that we've done as a family. Our memorization method was simple. I read the passage out loud every morning after breakfast, and again (most days) after lunch. Sometimes I'd read it a couple of times, but mostly just once. When it was quite familiar, I would sometimes pause part way through a line and let them finish the sentence, which they did quite easily, quite naturally, and quite happily. By the end of a month my two eldest children (12 and 6) and I could recite the passage without error. Now, almost 2 months after completing our memorization, we can still do it!

This week there is a new post on the ChildLight USA blog on memorization. Tina Fillmer has written an interesting piece entitled
Memorization "Learnt Without Labour". I hope you will take a couple of minutes to read her article. It fit so well with my family's experience this fall that I felt I ought to share the news.

If you're interested, you can read about my family's experiences memorizing the parable by visiting
PeaceLedge and clicking on the 'memorization' topic on the left.

Wednesday, 3 December 2008

Thanks to Laurel and Christine for facilitating the meeting yesterday, and to Karen for opening her home to us so beautifully.

But even more, thanks to all of you who contribute so much to the conversation each evening. Yesterday's talks about the Science of Relations and Narration were engaging partly because of the participation of so many people. I love hearing how other people work Charlotte Mason's principles into their homes and home education;the questions, too, indicate the search that we are all participating in to some degree or another. I appreciate how much people are doing to make themselves vulnerable as those questions are brought out.

What a wonderful group we have! Blessings abound!!

Sunday, 30 November 2008

Bakers, Take Note

I know that it can be a labourious task to type up a recipe, but many people are interested in the recipes for the desserts that have been brought in the past. If you have contributed a dessert or are bringing one to this week's meeting, please consider writing it out by hand and giving it to me at the meeting. Then I'll do the work of keying it in and publishing it on the blog. Please think about this.

Oh, and don't fool yourself into thinking, "It can't be my recipe they were interested in." The requests have been pretty far flung!

Check Out the ChildLight USA Blog

There is a great new blog post at the ChildLight USA blog. It broadens the vision of a CM education way beyond the limits of our own home schools, and, in reading it you will find yourself drawn into deep thought. Enjoy!

Sunday, 23 November 2008

What Do Charlotte Mason and "Naked and Blue" Have to Do With Each Other?

How many of us have desired the results of a Charlotte Mason Education: the creativity, expressiveness, deep thinking, and so much more that comes from an immersion in living literature and history, only to have it fall to the wayside under the pressure to complete curriculum, achieve tangible, measurable results, and meet (other's and our own) expectations of achievement?

How do we set our priorities for the educational pursuits of each day? Which tasks are 'musts', which skills have to be in place (and when)?

For some interesting - and entertaining - ponderings on these thoughts, hop over to the ChildLight USA blog, where Sandy Rusby Bell has written a post entitled "Naked and Blue at My Back Door".

Monday, 17 November 2008

Charlotte Mason Educational Review - Summer/Fall 2008 Issue now available

ChildLight USA has just released the Summer/Fall 2008 issue of the Review. In it you will find an article by our own Deani (!) who spent several days at Ambleside this summer, going through the archives of Charlotte Mason's works with several other CM scholars.

It also includes early information about the 5th Annual Charlotte Mason Educational Conference to be held June 10, 11, 12 and 13, 2009 on the campus of Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs, North Carolina. This year's conference theme is "For the Beauty of the Earth". Members of WHHE have attended for the past three years and it is a time of great inspiration and encouragement in our educational endeavours, while at the same time offering time for relationships to grow. It would be wonderful if we could get a van full of WHHE members to go next June! Boiling Springs or Bust!!

Sunday, 16 November 2008

New Nature Study Post at ChildLight USA

Deborah and HollyAnne Dobbins have a new post on the ChildLight USA blog, addressing common Questions and Answers about Nature Study, particularly when it is done as a formal Nature Study class incorporating dry brush watercolour once a month or so.

Tuesday, 11 November 2008

Reality: A Link

Many times, our plans are wonderful, but reality is quite different. We need to learn to let the children, our students, guide some of their own learning, to build on their own relations. Barb, at Handbook of Nature Study, has a post that reflects this idea, particularly as it relates to Nature Study. May I encourage you to hop over and read it?

Saturday, 1 November 2008

Links from ChildLight USA

  • Education is Formation, Not Information - a ChildLight USA blog post by Naomi Heidorn
  • Teaching Nature Study - Listen online to the 2007 ChildLight USA Charlotte Mason Educational Conference lecutre given by Deborah Dobbins and Holly Ann Dobbins. This link will bring you to the ChildLight USA website, where this lecture is being featured at the top of the page. Click on the "Listen Now" button.

Tuesday, 28 October 2008

Education: The Science of Relations, and Introducing Ambleside Schools International

Ambleside Schools International is an organization that "seeks to build and to serve a worldwide community of schools and training centers that provide what Charlotte Mason called a 'living education,' guiding and empowering students, parents and teachers to author lives which are full and free, rich in relationship to God, self, others, ideas, and all of creation." (From the ASI website.)

ASI's website is filled with information about the organization and demonstrates their desire to train and equip those who are interested in a Charlotte Mason education. While much of what they offer is of particular interest to those involved in CM schools, there is a lot that is relevant to home education as well.

"Ambleside Reflections" is a monthly publication of Ambleside Schools International for the purposes of advancing a renewal in education in accord with the principles of Charlotte Mason. You can subscribe to this publication by visiting the
ASI website's resources page.

The following is a recent article titled "Education: The Science of Relations", written by Bill and Maryellen St. Cyr, and is posted here with their permission. I thought it was particularly relevant as we will be diving into the Science of Relations at our next meeting.
Education: The Science of Relations

by Bill and Maryellen St. Cyr
We are now seven weeks into the school year. Administrators, teachers, parents and children are all busily engaged in the work of education. But what is this task called education? At Ambleside, we have some very definite thoughts on the matter.

We consider that education is the science of relations, or, more fully, that education considers what relations are proper to a human being, and in what ways these several relations can best be established; that a human being comes into the world with capacity for many relations; and that we, for our part, have two chief concerns––first, to put him in the way of forming these relations by presenting the right idea at the right time, and by forming the right habit upon the right idea; and, secondly, by not getting in the way and so preventing the establishment of the very relations we seek to form. (Charlotte Mason, School Education)

This brief passage, full of meaning, challenges not only how school teachers do their jobs but how all of us are to live. Its starting point is the conviction that we are made for relationship, that every “human being comes into the world” with a vast capacity for relationship. The kind and number of these relationships are as vast as creation itself and beyond, extending to the ultimate object of human relationship, God. We study nature and the natural sciences that we might grow in relationship with earth and sky, atom and quasar, flower, bird, and our own bodies. We study mathematics that we might grow in relation to creation’s fundamental physical order, the melody of number. We study history, literature, art and music that we might grow in relationship with the men, women, nations and cultures that have gone before us and perhaps through their wisdom or their foolishness catch some new glimpse of the Good, the! True, and the Beautiful. Education is not to be reduced to occupational training. It is a way of living, a deepening engagement with the riches of life, and an enhancement of the ability to thrive, even in the midst of adversity.

Given the priority of “relations,” we naturally ask, “What is it that shapes the nature of our relations?” First, we must note that relations are more caught than taught. Nothing is so likely to fan the flame of a little botanist as being with an adult who is captivated by the world of flora. Likewise, nothing is as likely to enflame the heart of the young disciple as being near an adult who is captivated by the love of God. In stating this, we do not in any way deny the fact that there is still intentional effort to be made by both teacher and student. But, an understanding of the nature and primacy of relations informs the kind of effort we are to make.

We ask the question, “If an optimal relation is to be established with number (mathematics) or flowers (botany) or God (practical theology), what is it that must be caught?” At Ambleside, we answer “right habits” and “right ideas.” “Right habits” consist not only of habits of doing but, more fundamentally, habits of heart and mind. For our habits of heart and mind always express themselves in our doing. “Right ideas” are those grounded in the Good, the True, and the Beautiful and can range from the beauty of a mathematical principle to the majesty of God Himself.

It is critical to note that the context for such habits and ideas is relationship grounded in Love and Truth. Apart from such relationship, habits quickly degenerate to dead legalism and right ideas are reduced to mere information.

I'm adding their website to the CM Links sidebar, and wish to convey to you the enthusiastic welcome that Bill St. Cyr offered us when I inquired about the article.

Monday, 27 October 2008

Read-A-Thon Information - Links and Forms - Here They Are!

Here are the links to Read-A-Thon forms:
  1. Parent letter with basic info
  2. Reading Journal
  3. Letter from Follower's Book Corner
  4. Order form from Follower's Book Corner
  5. US to CAN funds conversion chart from Follower's Book Corner

The last three items are also available through this link to the Follower's Book Corner website.

    I haven't included a sponsor pledge sheet, but I'm sure you can make something up! If you're really stuck, email me and I'll try to get one online. (peaceledge at cyg dot net OR talsma at cyg dot net)

    Sunday, 26 October 2008

    A Question to Follow-Up the Meeting from Cathy B. (who led the application portion of the meeting)

    We were unable to get to Chapter 13 on Tuesday night....my how time does fly. (I can appreciate why a clock is often placed by the facilitator!)

    After looking at my notes, there is one point that I thought I would still like to put forward to the group to ponder and maybe even respond via the WHHE site.

    On page 108, I have taken the following quote:

    "I've always been careful not to 'over-work' literature by picking it apart or by scheduling in very many suggested activities listed in those expensive study guides. One or two related activities, at most, have worked fine for us."

    My question would have been, "What kind of activities have you found to work well or not so well when working with literature?"

    Wednesday, 22 October 2008

    Read-A-Thon Information - Links and Forms Coming Soon

    I've had a couple of requests for information about the read-a-thon from people who couldn't be at the meeting or had to leave early. Please check here in a couple of days and I'll have links to the letters and forms that you can print out at home. All the information is in those letters, and if you have a question that you don't find answered there, you can email me.

    Keep watching!

    Books and Links - Now Updated

    Below are new titles in our WHHE library and links to some of the websites that were mentioned in the meeting. Please let me know if you have other links, especially for the service opportunities. The side-bar link to the library listings will be updated in a few days.


    Books
    Le Francais Facile (See the sidebar for links to the website for samples, etc.)
    Did Fleming Rescue Churchill?: A Research Puzzle - James Cross Giblin (Thanks for the info I forgot, Sandy)

    This Country of Ours - H.E. Marshall
    The Travels of Marco Polo
    The Story of Mankind - H. Van Loon

    Van Gogh and the Sunflowers - Laurence Anholt
    Kon-Tiki - Thor Heyerdahl
    Kon-Tiki for Young People - Thor Heyerdahl

    ::

    Websites mentioned at the meeting:

    Charlotte Mason
    ChildLight USA blog post by Carroll Smith about his visit to a CM school.


    Service Projects
    Knitting Blankets

    Blankets4Canada
    If you google "donate knitted blankets" you'll probably find others for international donation.

    Crocheting sleeping mats from milk bags
    An article from 2007 about one aspect of the project
    If you google "crochet sleeping mats milk bags" you'll come up with links to lots of articles like this one. Within the articles contact people are often named, so you can follow-up that way. In my very quick search I didn't find a link to a specific organization or specific instructions.
    UPDATE - Stratford Parents Online, an email group in my town, just had a posting about this project. If you want a contact number for a pattern and such, let me know.

    Read-A-Thon

    Follower's Book Corner

    Dessert Recipes Wanted

    Once again, we heard many requests for dessert recipes from the selection that was shared at the tea last night. You ladies are a gifted group!!

    If you provided a dessert at either of the meetings so far this year, would you take the time to type the recipe into an email and send it to me in an email?

    I know that it takes a bit of time to do, probably more time than to write it out by hand, but there were LOTS of requests, and this really would be an efficient way to get the recipes into the members' hands. Of course, if yours is a multi-generational secret family recipe which you have promised your grandmother never to share with anyone other than your own children, we wouldn't expect you to break that promise! But, I'm sure that most of you are like me: mildly flattered when anyone requests the recipe for something I've served (WOW! They liked it!!).

    So, please contribute to our WHHE dessert recipe compilation. As this grows we might even expand to include lunch ideas, or great crock-pot concoctions...who knows?


    Oh, and I'll soon have some of my reflections about the meeting posted. If you want to contribute your own thoughts to add to the conversation, please email me and I'll put it into a post.

    Saturday, 11 October 2008

    Poetry Post and Read-Alouds

    There's an interesting new post on the ChildLight USA blog about composing poetry and having children write narrations (exams, actually) in poetic form. The author, Bonnie Buckingham, includes two examples of the poems produced by students in grades 11 and 12.

    I've been reading a lot from Jim Trelease's book "The Read-Aloud Handbook", and I'm so encouraged to keep on keeping on with lots of reading, lots of reading aloud, lots of literature time, lots of poetry. These can be dark days of discouragement as we enter into the full impact of the new school year, the changing season, the burden of all our responsibilities coming to bloom. Reading something that is affirming what we do in a CM education, that validates so much of what we believe and know to be true about how children learn has been vital to me as I flounder around with "What am I doing" and "Why am I doing it" kind of questions. (Also vital has been interacting with other home educators and being honest about how overwhelmed and inadequate we are feeling right now - if that describes you, know that you are not alone!)

    "The Read-Aloud Handbook" is in our WHHE library and is worth the time it takes to read. Part One builds the case for reading aloud to children, even very big children, providing the theory and research in a really readable form - very engaging, very thought-provoking, very well-written. Part Two is a "Treasury of Read-Alouds" covering Wordless Books (yes, for reading aloud!), Picture Books, Predictable Books, Reference Books, Short and Full-Length Novels, Poetry, Anthologies, and Fairy and Folk Tales. He includes several themed short lists as well, such as "Jim's Favorite Kindergarten Novels," "Out-of-Print Novels Too Good to Miss," and "Jim's Favorite Dog Stories." This book is a treasure.

    Friday, 3 October 2008

    Anybody Out There?

    It's been over 2 weeks since our first meeting and I haven't heard anyone's thoughts about the year's beginning. I know we have people reading here, but does anyone have anything to share?

    Maybe it's thoughts about the meeting: comments about the community of WHHE, follow-up ideas on the topic of the night (which, in case you've forgotten, although I don't know how you could, was Nature Study and the use of dry-brush).

    Or maybe you want to respond to something that you've seen on the blog or on another CM website. Maybe you have a question to ask that others could help you with regarding a CM eduation.

    Or maybe you want to take a moment to share a sucess story from your family's experiences with a CM education. There are many options, and we'd like to have more interaction.

    There are two ways you can do this:
    1. You can email me directly (talsma at cyg dot net), putting the comments or ideas you'd like to share in that format. That way you can send in digital pictures as well and I can post them onto the blog as a separate entry with your email content.
    2. You can post a comment directly on the blog. Each blog post has a tiny little comment button at the bottom of it, and if you click on it you open up the comment page. In that setting you can write your message and post it to the blog. Photos can't go through that way, so if you have those, you'd need to use option 1. When you use the comment page, you will be asked for an i.d., but that can even be 'anonymous' if that's how you'd like to remain.

    So maybe I can start by asking a question:

    What were the things that you took away from the meeting in September? We really do want to know!

    Blessings to you all, you're a great bunch of women!

    Welcome Hannah

    One of our members, Rachel M., gave birth to her daughter, Hannah Jane on September 21, which is also her Grandma's birthday. Hannah broke her arm during the birth process and her arm is in a splint for the time being, but it is expected to heal quickly.

    Hannah has already easily passed her birthweight of 8lbs and she and Rachel are doing well.


    Praise the Lord for new birth! And congratulations from the WHHE members to Rachel and family!

    Monday, 22 September 2008

    Techniques of Dry Brush Painting in Nature Study by Sandra Zuidema

    The following are the notes Sandra has made available. If you have questions for Sandra about technique, please put your question in a comment on this post so she can share the information with the rest of the group, too.

    Techniques of Dry Brush Painting in Nature Study

    A. Keep in mind that this is nature study, not painting, drawing or art class
    • The focus is on studying nature
    • 1 minute of quiet observation
    • Allow time for kids to talk about what they’ve observed. Let each child talk. You and theycan ask questions like: “anything else”, “what is the neatest (most complicated, most lovely…) part”...
    • Time for you to talk about
      1. What you observed
      2. What you know (Comstock…)
      3. Good technique for drawing/painting it (e.g. See how the grape tomatoes are all perfectly round, how the top ones are dark orange/red but get progressively lighter until they’re green at the bottom, how they are progressively smaller…Why? What side looks like it’s in shadow?)

    B. Paint Box:

    • Use small brush (#2)
    • Transfer colour to the lid
    • Mix colours in the lid
    • Don’t wash them off; just add a little water next time and re-use
    • Keep box open until dry
    • Don’t use the green and rarely the black

    C. Painting:

    • Date, Common name, Latin name
    • Observe object from the angle you will draw it. (Sometimes the children might choose a simpler position, other times they might like to challenge themselves.)
    • Hold the paintbrush like a pencil. The bristles should form a point once wet. Paint with the point, just like with a pencil.
    • Paint the outline in light yellow as if you were drawing it. (This is the most important part of your painting because it determines the size and shape, so take your time.)
    • Work from lightest colours to darkest colours, in layers.

    D. Shadows and Definition:

    • Shadows: Shading is what will make your painting look alive, rounded, full. To find the right colour to shade with (NOT black!), take the colour of the object (e.g. yellow) and mix it with its complimentary colour (purple). Use this new colour (mud) to shade.
    • Definition: Take the complimentary colour of the object (e.g. if your flower is yellow, take straight purple) and scantily outline the flower. I usually find that putting a very thin line on the shadow side of the flower and maybe in the folds of the leaves or the heart of the flower will make it pop out. The key is to use it very sparingly, rarely using a solid line.

    Wednesday, 17 September 2008

    Dry-Brush Exercise - Nature Study in Progress

    Our specimens, laying out and ready to be chosen: Maple leaves and Black-Eyed Susans.









    The tools of work in progress: specimens to choose from and observe, sketch or watercolour paper, pencils for labelling the painting, masking tape to hold the sketch paper to a hard surface when not working at a table, #2 watercolour paintbrush. The only thing not shown here are the watercolour paints.


    A leaf outlined in yellow , ready to have colour added. Yellow is used for this first step as it is easy to cover over with green. This way you have an opportunity to perfect the details of size and shape before going to a less forgiving colour.







    A Black-Eyed Susan in process. See how the stem was done in pale yellow first, then the light colours were painted. Green will come soon.











    A red Maple leaf. Mixing the right shade is one of the trickiest parts, and intense colours can be achieved by layering the colours.













    Careful work placing shading and definition marks.






    The colour testing paper can be a beautiful thing in and of itself. There is no end to the variations of colour that can be achieved, and it's nice to have a scrap to test the colour on before it's applied to the painting.


    This Black-Eyed Susan is almost complete. Light colours are finished, the small leaf and straight, narrow stem are done, too. Details of shading and colour variation have been added. Now for the black centre.








    An autumnal leaf - just changing from green to golden-orange. This one has had details of shading added as well as dark edges for definition.








    A completed Black-Eyed Susan. Lovely in its simplicity.






























    This leaf, heavy in reds, has striking green highlighting the main vein. Notice the lighter spot on the top of the leaf? See how the painter of this specimen tried to capture that in the painting?
    ::
    Thank you to everyone who allowed their photos to be taken for this post. What a wonderful evening we shared together. We'd all enjoy seeing samples of how you've tried dry-brush with your family, so, if you have photos, please email them to Jennifer.

    First WHHE meeting of 2008 - Nature Study Notes by Jennifer Talsma

    The following was originally posted on PeaceLedge. More about the first WHHE meeting and Nature Study, including Sandra's notes on dry-brush, photos from the meeting, etc., will be posted within a few days.

    Tonight two sweet friends and I led the application portion of our Charlotte Mason study group meeting. We were asked to speak about Nature Study and to teach the dry-brush technique that we had learned at the ChildLight USA conference in June. What follow are portions of my notes from my part of that talk.

    Nature Study

    As the we were preparing this section of the meeting, we were struck by how much Karen Andreola’s chapters [33-35 in A Charlotte Mason Companion] reminded us of a session on Nature Study that S. and I attended at the ChildLight USA conference in June, led by Deborah and HollyAnne Dobbins, mother and daughter nature study teachers at a CM school in the south. So as I talk about these chapters, I’d like to weave in things from the Dobbinses, leading up to S's instruction in a dry-brush watercolour exercise that we experienced at the conference.

    First of all, why do we do Nature Study? Karen says that in a Charlotte Mason education, there are two main reasons.


    The first is that it establishes a relationship between a person and creation. On page 255, Karen quotes Charlotte Mason:



    "We are all meant to be naturalists, each to his own degree, and it is inexcusable to live in a world so full of marvels of plant and animal life and to care for none of these things."

    Volume 1: Home Education, Page 61


    And the second reason is because it points us to the Creator. Karen quotes Audubon, also on page 255, to illustrate this:


    "When I had hardly learned to walk, and to articulate those first words always so endearing to parents, the productions of nature that hay spread all around were constantly pointed out to me. . . My father generally accompanied my steps, procured bird and flowers for me, and pointed out the elegant movements of the former, the beauty and softness of their plumage, the manifestations of their pleasure, or their sense of danger, and the always perfect forms and splendid attire of the latter. He would speak of the departure and return of the birds with the season, describe their haunts, and, more wonderful than all, their change of livery, thus exciting me to study them, and to raise my mind toward their Creator."

    John James Audubon quoted in A Charlotte Mason Companion by
    Karen Andreola, page 255




    Always looking at the creation and the Creator, nature study is not inteneded to be intense scientific investigation but to build a relationship between the student and the one (or One) being observed.
    The next question becomes HOW? How do we do nature study?

    Sometimes it comes about informally, as you’re going for a walk to friends and one of the children sees a bird, or an insect, or a leaf skeleton along the sidewalk. Take a moment or two, observe it, and when you get home, try to describe it and locate it in a field guide or draw it in a nature journal.

    Karen’s book has lots of suggestions for small nature study projects that you can do with your children whether you are in town or country. Chapters 34 and 35 are full of ideas. A key element in each one, though, is the Nature Journal. It is here that observations are recorded – dated entries that include drawings, poetry or prose, personal reflections about the item being journalled. This is simply a book, any kind will do, really, as Karen tells us in chapter 33: blank or lined, hard bound or soft cover; Karen even says that small children might prefer to work on loose paper and mount only the entries they choose to keep into their notebooks.

    We have kept nature notebooks sporadically since my oldest was about 5, and you can look at my family’s samples as well as S and L’s after the meeting (you can see some of our samples by looking at the Nature Study topic here at PeaceLedge.
    L's are posted at "the world as we see it". I'll see if S will offer photos or a links for hers). These things do become treasures to the children over time. They see how their observation skills are expanding, and how their ability to accurately represent what they observe is growing, too.

    You’ve heard me use the word observation many times already. Well, Karen points out in her first paragraph on page 253, the importance of observation when it comes to nature. Observation is how we come to know the natural world, how we come to care about it. Without observation there is no chance of a relationship.

    I found this passage written by Charlotte Mason:

    "In Science, or rather, nature study, we attach great importance to recognition, believing that the power to recognise and name a plant or stone or constellation involves classification and includes a good deal of knowledge. To know a plant by its gesture and habitat, its time and its way of flowering and fruiting; a bird by its flight and song and its times of coming and going; to know when, year after year, you may come upon the redstart and the pied fly-catcher, means a good deal of interested observation, and of, at any rate, the material for science.... They notice for themselves, and the teacher gives a name or other information as it is asked for, and it is surprising what a range of knowledge a child of nine or ten acquires."

    Volume 3: School Education, page 236

    Do you see the emphasis on observation, of accumulation of visual details which get sorted, collated, arranged, and categorized by the children on their own? This is the ‘common knowledge’ that precedes science teaching – and continues alongside it. This was something emphasized by Deborah and HollyAnne. They would take their students to the location they had selected for observation, and each student would choose a specimen. Then the students would return to their seats (or, if the whole class period was being held out of doors, they’d find a spot to sit) and they would silently investigate their specimen for a full minute. They would carefully turn their flower, looking at it from every angle, seeing what they could discover about it, handling it gently so as to preserve its beauty.

    After that minute of observation, they would tell a partner what they had seen. During this time, the student listening was required to remain silent and attentive – his turn to share would come. It was amazing when we did this in the workshop, the number of details that our partners came up with that we hadn’t – and vice versa. There is a world of beauty and detail in each specimen, just waiting to be discovered!

    I want to quickly add that Nature walks and nature journaling are not Science instruction time.
    Charlotte writes in volume 3:



    "The teachers are careful not to make these nature walks an opportunity for scientific instruction, as we wish the children’s attention to be given to observation with very little direction. In this way they lay up that store of ‘common information’ which Huxley considered should precede science teaching; and, what is much more important, they learn to know and delight in natural objects as in the familiar faces of friends. The nature-walk should not be made the occasion to import a sort of Tit-Bits miscellany of scientific information. The study of science should be pursued in an ordered sequence, which is not possible or desirable in a walk."

    Volume 3: School Education, page 237

    Nature study is a gentle time, a calm time of observing creation, and having our eyes raised to the Creator.

    We want to give you an opportunity to try the dry-brush technique that we learned from the Dobbinses in June. I had been very intimidated about entries in our nature journals – I’m not an artist, our pictures were poor representations of the specimens we were choosing, and painting? Well, painting sounded like a lot of effort, so we stuck to pencil, pencil crayons, even going as far as watercolour pencils and crayons, but sometimes not even adding the water afterward! I wanted to try it, and having done it in the workshop I realized how very accessible it is. We considered demonstrating it only or having an opportunity to try it after the meeting if people chose to, but felt that the greatest benefit would be in trying it yourselves, seeing how easily it can be done.

    A couple of things to keep in mind are that ideally the students should be silent during the dry-brush time. This is a time for quiet work – observing, reproducing. Sometimes Deborah and HollyAnne play soft music, other times there is complete silence. When the painting is done out of doors, the sounds of the environment naturally provide the backdrop.
    The children’s work is not to be criticized or corrected, although using a step-by-step method to label the drawings, and so on, will encourage careful work and accuracy.


    Always remember that the goal of this exercise is observation and a greater reverence for the Creator, not perfect representation of the specimen. If we wanted that, we’d take a photograph, and even that wouldn’t be perfect. No, the point is that the children spend time looking, learning to love what they see and the One Who made it.


    For more on the Nature Study topic at the WHHE meeting, including S's notes about dry-brush technique, visit the post on the WHHE blog. Those items will be posted in a couple of days.

    Wednesday, 10 September 2008

    Theatre Goers

    Twenty people, all connected in some way with WHHE, attended a matinee performance of Romeo and Juliet at the Stratford Festival Theatre on Wednesday, September 3. It was a great pleasure to be able to start of our year of living education with such a treat!


    (one family left before the photos were taken)

    If you're interested, you can read my brief post about the production at PeaceLedge.

    Monday, 1 September 2008

    100 Species Challenge Link Corrected

    Well, if you had tried to click the link to the challenge instructions in my 100 Species Challenge post, you probably found that it didn't work. I've fixed the link in that post, and I've made a link to it here. I encourage you to take a look. It appears to be a great idea for cranking up your family's Nature Study times.

    Friday, 22 August 2008

    Deani's Research Trip to Ambleside

    This summer Deani and a handful of other CM researchers spent time at the Armitt in Ambleside. It's true! Deani was there!

    You are all invited to read about the time she spent there and to view the stunning pictures of the Ambleside environs on the ChildLight USA blog. This is a direct link to her post and from that post you can read previous posts on the ChildLight blog. There's a treasure of knowledge and encouragement there!

    Welcome home, Deani! Pack me in your suitcase next time - although I probably weigh more than a printer/scanner/computer/recording device all put together. Hmmm. But, then again, I'd help you carry your bags once we arrived!

    Friday, 15 August 2008

    One Hundred Species Challenge

    Sandy Rusby Bell pointed me to this great idea. The point is to familiarize yourself with 100 species of plant life within walking distance of your home. Read the whole post to get instructions on how it works. It sounds like a great way to kick-start nature study for the new school year. Even if you don't blog yourself, you can do this in your nature journals, or even email this blog and share your information here, that way we can all benefit from what each of us learn. Do any of you think you'll give it a try? Please leave a comment if you plan to participate in this challenge.

    We're getting ready to start school again after a wonderful summer of travel, play, and simply change of pace. Keep watching for the 2008-2009 meeting schedule which you'll receive in your inbox as well as post here on the blog.

    Blessings to everyone these last weeks of summer!

    Jennifer

    Friday, 25 July 2008

    A Dangerous Adventure by Art in Kenosha

    If you haven't done so yet, please read Art's article on the ChildLight USA weblog. It is a beautiful description of the unity of life, the lack of separation between life and education, of the transforming power of a living education. It is powerful.


    This blog will be quiet for a while. I'm off to Colorado for 2 1/2 weeks and am so far the only one with access. See you again in mid-August. Jennifer

    Thursday, 17 July 2008

    Formation of Character

    Have any of you been following the discussion about Volume 5, Formation of Character, on the cmseries email list? We'd love to hear comments about it here and get some conversation going.

    You're not too late to join the discussion. They're moving along at a relaxed speed and are discussing "The Philosopher at Home." Next week begins the chapter titled "Inconstant Kitty." Both are interesting to read and have been relevant to me in my family. (I'm not naming names, though, to protect the innocent! *grin*)

    Anna Botsford Comstock

    Through the Handbook of Nature Study blog, which we've referred to a few times in our meetings, I was directed to an interesting little article on the Internet: In 1988 Anna Botsford Comstock was inducted into the Conservation Hall of Fame.

    Isn't it exciting to know that Comstock has been recognized for the contributions she has made to Nature Study? And to think that many of our children (as well as us!) are benefiting from her wisdom and insight.


    I believe that she'd be honoured to be recognized in such a meaningful way, don't you?


    In her book, Comstock emphasized the rewards of direct observation. She was ahead of her time in stressing the importance of natural relationships that work to form what we now call an ecosystem. The point of her approach to nature study, she said, was to "cultivate the child's imagination, love of the beautiful, and sense of companionship with life out-of-doors."

    -- From the Conservation Hall of Fame Website

    You can read about other inductees by visiting the National Wildlife Federation's inductee page.


    Tuesday, 8 July 2008

    CM Series - Volume 5 study

    Well, ladies, last year there was a lot of talk about Volume 5 being a foundational resource, and guess what? CM Series has just launched a study of Volume 5 (Formation of Character), led by Art Middlekauff. We've had the pleasure of meeting Art and his wife and children at the ChildLight USA conference the past 2 years, and Art is a highly articulate, thoughtful, well researched individual. He's been a frequent contributor to the CM Series discussions in the past and has set the schedule for Volume 5, which includes posting questions to contemplate and discuss as you read each section. The book has been divided up to be completed over the next 7 months, and I'm attaching the schedule below. If you want to be part of the email discussion, you need to sign up for the CM Series group.
    If you don't own your own copy of Volume 5, it is available online
    in original form and in a modern translation. If you want to read it on a portable device, Art has formatted it to eReader for Palm OS (personally, I don't know what that is, but if it means something to you, go for it!)

    Here is Art's note to the email group:

    On Sunday we will begin a study of Volume 5, "The Formation Of
    Character". The plan is to cover the book in seven months. May the
    Lord add His blessing as we read, discuss, and apply.

    Here is the week-by-week schedule:

    7/6 The Preface of Volume 5 (not the general preface, just the last six paragraphs which are the specific to Volume 5), and "The Philosopher At Home" to the top of p. 10.
    7/13 "The Philosopher At Home" concluded
    7/20 "Inconstant Kitty"
    7/27 "Under A Cloud"
    8/3 "Dorothy Elmore's Achievement" Chapters 1-3
    8/10 "Dorothy Elmore's Achievement" Chapters 4-6
    8/17 "Consequences"
    8/24 "Mrs. Smedley's Tale"
    8/31 "Ability"
    9/7 "Poor Mrs. Jumeau!"
    9/14 "A Happy Christmas To You!"
    9/21 "What A Salvage!"
    9/28 "Where Shall We Go This Year?"
    10/5 "The A-B-C-Darians"
    10/12 "A School-Master's Reverie"
    10/19 "A Hundred Years After"
    10/26 "Concerning The Schoolboy And Schoolgirl" to the top of p. 196
    11/2 "Concerning The Schoolboy And Schoolgirl" p. 196 to the middle of p. 216
    11/9 "Concerning The Schoolboy And Schoolgirl" concluded
    11/16 "Concerning The Young Maidens At Home" to the middle of p. 253
    11/23 "Concerning The Young Maidens At Home" concluded
    11/30 "Two Peasant Boys"
    12/7 "A Genius At 'School'" I - IV
    12/14 "A Genius At 'School'" V - VIII
    12/21 "A Genius At 'School'" IX - XI
    12/28 "Pendennis Of Boniface"
    1/4 "Young Crossjay"
    1/11 "Better-Than-My-Neighbour"
    1/18 "A Modern Educator: Thomas Godolphin Rooper"
    1/25 "Appendix: A Few Books Dealing With Education"

    Blessings,
    Art in Kenosha

    I hope you'll enjoy reading along with us and having light shed on these terrific passages by a multitude of 'beings breathing thoughtful breath'.

    Jennifer

    p.s. - Thanks Sandy, for the email to everyone that inspired my adding this to the blog. Why didn't I think of that earlier? - J.

    Friday, 20 June 2008

    Feasting on Ideas: Reflections on the 2008 ChildLight USA Conference - by Sandy Moore

    Have you ever gone to some fantastic buffet restaurant and stood perplexed in front of all the amazing and diverse dishes, feeling somewhat intimidated with all the choices? I must admit that at first glance of the ChildLight USA conference schedule I felt somewhat overwhelmed at the depth and richness of the topics and workshops available to partake in. Truly this was a feast spread before us, but the food all looked so good and so tempting how was one ever to choose between the various forms of nourishment available? I felt a little like a kid in a candy shop! Here I was in a CM educators' paradise and I was paralyzed to know where to begin!

    My first choice of breakout session, “Education is a Discipline” (all about habit formation) launched me into a fantastic few days of inspiration, learning, fellowship and reflection. It was not long before I realized that no choice was a bad one...each discussion, each plenary session, and even the informal meal time chats were opportunities to be inspired and make connections, to be affirmed in my vocation as a home educator and my calling as a mom. Of course I did not understand every definition, idea, or concept presented and at times I had to laugh at myself wishing I had my dictionary in tow to look up some heady term like epistemology or pedagogy. But for the most part I was in my element, a land of plenty, flowing with milk and honey.

    One particular session I have been reflecting upon since returning home was the session entitled “On Parallel Tracks: Mason and Vygotsky” by Tammy Glaser. I almost skipped this session as it fell on the last morning and I was feeling rather sleepy (having indulged in more than one late night chat session). I was also feeling rather cranky about having to wrap my brain around the many unfamiliar terms I had glanced at in the session summary of our handbook. Words like "scaffolding”, “parallel tracks”, “zones of proximal development”, and “Vygotsky" (who the heck was he anyway?) seemed to dampen my enthusiasm for attending this lecture, but at the last moment I sauntered into the hall figuring I had come this far and even if I picked up a couple of good points it would be better than having to pack my suitcase (which is what I would have done otherwise).

    It turned out to be the pivotal lecture of the whole conference for me and I almost missed it! You know it reminds me of the times when I ask my dear husband to get some condiment or other from the fridge and he stands there with the door open looking puzzled: “I just can’t find it,” or, “It’s not here,” the familiar refrain followed by my typical, “What then is this?” as I lift the desired item from right in front of his nose.

    For some reason I hadn’t seen it before but this lecture, and the points outlined within it, had the effect of turning on the lights for me. From Behaviourism to Relationships… that’s it! That is what all of my efforts at creating an atmosphere, a discipline, and a life are all about. And now Tammy Glaser was able to show me real, practical ways to actually put this into action. Scaffolded learning went from being a vague undefined mysterious concept to a solid framework of real-time tools that I can use "today" to help my young learners engage in the educational process in an emotionally healthy way. Terms like Dialog, Shared Understanding, Joint Problem solving, the Zone, and Self Regulation suddenly took on new meaning for me. These are not just abstract ideas but the keys to unlocking a healthy educational life that does not depend on the behaviouristic techniques of drill, reward, and punishment. Now this was something I really needed to hear and really needed to absorb. Oh, yes, these ideas are not new to my thinking but the implementation strategy has always been rather vague for me: How do we actually move from Behaviourism to Relationships? How do we know we are really doing this? Which techniques are best? I needed someone to lay them out side by side like Tammy did and point the way. This is the essence of our efforts as CM educators: building an educational process that is vibrant and living without external pressures and artificial expectations.

    I feel equipped now and much more confident...sort of like my kitchen cabinets have all been cleaned and organized and I am ready to try out some new recipes. Indeed the educational life is like a feast and these ideas have been nourishment to my soul. I am so thankful to have had the opportunity to taste and I will continue to digest this food for many weeks to come. As always a good meal is better shared and I can't wait to hear how others have been nourished as well.


    ( Editorial note: We look forward to a series of reflections on the ChildLight USA CM Conference in Boiling Springs, NC. Thank you, Sandy Moore, for pulling together the first post. We invite all you you to come back again later to see the other posts as they are added.)

    Thursday, 19 June 2008

    ChildLightUSA CM Conference Notes - Part One


    The ChildLight USA CM Conference was wonderful. We are so thankful to have been able to share it with more members of the WHHE. Seven of us were able to take part and came away full and inspired in our home education efforts.


    We hope to have several posts about the conference, and my sincere desire is that each woman who attended would be able to share some of what she experienced and learned while there. The formal posts for this blog will begin soon, but in the meantime, you can hop over to PeaceLedge where I have posted about my experience with Nature Study and dry-brush watercolour. Here's a teaser, though, so you can see what this 'non-artist' learned:


    More to come,


    Jennifer

    Monday, 9 June 2008

    Boiling Springs, here we come!

    Bright and early tomorrow morning I'll hop in my van and head out to pick up two other WHHE members who are driving with me to Boiling Springs, North Carolina for the ChildlightUSA Charlotte Mason Conference. Another three ladies are flying down, and one is bringing her whole family (but leaving the kids with grandparents in Virginia).

    We are so excited to be going we're about to burst!

    Fifteen hours of driving will bring us to our destination, and then we will enjoy three and a half days of wonderful plenary sessions, breakout sessions, networking, and processing. Not to mention the fabulous southern hospitality!

    This is an annual conference, and maybe next year you, too, can join us.

    Thursday, 29 May 2008

    Childlight USA's Charlotte Mason Conference Coming Soon!

    Less than two weeks and we'll be on our way! Six of the ladies associated with WHHE are going to be attending the 4th (?) annual CM conference at Gardner-Webb University in Boiling Spring, North Carolina. It's not too late to register, and we still have room in our van if you care to car-pool down with us!

    Saturday, 24 May 2008

    Laurel's Fruit Crisp Recipe from the Last Meeting

    Laurel brought a delicious crisp - it was so-o-o-o successful that she only had a tiny piece left to bring home for her husband! Hope you make it lots and enjoy it every time.

    Rhubarb and Mango Crisp

    Chop up enough rhubarb and mango to fill a 9"x13" greased pan. Mix in a tablespoon of flour and a scoop of sugar depending on how sweet your rhubarb is. About 1/2 - 3/4 cup. Pour this mixture into the pan.

    In a bowl, mix together 1/2 cup butter, 1 cup rolled oats, 1 cup flour and 1/2 brown sugar. Also add 1 tsp of cinnamon. Spread this topping over the fruit.

    Bake for about 30 minutes in a 350'C oven.

    Serve warm or cooled with whipped cream or ice cream.

    Laurel adds: This is my own adaptation of various recipes from over the years and from numerous people. The same topping works with any kind of fruit. Adjust the ingredients to your liking or "what I have in the cupboard right now".

    Friday, 23 May 2008

    Year End - Nature Study and Reviews by CM

    The content of this year-end meeting was two-fold: philosophical, led by Liz; and application, led by Sandy. There was so much content and I'm finding so much great stuff to think and write about, that I'm going to split it into at least two separate posts.

    Liz led the philosophical portion and succinctly summarized and highlighted portions of the reviews Charlotte Mason had written of three different works: The Moral Instruction of Children, by Felix Adler; Education from a National Standpoint, by Alfred Fouillee; Faith, by Rev. H. C. Beeching; and an article by General Booth in Darkest England; all found in volume 2 (Parents and Children), Chapters XI -XV.

    What I find to be some of the best quotes from reading and discussing those chapters are the following (including my own comments for some of them):


    "But it is singular that so few educationalists recognise that the Bible is not a single book, but a classic literature of wonderful beauty and interest; that, apart from its Divine sanctions and religious teaching, from all that we understand by 'Revelation,' the Bible, as a mere instrument of education, is, at the very least, as valuable as the classics of Greece or Rome. Here is poetry, the rhythm of which soothes even the jaded brain past taking pleasure in any other. Here is history, based on such broad, clear lines, such dealing of slow and sure and even-handed justice to the nations, such stories of national sins and national repentances, that the student realises, as from no other history, the solidarity of the race, the brotherhood, and, if we may call it so, the individuality of the nations. Here is philosophy which, of all the philosophies which have been propounded, is alone adequate to the interpretation of human life. We say not a word here of that which is the raison d'etre of the Bible, its teaching of religion, its revelation of God to man; but, to urge only one point more, all the literatures of the world put together utterly fail to give us a system of ethics, in precept and example, motive and sanction, complete as that to which we have been born as our common inheritance in the Bible." Vol. 2, Ch. XI, p. 104


    When my husband and I had been married for 4 years, before we had children, we spent a year in south western Russia. That in itself was exciting, but what was more exciting was the reason for our being there. In the early 1990's, when Communism had collapsed in Russia, the whole moral and ethical structure of their society collapsed with it. They had no more backbone or ruler by which to bring up the next generations of Russian children into lives of great character and integrity. So what did they do? The Russian Ministry of Education turned to Western Christians to provide them with a curriculum of Christian Ethics and Morality based on the life of Jesus Chirst. They were making no claims to validate the theology of the Bible, but they certainly recognized this very thing that Charlotte Mason said nearly a hundred years earlier, that the Bible provided a fully comprehensive "system of ethics, in precept and example, motive and sanction"! Truly a miraculous period of Russian history to have been a part of!

    The Bible's position as the holy Word of God, God-breathed, living, and inspired, is, in my mind inseparable from its value as a moral code, as a literary work. He planned it that way. But in the context of this statement by Charlotte Mason, we also recognize its value as the ultimate educational tool for all children. (And through that educational tool, might it be that some will come to know the God of all Creation for themselves? We pray that it may be so.)

    ____________________

    "I am inclined to think, too , that fairy tales suffer in vigour and charm when they are prepared for the children; and that Wordsworth is right in considering that the very knowledge of evil conveyed in fairy tales under a certain glamour, is of use in saving children from painful and injurious shocks in real life." Vol. 2, Ch. XI, p. 107

    ____________________

    Regarding Bible stories:

    "The child is not an exegetical student. The moral teaching, the spiritual revelations, the lovely imagery of the Bible, are the things with which he is concerned, and of these he cannot have too much...Read your Bible story to the child, bit by bit; get him to tell you in his own words (keeping as close as he can to the Bible words) what you have read, and then, if you like, talk about it; but not too much." Vol. 2, Ch. XI, p. 109, 110

    ____________________

    Regarding a Child's Inducements to Learn:

    "The motives proposed for seeking knowledge are poor and inadequate: to succeed in life, to gain esteem, to satisfy yourself, and even to be able, possibly, to benefit others, are by no means soul-compelling motives. the child, who is encouraged to learn, because to learn is his particular duty in that state of life to which it has pleased God to call him, has the strongest of conceivable motives, in the sense that he is rendering that which is required of him by the Supreme Authority." Vol. 2, Ch. XI, p. 114

    ____________________

    "Probably the chief source of weakness in our attempt to formulate a science of education is that we do not perceive that education is the outcome of philosophy.../we are content to pick up a suggestion here, a practical hint there, without even troubling ourselves to consider what is that scheme of life of which such hints and suggestions are the output...What we have to do is to gather together and order our resources; to put the first thing foremost and all things in sequence, and to see that education is neither more nor less than the practical application of our philosophy." Vol. 2, Ch. XII, p. 118, 119

    ____________________
    "As has been well said, 'Sow an act, reap a habit; sow a habit, reap a character; sow a character, reap a destiny.' And a great function of the educator is to secure that acts shall be so regularly, purposefully, and methodically sown that the child shall reap the habits of the good life, in thinking and doing, with the minimum of conscious effort...Educate the child in right habits and the man's life will run in them, without the constant wear and tear of the moral effort of decision." Vol. 2, Ch. XII, p. 124

    This is pure Charlotte Mason, a quotation we've all heard parts of so many times that it seems to almost embody the whole of what people think of when they hear "Charlotte Mason". As with so much of her writing, she addresses is so directly that it seems obvious, simple even. But we know that it is not so. Much of what we do as parents and educators comes from moment-by-moment action, not from the well thought out plan that she describes in horticultural terms here. And without that plan, there is no laying down of the rails of good habit. There is simply then a fly-by-night, come-what-may approach to education. It comes back to whether we have a philosophical spine to our educational approach, or whether we are grasping for whatever technique is current, appealing, popular, or what have you. (See the quote directly above the one I'm commenting on.) It isn't simple. Charlotte Mason doesn't say that it is, although she does present it very directly, very matter-of-factly. It it truly hard, truly challenging, and, in the long run, truly effective and rewarding.

    ___________________


    "As we have had occasion to say before, in this great work of education parents and teachers are permitted to play only a subordinate part after all. You may bring your horse to the water, but you can't make him drink; and you may present ideas of the fittest to the mind of the child,; but you do now know in the least which he will take, and which he will reject. And very well for us it is that this safeguard to his individuality is implanted in every child's breast. Our part is to see that his educational plat is constantly replenished with fit and inspiring ideas, and then we must needs leave it to the child's own appetite to take which he will have, and as much as he requires. Of one thing we must beware. The least symptom of satiety, especially when the ideas we present are moral and religious, should be taken as a serious warning. Persistence on our part just then may end in the child's never willingly sitting down to that dish any more." Vol. 2, Ch. XII, p. 127

    You heard me comment on this one at the meeting, so for fear of not stopping when I should, I'm just going to say "Stop When It Is Enough!"

    ____________________

    "...we shall most likely be inclined to agree with his conclusion that, not some subject of mere utility, but moral and social science conveyed by means of history, literature, or otherwise, is the one subject which we are not at liberty to leave out from the curriculum of 'a being breathing thoughtful breath.'" Vol. 2, Ch. XII, p. 127-128

    I simply love the last phrase here, speaking of our children as 'beings breathing thoughtful breath.' It's poetry. It's rich. It's all that I long for my children to be.

    ____________________
    If you have others that you really liked or would like to have conversation about, please, please, please comment below. This blog is intended to be an extension of the dialogue begun at the meeting, and what I, or any other post authors, write in my posts isn't meant to be definitive.

    ____________________
    The discussion about Nature Study was really encouraging for me, and, judging from the engagement of so many of you, I'm guessing that it was for you as well. The next post will look at some of the comments that came out of that conversation and will include some links to websites and blogs that were mentioned.
    Blessings to you all,
    Jennifer

    Thursday, 22 May 2008

    Mother Culture? Or Just an Excuse to Indulge?

    Our year-end meeting always includes dessert.

    I suppose it's a way to ease the pain of not being able to sign out any books from our library collection of several thousand volumes, and it does distract me from that, but a living book is a lot easier on the hips than the delicious goodies that were served up last night. Thanks to everyone who contributed with a special dessert for our meeting last night. After hearing so many people asking for recipes, we decided that this would be a great forum for sharing the ones that were brought, so, if you brought something special to the meeting last night, email me (talsma@cyg.net) and I'll make sure your recipe gets included in an upcoming post. Scroll down for the first recipe.

    Strawberry No-Bake Cheesecake

    2 cups graham crumbs
    1/3 cup margarine, melted
    4 packages (250g each) light brick cream cheese, softened
    1 cup plus 2 Tbsp. sugar, divided
    1/2 cup strawberry jam
    16 fresh strawberries, chopped
    3 cups thawed light Cool Whip

    Mix graham crumbs and margarine; press onto bottom of 13x9-inch pan. Refrigerate while preparing filling.

    Beat cream cheese spread and 1 cup of the sugar in large bowl with electric mixer until well blendd. Add jam; mix well. Place strawberries and remaining 2 Tbsp. sugar in small bowl; mash with fork. Stir strawberry mixture and whipped topping into cream cheese mixture. Spoon over crust; cover.

    Refrigerate 4 hours or until firm. Store in refrigerator. Makes 20 servings.

    (This recipe came from the Summer 2008 Kraft "What's Cooking" publication.)