"For a young child, twenty or thirty minutes daily on a mother’s lap reading or playing with her was more profitable than several hours of nursery school." ~Glen Nimnicht
You don’t have to be an expert in early childhood education to know that children learn best in an environment of safety and security, surrounded by people who love and care about them. This means that your home is the perfect place for learning! There are many things that you can do to create an atmosphere of learning in your home and within your family. The most important thing is to develop an awareness of the learning opportunities that present themselves each and every day.
Parents have a wonderful opportunity to teach their children at home from the day they are born. The toddler and preschool years are an especially fun time to homeschool. That's when children are the most self-motivated and eager to learn about anything that comes their way. Homeschooling a preschooler doesn't require any formal instruction. You can simply delight in being with your child and participating in his or her discoveries.
Anyone who observes young children will see that they are constantly learning. They are naturally inquisitive and curious about everything, and they are intensely interested in exploring the world around them. All you have to do is spend plenty of time with them and give them lots of love, and the learning will automatically occur.
Homeschooling a preschooler is actually a lot like unschooling. Unschooling is a form of homeschooling in which the learning process is child-led, giving them complete freedom to choose what they learn, when they learn and how they learn. Unschooling seems to be a lifelong continuation of the more casual style of preschool education, in which children simply learn as they go, where school and life are completely integrated.
There are plenty of fun and informal learning experiences that you can do with your preschooler. Read books. Recite poems. Sing songs. Play games. Draw and color. Do puzzles. Make crafts. Go on nature walks. Visit zoos and museums. Name and count everything in sight. Bake cookies. Plant a garden. Practice sorting and matching colors and textures in the laundry. Say the names of trees and other objects as you walk down the street. Ask children to look for specific letters, numbers, shapes or colors on signs and packages at the grocery store.
You can get some basic phonics and math workbooks and/or educational computer software. However, the best learning activity is reading books together. Go to the library regularly and check out lots of books, both fiction and nonfiction. Read to your child often, even if it's reading the same book over and over again. This will develop their ear for phonics and the rhythm of the language, as well as their listening, sequencing, and comprehension skills.
Toddlers and preschoolers like to participate in whatever the rest of the family is doing. Ask them to help you around the house. If you have older children as well as younger ones, let the younger children color or do some other quiet activity while you teach the older ones. You will be surprised at the things they will pick up just by being in the same room. But do allow them to go and play when their attention span is gone.
Since preschoolers are so full of wonder and curiosity, you can utilize this learning time to its full advantage. When they ask questions like "Why is the sky blue?" don't just shrug and guess at the answer. Look in an encyclopedia or log onto the internet and find out the real answer as soon as possible after they asked it. This introduces them to the concept of looking up information and researching for facts. After all, knowledge isn't so much what you know, but rather knowing how to find it out.
Finally, relax...there's no need to hurry and no need to worry - there are no educational emergencies when it comes to preschooling at home! The home provides a convenient, integrated learning environment. Every day is another opportunity to instill a love for learning that will last a lifetime. Just go with the flow. By starting early and proceeding gradually, eventually you will find that you have covered everything they need to know.
"Proceed slowly and steadily. Don't rush. It will come. When you plant a seed and nurture it with food, water, and sunshine, you don't see it for a while. But the roots are growing, and eventually it will burst through the soil and you will see a beautiful blossom! And so it is with a student!" - Shinichi Suzuki
Preschool ABC series, by Rod & Staff Publishers. (Adventures with Books, Bible Pictures to Color, Bible Stories to Read, Counting with Numbers, Do it Carefully, Everywhere We Go, Finding the Answers. Click here to read my complete review.)
What Your Preschooler Needs to Know, by E.D. Hirsch Jr. (Designed for parents to enjoy with children, filled with opportunities for reading aloud and fostering curiosity, this beautifully illustrated anthology offers preschoolers the basic fundamentals they need to know in literature, music, history, science, and the arts.)
Comprehensive Curriculum of Basic Skills: Preschool, by American Education Publishing Company. (A complete basic skills workbook with carefully structured lessons, sequentially organized so the student can master each skill in the order of importance. Each lesson is prepared for easy teaching and a complete answer key is provided along with additional suggestions and a bibliography.)
Get Ready to Learn, by Nancy Champion Chupp. (This is a step-by-step learning program for prekindergarten children. The practical, easy-to-implement activities in this book will help you teach your child a solid base of skills. The book suggests using typical household items in activities that are already part of your daily routine. Each concept is presented many times to ensure that your child masters it. The book contains 11 weeks of activities, with several mental and physical activities for each day of the week.)
Learning at Home: Preschool and Kindergarten, by Ann Ward. (A Christian parents’ guide with day-by-day lesson plans using the library as a resource. This is a comprehensive, yet easy to use program for educating young children. It provides all of the essential basics to early learning combined with lots of ideas to make learning fun. Includes complete lessons for 36 weeks, 4 days per week. The introduction includes a scope and sequence; developmental profiles of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds; sample schedules; recommended resources; and basic equipment needed.)
Teaching Your Child Concentration: a Playskool Guide, by Lee Hausner and Jeremy Schlosberg. (The author shows you how easy and fun it can be to teach your child the essential skills of concentration with simple, enjoyable games and activities that you can play anywhere, even in the car. By fostering your child's ability to concentrate, you can help him or her to succeed in learning and life. Especially useful in this age of television and video games, with activities for preschoolers and older. Even though this book is sponsored by Playskool, the activities in this book use common household objects. Playskool toys are not required.)
Teach Your Children Well: A First Grade Teacher’s Guide for Parents, by Jay Davidson. (The author encourages parents to take an active role in their children’s education to help them become lifelong learners and responsible citizens. You will see how easy it is to include learning experiences as part of your everyday family life, build a strong foundation early in your child’s education, connect your child’s learning to all areas of school curriculum, and mold your child’s attitude to become a lifelong learner.)
Teaching Preschoolers: First Steps Toward Faith, by Thomas Sanders and Mary Ann Bradberry. (This book is designed to help preschool teachers understand how preschoolers learn and what teaching methods are best. It also helps teachers understand the importance of laying strong spiritual foundations in the lives of preschoolers. Published by LifeWay Church Resources.)
www.abchomepreschool.com/FreeActivities.htm (ABC Home Preschool has many free preschool activities like coloring pages, crafts, physical education activities, music activities, and Bible activities.)
www.preschoolactivitybox.com (Preschool Activity Box provides preschool activities, crafts, worksheets, and materials for homeschools, daycares, and parents.)
www.preschoollearningonline.com (Preschool Learning Online features themes, activities, coloring pages, printables, lesson plans, and teacher resources.)