Yes, I get one word in the English Language that is just
MINE! Binderized! On the Charlotte Mason Internet Loop, I have
acquired the loving name of "The Binder Queen." Cute huh? Well,
you can become a Binder Queen too! As a matter of fact, when you
see all that you can do with one of those three-ring binders, I
guarantee that you will be sold!
Each year, our family spends more money on three-ring
notebooks and page protectors than we spend on curriculum! I
doubt we will ever have enough...much less too many binders in
our homeschool! If you are not Binderized, you are missing a key
learning tool in the home! BUT, I will not let you miss this bug
biting at your heels...let’s look at this teaching tool!
Advantages of Binderizing!
Binders are priceless! When using Notebooking, all of life
can be used fully for curriculum. Actually, we consider all of
the treasures in our binders to be our curriculum. Any subject
or any topic can be used as the subject of the notebook! This
instills a love of learning because the child is able to develop
a personal relationship with the material at hand. They can have
their own distinct, one of a kind notebook. All of their life is
fair game for use in a binder, because the material is not
dictated to the child. The child learns that all of life is a
classroom. All of their life contains the "subjects" that
exercise skills practically as they preserve thoughts and
information collected along the way! The child can develop a
passion for the topic from their personal life and use the
notebook to keep the overflow!
Notebooking is for everyone! Notebooks are adaptable for
every style of learning. Any child can be captured by their
interests! Even the busiest child will love using their skills
to collect information on their favorite topic! Every learner
flourishes when studying areas of delight regardless of their
learning style!
Notebooking reflects the interests, individuality and
strengths of each child. The child may be more artistic...using
natural inclinations in their notebook. The child may be more
literary...using skills in a fun way. The child may be more
interested in collecting things such as memorabilia, pictures,
and nature specimens, but need a place to keep their
collections! These interests and strengths can be nurtured
(instead of allowed to lay dormant!) with the use of notebooks!
Notebooking develops a habit of writing and recording from
childhood! They learn how to draw out of themselves thoughts,
ideas, and information. They learn how to record that
information into a valuable product. This habit does more to
instill a love of learning and a love of writing than mounds of
information poured into the child could ever do! Notebooking
prepares the child for more serious study and research that is
necessary in the latter years of life regardless of calling or
profession. Notebooking encourages self-government. The child
learns to govern himself. He learns the value of setting his own
standards for his work...excellence, neatness, volume, and so
on. In turn, the child develops more than a Notebook, he
develops his own character! He develops initiative,
attentiveness, perseverance, excellence, diligence, and
patience. The child learns that the standard is determined by
his own improvement...by his own obedience...by his own
excellence of quality!
Quick How-to’s of Notebooking
Begin with one notebook for each child. We buy 3-ring binders
for our notebooks. We use plastic sleeve protectors, which
nicely protect each page whether the children are using notebook
paper or sketch paper or acid-free cardstock paper for their
pages. This allows versatility in what goes into our
notebooks...ALL goes into ours whether sketches, copywork,
samples of nature specimens, keepsakes, or photos...we find that
our notebooks can include whatever we want to add for that
subject! For things needing mounting, we use mounting tape or
archival safe glues for mounting.
When beginning to use binders for Notebooking, just keep one
general notebook containing all of the various work projects. As
you see a subject developing into it’s own notebook of interest,
take it from the general notebook and make a notebook of its
own. Matthew (my son) divided his binders this year into many
different topics: Poetry, General History, Military History,
Civil War History, Bible Verses, Book of Centuries (timeline),
Science, Scouts, God’s World Papers...so on! This is as a result
of many years of Copywork and study on these areas of
interest...child-led not teacher-directed. He does not work in
each notebook each day...just one passage of Copywork per day
and it adds up! The focus is not on the volume of notebooks or
on trying to have any (or lots of) specific topics for the
notebooks. The focus is on learning to use skills and learning
tools to encourage a lifestyle of delight-directed learning! The
purpose is to learn skills so that the writing delight will grow
naturally!
Allow your children to work back and forth on different
notebooks. "Real" writers need this change of pace and so will
your children. If they seem to get frustrated with one topic and
a breather does not bring back the passion, encourage them to
bring the notebook to a quick completion. The children need to
develop delight but not at the expense of their character. The
habit of boredom and dawdling results when the child is forced
over and over to do work that is not from the heart. Teach them
to complete all that they start in an excellent way while doing
their work from the heart! This habit will run over in all areas
of learning therefore encouraging a love of learning!
Let Notebooking become a natural part of life. Recording may
be encouraged at the beginning, but let it become their personal
journal and scrapbook! They may work in a notebook every day or
just a few times a month depending on their interest on that
topic! Just remember to use Notebooking as a tool for
encouraging your young writers. Make up Notebooks just for your
own family and their needs. There is no certain way to do the
"right" notebook/sketchbook except your own way for your family!
Copyright 1998 by Cindy Rushton
The above article was used with permission and taken from
Language Arts... the Easy Way!, by Cindy Rushton. It is
available for $20 PPD. Cindy’s 11 year old son, Matthew,
recently published his first book, after years of compiling
information in his notebook on a favorite subject - the Marines
Corps. It is called Fearless Warriors. These are available from
Rushton Family Ministries, 1225 Christy Lane, Tuscumbia, AL
35674. E-mail:
haroldr@gateway.net
Used with permission from the Homeschool Gazette