“A & B To recite a poem (each child may choose a different one), to learn two hymns, Psalm 111, and two suitable passages of six verses each from (a) Numbers, Chapter 22,(b) St. Matthew, chapter 25. IA, The Fairy Green, by R. Fyleman (Methuen, 1/6). IB, Recitations for Little Children, by G.H. Tuffley (1/-).” — from the Programme for Term 93
“A & B To recite a poem (each child may choose a different one), to learn two hymns, Psalm 84, and two suitable passages of 6 verses each from (a) Exodus, chapter 13, (b) St. Matthew, chapter 16. The Golden Staircase, (B) Vol. I., (A) Vol. II. (Nelson, 4d. each). The Fairy Green, by R. Fyleman (Methuen, 1/6).” — from the Programme for Term 92
“It is possible that the disengaged mind of a child is as free to take and as strong to hold beautiful images clothed in beautiful words as was that of this lady during her convalescence. But, let me again say, every effort of the kind, however unconscious, means wear and tear of brain substance. Let the child lie fallow till he is six, and then, in this matter of memorising, as in others, attempt only a little, and let the poems the child learns be simple and within the range of his own thought and imagination.” (emphasis mine)
“The child must not try to recollect or to say the verse over to himself, but, as far as may be, present an open mind to receive an impression of interest. Half a dozen repetitions should give children possession of such poems as ‘Dolly and Dick,’ ‘Do you ask what the birds say?’ Little lamb, who made thee?’ and the like. The gains of such a method of learning are, that the edge of the child’s enjoyment is not taken off by weariful verse by verse repetitions, and, also, that the habit of making mental images is unconsciously formed.” (emphasis mine)
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Celeste, I'm wondering what memory work looks like for your kids. I've gone through the memory work index on your blog (which seems like more than what CM expected to be done, correct? I'm feeling like I have to live up to that impressive list!!!) , but I'm interested learning more about how it's done. Do you all do memory work as a group, in a single sitting, as some people seem to work memory work into a group setting? Do you send kids off to work on it independently? Aloud or silent? Are there tips and tricks for helping aid the process (i.e. Using memory work as copy work? Writing the memory work on a board and "erasing" lines as they are learned?)
Right now, I have my son go off with his memory work and read through it all independently, but that seems so disingaged and boring for him. I thought about including it in a collective morning time, and having him read his memory work aloud to younger siblings, but that seems a bit too forced. Do your kids use a piece of memory to practice recitation (rather, can memory work and recitation be combined?) Do you have your kids run through all their memory work every day?
I'm sorry for all the questions! Thank you, as always 😉💗
Hi Rachel,
My rule of thumb has been to always be working in the categories Charlotte Mason had students memorizing in her schools. Despite not putting much emphasis on memory work, her students actually did have quite a few passages assigned each term, some quite long. I think the amount we have covered is comparable to what they did in PNEU schools, or at least that is what I'm aiming at. *However* my rule of thumb has always been to make lists we can pull from, but then just work at my kids' pace, doing the next thing on the list when we have finished. There is no list to live up to!! The amount you do will just depend on your family's abilities and priorities. 🙂
What CM did NOT include in her schools is review of prior memory work, at least as far as I know. But I find review to be both fun and valuable, so that is what I use for Recitation in our homeschool. That means we have two slots in our daily schedule: memory work (where we read or sing our new selections) and recitation (where we recite some old ones as a review).
We do not run through all the memory work each day — just a bit that usually takes about five minutes. I have our review strategy written up here:
http://joyouslessons.blogspot.com/2013/03/more-on-memorization-using-evernote.html
We do Memory Work as a family. We all learn the same hymn, folk song, Bible passage, and Shakespeare. My kids choose their own poems. We read it aloud all together in one sitting, usually. I try to make it a fun time when we are enjoying truth, goodness, and beauty through these lovely passages. So the emphasis is on appreciation, not necessarily on memorization — the memorization is the side result, if that makes sense. 🙂 They do sometimes use their memory work as copywork, but that is their choice. (They choose their own copywork for the most part.)
Hope that helps!
Yes! It does, thank you! Seeing it as a time of fun appreciation and being together really puts memory work in a different light, one I hadn't arrived at yet (being so concerned with the mechanics.) Thank you!