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Unit Studies 101 --
Excerpt
By Amanda Bennett
Please note: This article is excerpted from Amanda's new book,
Unit Studies 101. The material is copyright-protected - please honor the
copyright.
For more information about the complete book,
visit Unit Studies 101.
Excerpt from Unit Studies 101:
Just exactly what is a unit study? After all, they are in all of the
catalogs, talked about in the magazines, and people in the support groups rave
about them. What are they? Why can't we just all use textbooks for curriculum?
Just as with clothing, shoes, or so many other things in life, even for
curriculum,
We all know that there is no such thing as "One Size Fits All!"
This generation of young people is much more visually oriented - unlike in
generations past where television wasn't around and life was centered on small
town life and waiting for the mail - the stimulation to learn came through
reading books and newspapers, local people sharing their experiences, and
learning by doing. People would share their experiences about wars, travel,
and life in general. Through books and newspapers, people could travel to
places that they never thought they would see in person, learn about people
around the world, and gain a better understanding of our country and the rest
of the world - all by using words to help them create pictures in their heads
and a better understanding of life.
These days, with video games, DVDs and so much more, kids are typically very
visually stimulated. Just think about a trip to your local huge mega-store.
How many TV monitors are suspended along the main aisles, blaring away with
the latest products, movies, music, etc? If you go through the electronics
department, you can usually find crowds of kids around many of the
demonstrations game display monitors or computers, waiting their turn to try
out the latest games. Even a trip to the local grocery store provides
entertainment from continuously running commercial monitors and TVs running
latest movie releases.
So, in this day and age of so much visual stimulation and entertainment, how
is it that we still rely primarily on textbooks to educate our children and
excite them about learning? The textbook approach works well for some people,
and not as well for others. Unit studies provide more of a hands-on approach,
using all of the senses and keeping the student's mind looking for answers and
understanding.
"Unit study" is the name given to a type of curriculum tool where on topic is
taken and looks at, or studied from many different aspects. They are called
"cross-curricular" in approach, looking at the given topic across many areas
of learning including science, history, geography, literature, and others. A
unit study your hand and spin it like a globe, looking at the various
components in all three dimensions.
How does this compare with textbook curriculum? First, understand that
textbook curriculum is broken down by segments or areas of specific knowledge.
For example, a textbook curriculum for a third grader might include a science
textbook, a social studies textbook, a language arts textbook, readers, a math
textbook, and perhaps a health textbook, along with many assorted workbooks
that accompany these textbooks. Each textbook contains summarized information
regarding key topics that the publisher has chosen to be important for that
particular age and grade of learning, summarized in the publisher's scope and
sequence.
With that said, I must say that I was educated using a textbook approach in
both public and private schools. There was not much that I looked forward to
during my years of schooling, with the exception of our weekly library visit,
which was very brief. I loved to read real books, and I tolerated textbooks -
the faster I could get through with them each night, the more time that I had
for some "real" reading. I was an excellent student, and made good grades -
but I was never really challenged to think or wonder or reason.
It wasn’t until I arrived at engineering college that I realized just how
short-changed my education had been! When I had my first exam in my first
engineering class, there were two questions and five blank pieces of paper -
no “True/False” questions, no “Fill in the Blank” questions, no “Circle the
Correct Answer” questions - time to panic! I had been educated all those years
to memorize the bolded words, answer brief questions at the end of the
chapters that were about the bolded words, and regurgitate information that
had absolutely no real meaning in the big picture of life. I had to learn how
to think, really think and reason, when I got to college, and I look back now
and wonder what I might have done if I had been educated in a different way.
Which leads us to the next question that I am asked frequently -
“If I use unit studies, won’t there be holes in my child’s education?”
My first response is to ask if they recall ever finishing, completely
finishing a textbook during their own education. This really makes people
think, and then they usually reply that no, the don’t remember finishing a
textbook - there were always chapters left uncovered at the end of the school
year.
I remember looking ahead at the chapters at the ends of the books,
particularly the science textbook, and getting excited about the material that
was coming after we reviewed the basics, once again. I don’t recall ever
finishing a textbook - ever. I do recall hoping that perhaps the next school
year we would pick up where we left off in the textbooks, finally getting to
the good stuff, only to be let down again with a new textbook that once again
began with the basics.
So since most of us never finished the bulk of the textbooks used on our own
education, do we have “holes” in our own educations? Speaking for myself, yes!
I have huge gaps - the equivalent of the Grand Canyon. However, I do know how
to find answers, thanks to teaching our own children. I am firmly convinced
that teaching our children how to find answers is a vital obligation that we
must fulfill in this day of information overload. As the world becomes so
interconnected, the abundance of information available to humans is absolutely
overwhelming.
If we can teach our children with interesting materials, challenging them
to think, reason, analyze and dig deeper for further information, we will find
them to be well-educated and ready to move on to a lifetime of challenge and
questions and adventure. While we will never be able to teach a child
everything, we can certainly teach them these things, providing a strong
foundation and knowledge tree that they will utilize for the rest of their
lives. Unit studies provide a powerful tool to accomplish this task.
Unit studies teach the student to look at things from all sides, gaining a
better and more complete understanding of the topic than if they had learned
about it in bits and pieces over twelve years of education. In many textbook
scope and sequence listings, you can see how divided up one topic can be over
the course of a "standard" education. For example, the child might learn about
sea animals in the third grade, animal classification in the fifth grade, and
cells in the seventh grade.
While using a unit study approach over a four week period, your family could
learn about sea life and its classifications (both plant and animal), as well
as a simple study of plant and animal cells using pond life from a nearby
park. The children would get the whole picture at one time, instead of
spreading it out in segments over years of learning. With a unit study
approach, perhaps you study ocean life as a general topic initially, and in a
few months time, return to the topic to study oceans and world geography, and
at some time in the future study marine biology in greater depth, adding to
the solid tree of knowledge that has been built steadily during the
educational process.
From studying shrimp legs and pond life under a microscope to performing surf
and tidal wave experiments in the wading pool - lasting memories are being
made and a sound information foundations is being laid. Our children became
self-motivated key players on the unit study team, asking amazing questions
and coming up with ideas all their own. The understanding obtained through
unit studies and the hands-on learning process is amazing to me, a first-hand
participant in the study. We all learn together. Do you know what Michelangelo
said on his 87th birthday? "I am still learning."
"Example isn't another way to teach, it is the only way to teach."
Albert Einstein
For more information about the complete book,
visit Unit Studies 101.
Please note: This article is excerpted from
Amanda's new book, Unit Studies 101.
The material is copyright-protected - please honor the copyright.
"I was extremely impressed with
Amanda Bennett’s new Unit Studies 101 on CD-Rom and I cannot
recommend it enough. It’s value is unsurpassed for the typical homeschooler. It is so much more than another
"how to teach" something. It
is a valuable educational tool that includes hard-to-find resources that
will help you understand yourself, your children, your learning and
educational goals, how to create a learning environment and make the most
of your homeschool experience.
Throughout the CD - in every
chapter there are links that will take you to web sites or to documents
that give you more details and explanations on the subject at hand. For
instance, in Chapter Three, entitled How We Learn, Amanda has carefully
researched the developmental needs of children at every stage and has
provided links to important documents such as Bloom’s Taxonomy of Learning
Skills, a link to an extensive document entitled Learning Styles and
Strategies published by North Carolina State University, a free online
learning styles assessment, study sheets with helps for every type of
learner and other links like “Overview of Learning Styles”, “Making Your
Learning Style Work for You”, “Index of Learning Styles Questionnaire”,
“Learning Styles and Homeschooling” and much more.
Now that’s just in one chapter.
Because of the extensive and comprehensive use of technology, this “book”
on a convenient CD provides an entire education for you on learning,
teaching and homeschooling. This is an investment in your homeschool, in
your own education as a parent/tutor and in your children’s
education/future that you simply cannot afford to pass up. Thank you
Amanda!"
Jane Boswell, Editor of the Family Times
magazine
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