Public education and homeschool have different goals for unit studies. While one may
seek to camouflage the actual course of study, the other seeks to preserve children's sense of wonder.
In public schools, unit studies are usually called "study units." More than the name is
different, though. Although both "study units" (or just "units," as they are often called)
and "unit studies" bring many subjects together under one main unit topic, the goals of
most public school "units" is either to fill up the time with trivialities such as
constructing a shoe box village to make holders for valentine cards (here the "subjects"
employed are art and holidays) or to indoctrinate children in a politically correct worldview.
Such public school units often blur the lines of separation between the different academic
subjects, so parents have difficulty determining what subjects are actually being studied
and what material is actually being covered. Conscientious parents may become frustrated
when their ability to oversee their child's education is nullified, because the all-in-one
teaching of units obscures the fact that Johnny is really not learning science or history,
but instead is studying politically correct ways to preserve the rain forest.
At home it is a different story. Here, integrating subjects allows subjects to be taught
naturally in an unfragmented approach. Units preserve the unity, the interrelatedness and
the wonder of God's creation. Unit studies work well for homeschooling, because the art
teacher is the history teacher and the English teacher all rolled into one - Mom! The only
faculty meeting necessary to correlate the subjects is in Mom's mind. An art project, say
a papoose carrier, can fit right into a history demonstration and an English report on the
Apache Indians. When students dramatize the Constitutional Convention, they are covering
the subjects of history, drama, speech, debate, and even art through the making of their
costumes. A unit on the classification of plants must be accomplished by reading The Secret
Garden (at least, I think so!). Yes, the lines are blurred between the subjects, yet when
subjects are meshed together, each is enhanced by the others.
Cynthia Pilling, the KONOS representative in Florida, recently trained a group of parents
in How To Teach with Unit Studies. Instead of telling them how to integrate subjects and
make learning hands-on and fun, she decided to teach them by giving an actual lesson. Her
unit topic was "birds." Naturally, she would have included sketching birds as well as reading
about John James Audubon, but her real goal was to have the parents participate in a hands-on
activity. Laying out an assortment of tools that represented the birds' beaks as well as an
assortment of birds' food, the parents were instructed to choose the best beak for the various
foods. Nuts were cracked by pliers, a coffee filter was used to catch flying insects (mini
marshmallows), while tongs were used to dig through peanut butter (mud) to pluck out a prized
gummy worm.
For exercise, Cynthia had the parents stand up and flap their wings to see if their muscles
tired easily. Then she told them how fast the hummingbird flapped its wings. They were amazed!
As they talked about nests of birds, Cynthia passed out a milk carton cap to each parent.
Placing one navy bean in each cap, she told them that the cap was the size of a hummingbird
nest and the bean was the size of a hummingbird egg.
Although there had been much talking and bantering by the "students" during the other activities,
as soon as the size of the hummingbird egg was revealed, all became quiet. The sense of wonder
had overtaken them.
One mom put it so well when she said, "I knew it was small, but I never realized it was like
this." Cynthia commented to the group of awestruck parents, "Isn't this what you want to give
to your children?" A sense of wonder had been preserved.
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