alternately titled: Teaching Your Kids Without Telling Them It's SchoolSo how do I expose my kids to a variety of topics that I don't plan to formally teach during our school day? I'm a sucker for books. I am constantly picking up books at the library that pique my interest and bringing them home to peruse...and hope my children will want to peruse them, too. Rather than assign them as required reading, I've started leaving a variety of books in a stack on the coffee table. We spend a lot of time in our living room so the books are sure to be seen.
Sometimes I'll read part or all of a book to my kids in the evening as they're settling down for bed and sometimes I simply leave the books there for my kids to discover on their own.
Here's a small sampling of the books that have rotated on and off of our coffee table this year:
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A Beatrix Potter Treasury
and
Beatrix Potter
(biography)
by John Malam
100 Great Poems for Girlsedited by Celia Johnson
100 Great Poems for Boysedited by Leslie Pockell
Toilet: How It Works
by David Macaulay
The American Story: 100 True Tales from American History
by Jennifer Armstrong
My Mommy And Me Story Bible
by Tracy Harrast
Top 10 Dogs for Kids
by Ann Graham Gaines
Thomas Jefferson: Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Everything
by Maira Kalman
Illustration School: Let's Draw Happy People
by Sachiko Umoto
Mirror Mirror: A Book of Reversible Verse
by Marilyn Singer
13 Buildings Children Should Know
by Annette Roeder
The variety of subjects, reading levels, and styles introduces variety that might not be found in our school curriculum, plus providing snippets of various history, science, literature, or art topics may just spur a desire in one of my kids for additional independent learning.
During certain seasons of the year, I'll also place a stack of themed books out to help us celebrate.
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