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"Unit study" is the name given to a type of curriculum tool where one topic
is taken and looked 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 can be called a thorough look at a single topic,
as if you could pick up the topic in 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 "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, 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.
As an author, I am frequently asked to speak at homeschool conventions across
the country. What question am I asked most 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, they 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. The end chapters held my interest,
covering topics like oceans, space exploration, flight, and many other exciting
topics that were much more interesting than basic science concepts that we
reviewed year after year. 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.
I know that it will be impossible to teach them everything that is now known.
Knowing this, I have determined that it is much more important to provide
and excellent basic education as well as to teach them how to think and find
answers. If we just keep trying to cover more and more information with little
depth to the information, not firmly grounding any of the information in
their minds, then we will not be providing a "good" education. We will become
like textbook publishers, who rush to keep adding new information to textbooks,
further abridging, condensing and modifying or deleting what they deem less
important or not politically correct. Many textbooks now read like encyclopedias,
with little interesting reading included, just facts, figures and condensed
material. I don't know of many children OR adults that pick up a textbook
these days for a "good read." Do you?
As you choose topics for your unit studies, as well as the direction of
the studies, keep a scope and sequence listing on hand to use as a reassurance,
a guide, or a check-off sheet. What is a scope and sequence listing? Simply
stated, it is a listing, grade by grade, of "typical" material covered in
that year of school. Many textbook publishers provide their own scope and
sequence listing on their websites. World Book maintains a very detailed
scope and sequence (typical course of study) on their website.
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 foundation 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."
"When a man's knowledge is not in order, the more of
it he has,
the greater will be his confusion"
Herbert Spencer
Amanda Bennett is a homeschool marketing consultant,
writer and homeschool mom. She travels and speaks at conferences and retreats,
sharing her faith, homeschool experiences, and a contagious love of learning.
Her groundbreaking unit studies have become very popular with homeschool
families around the world. With two that have graduated from college and
one teenager at home, she and her husband stay busy on their tree farm
in Tennessee. Visit her websites www.unitstudy.com and www.AmandaBennett.com.
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