|
"Never give up and never let yourchild give
up. Period. End of story." (Emily
Baughn)
Solomon tells us in Ecclesiastes that there is an appointed time for everything. "To
every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven." ( Ecclesiastes
3:1) God is sovereign and He has appointed a time for all things,
and that includes reading!
When we begin homeschooling, we all start with hopes and dreams. We submit
our plans, children, and lives to the Lord and begin, confident that all
will work out well. They are His children.
Throughout the Bible, we are admonished to read His perfect, inspired Word
and to write it on our hearts. We automatically assume that our children
will read; after all, how can they know His Word if they cannot read it?
Our daughter Emily started out as an incredibly bright child, well on her
way to law school in kindergarten. Inquisitive, funny, full of life, she
was a delight. At the very least, she would be gifted, smart like her big
sister Krista, able to learn things easily.
Imagine our surprise when she was unable to learn to read in public school
kindergarten or after transferring into private Christian school for first
grade. Her AWANA leader, a schoolteacher, made it a point to tell us how
dumb she was and that she needed to be held back.
Emily slowly began withdrawing into a prison of inability. What had happened
to our bright, gifted, funny child? Emily went on to struggle for years before
finally beginning to read in the middle of seventh grade, at age 12.
When Mom is the teacher and the child isn't reading, there are waves of
tremendous anxiety, guilt, shame, and fear for both the child and parents.
Satan works overtime to inspire insecurity, encouraging Mom to give up,
put that child back in school, and "leave him to the experts where he belongs." Friends
and family can add to the confusion, and the "obvious answer" is always "put
him back in school."
As the years tick by, the reading doesn't come, and homeschooling becomes
focused on figuring out what is wrong and fixing it. We change curriculum,
try a new phonics program each year, go from simple to exotic bells and whistles,
everyone in the family does flashcards to reinforce concepts, games, and
workbooks--all are tried with the struggling learner. Life can become a confusing
mass of doctors' appointments, specialists, diagnosis, and treatments.
Emily's brain was like a colander. Information flowed through it, filtering
down through the holes--gone forever down the drain. She was diagnosed with
dyslexia, dysgraphia, perceptual motor difficulties, auditory processing,
right- and left-brain glitches . . . or is it ADHD? Learning specialists
recommended additional programs, strategies, and exercises to help increase
learning.
We adapted an organic diet and looked for food allergies. (Find specifics
on what we did at www.ThePrudentWife.com.)
Everyone recommended books. We traipsed to every convention, conference,
and person who might be able to help.
When your child struggles to read, a
wilderness of information confronts you at every turn. If you have a checkbook
or an insurance card, someone will have a solution. You pray and beg God
to help, constantly bringing your child to the throne of grace. At times,
He can seem silent. Be encouraged!
Throughout that seeming silence, God is busy building character, strength,
and perseverance in both of you.
Years later, we see how the Lord prepared us to grow the mind of our struggling
learner. A few weeks after we started homeschooling, we attended a Carole
Joy Seid seminar. Carole was amazing and so very reassuring, talking about
developing your own philosophy of homeschooling, sharing the ideas of Raymond
Moore and Ruth Beechick, encouraging us that later was better than early.
We did not want to inoculate our children against learning by forcing it
too fast. We agreed: learning was to be a joy! Carole challenged us to not
let media run our kids' lives, to use great caution and limit it. She encouraged
us to read aloud with our children, to foster a love of great literature
by reading the best books.
We firmly believed that education was the lighting of a fire, not the filling
of a bucket. We felt the freedom to experiment. We wanted to make our homeschool
different, creative, to really consider the natural bents of our children
and create an environment that encouraged and nurtured them. We have always
told our girls that the Lord has a plan and purpose for their lives, and
finding that purpose is one of the reasons we homeschool. God created them
for His good pleasure, and He created them unique and special.
Since so many families have a struggling reader and wonder what
goes on in the mind of their child, I briefly interviewed my almost-14-year-old
daughter Emily, who has been reading fluently for only a year and a half.
Passionately, she encourages you to never give up on your child, to run the
course. You will reap the reward in the end.
Interview With Emily
• What helped you endure the eight-year
struggle to read?
My mom always told me that God had a time for me to read. She encouraged
me and told me how good it would be when I could read. My mom was patient.
She didn't force, yet she still pushed me on, gently, and always encouraging
me. • How did you feel when you could not read?
I did not realize everything
I was missing out on all those years. Sometimes I felt stupid inside, because
I couldn't read and a bunch of younger kids could. But it is better to do
something when you are ready for it than to force it. When you are ready-you
will read and love it. If forced into it, you don't want to do it any more.
I love to read now. I read all the time. My mom has to force me to go to
bed at night!
• What have been your favorite things in homeschooling?
My favorite things are Civil War reenacting, putting the story circles on
the map in Five in a Row, when my mom allowed me to play with money
instead of blocks for math, all the books on tape or CD, and when Mama allowed
me to do tax stuff (yes, a dyslexic kid helping with taxes!). I loved Bible
study and anything having to do with the Bible. Even though I could not read
other books, I could kind of read the Bible. As long as I can read the Bible,
the only book that really matters, I am okay. It has everything-a history
book, how to live your life, everything you need to know, and even some math
problems that you have to figure out.
• What did your parents do right in your struggle to learn?
They allowed and encouraged me to listen to books on tape, which encouraged
me to read. I got the whole Elsie Dinsmore series in
books and the first three books on CD. If I wanted to know what happened
later, I had to read them to find out.
• How did your parents keep the world open for you?
By talking to
me as though I was a person, not a stupid little child (like others did who
knew I could not read). I knew one day I would read, and I didn't worry.
I loved to pretend to play library, bookstore, and restaurant-anything
that had to do with money or scanning. Doing math on paper is hard, but dealing
with money is real.
We were able to do crafts, to sew real things, make quilts, and have fun
homeschooling. Homeschooling is not a boring thing; it's different than "school
at home." With "school at home," you give your child a book, and he does
it. With homeschool, that is where you make the schoolwork come alive and
then it isn't schoolwork because it is everyday living.
My mom made it fun. With Five in a Row, she read to me on the
couch, and then we put the story circles on the map in the hallway. Every
child should do that. (Mom's note: I had flare-ups of impatience--bought every
phonics program, book, game, and flashcard known to man--and we went through
them. We did six years of phonics, and Emily doesn't remember any of
it--just the party with cupcakes at the end of a book. I was sure I made her
crazy, and she doesn't remember any of that!)
• What is the best advice you could give to other parents who have
struggling learners?
Never give up and never let your child give up. Period. End
of story. No matter how many times you want to, or how much better it sounds
to send your child off to school-don't. Homeschooling your child is the
best thing in the world.
The Lord's Faithfulness
Eight years later, we can look back on the Lord's absolute faithfulness.
There have been many struggles--days we felt like quitting, situations that
overwhelmed us--but He was always there. What He calls us to do, He is faithful
to equip us to complete in a myriad of ways. It may just be manna for the
day, or it may be a miraculous change of heart. He perfectly models the relationship
we are to build with our own children, and homeschooling gives us the freedom
to pursue it.
May the Lord bless and keep you. Remember, the joy of the Lord
is your strength!
Lisa loves to teach inductive Bible study, encourage other moms who
have struggling learners, and teach women how to save time, money, and
effort. More can be found at her website (www.ThePrudentWife.com), including
articles and recipes about Building a Better Brain and specifics
on what the Baughn family has tried over the years. Lisa is available to
speak on many topics at conferences and conventions. Keep up on the adventures
in Emily's life at her website (www.EmilyBaughn.com), and remember
to never give up hope!
|