Frequently Asked QuestionsAnswers to your questions about Ambleside Education
Knowledge is the food of the mind.
― CHARLOTTE M. MASON ―
Knowledge is the food of the mind.
― CHARLOTTE M. MASON ―
In a typical classroom, children engage in an assignment-work‑completion routine which develops a particular attitude to work. They are expected to finish the task at hand, get on to the next task, and do what is required to earn the desired grade. The focus is on getting the work done. The process, the act of work itself, takes on a secondary role. This system encourages them to develop habits aimed toward a “good-enough” outcome—at the expense of working well. Children learn to ask “What must I do to get an A?” or “What must I do to pass?”
The Vine School has a different approach to work. The work itself is valuable and worth doing for its own sake. Curiosity sparks an interest in knowing and work is needed to master what you are interested in. Work is meant to be a natural response to knowing, not something you do to get a grade or praise and approval. Our students are encouraged to write, speak, think, compute, draw and paint, as a response to what they learnt rather than as a task to complete. When the work of mastering something is difficult, instead of giving up they can rely on a teacher to come alongside to help them. But they are the ones who make the effort and earn the reward of knowing - something far more lasting and valuable than just getting a grade or approval.
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