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A child gets moral notions from the fairy-tales he delights in, as do his elders from tale and verse.
Charlotte Mason
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Charlotte Mason
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More quotes by Charlotte Mason
Every person exceeds our power of measurement.
Charlotte Mason
Children should Transcribe favourite Passages. A certain sense of possession and delight may be added to this exercise if children are allowed to choose for transcription their favourite verse in one poem and another.
Charlotte Mason
The peculiar value of geography lies in its fitness to nourish the mind with ideas and furnish the imagination with pictures.
Charlotte Mason
Give your child a single valuable idea, and you have done more for his education than if you had laid upon his mind the burden of bushels of information.
Charlotte Mason
The mother who takes pains to endow her children with good habits secures for herself smooth and easy days.
Charlotte Mason
Let children feed on the good, the excellent, the great! Don't get in their way with little lectures, facts, and guided tours!
Charlotte Mason
In this time of extraordinary pressure, educational and social, perhaps a mother’s first duty to her children is to secure for them a quiet and growing time, a full six years of passive receptive life, the waking part of it for the most part spent out in the fresh air.
Charlotte Mason
A child is a person in whom all possibilities are present - present now at this very moment - not to be educed after many years and efforts manifold on the part of the educator
Charlotte Mason
Let the parent ask Why? and the child produce the answer, if he can. After he has turned the matter over in his mind, there is no harm in telling him - and he will remember it - the reason why.
Charlotte Mason
The most common and the monstrous defect in the education of the day is that children fail to acquire the habit of reading.
Charlotte Mason
For the mind is capable of dealing with only one kind of food it lives, grows and is nourished upon ideas only mere information is to it as a meal of sawdust to the body there are no organs for the assimilation of the one more than of the other.
Charlotte Mason
Composition is as natural as jumping and running to children who have been allowed due use of books.
Charlotte Mason
There is no education but self-education.
Charlotte Mason
Every walk should offer some knotty problem for the children to think out-Why does that leaf float on the water, and this pebble sink? and so on.
Charlotte Mason
The teacher who allows his scholars the freedom of the city of books is at liberty to be their guide, philosopher and friend and is no longer the mere instrument of forcible intellectual feeding.
Charlotte Mason
Let them get at the books themselves, and do not let them be flooded with diluted talk from the lips of their teacher. The less the parents 'talk-in' and expound their rations of knowledge and thought to the children they are educating, the better for the children...Children must be allowed to ruminate, must be left alone with their own thoughts.
Charlotte Mason
We are all meant to be naturalists, each in his own degree, and it is inexcusable to live in a world so full of the marvels of plant and animal life and to care for none of these things.
Charlotte Mason
We talk of lost ideals, but perhaps they are not lost, only changed when our ideal for ourselves and for our children becomes limited to prosperity and comfort, we get these, very likely, for ourselves and for them, but we get no more.
Charlotte Mason
Authority is just and faithful in all matters of promise-keeping it is also considerate, and that is why a good mother is the best home-ruler.
Charlotte Mason
Every day, every hour, the parents are either passively or actively forming those habits in their children upon which, more than upon anything else, future character and conduct depend.
Charlotte Mason