I have been reading through Hours in the Out-of-Doors and it has got me thinking about how Charlotte Mason implemented nature study as it seems that everyone does things a little differently for what works for their family. Can you help me work through understanding this?
In my mind..
There is a nature walk that we can do just for exploring and seeing what interests my little ones. This could turn into a specific nature study if we find something interesting and identify it, observe it, include it in our nature notebooks or it could just end up being time in nature for enjoyment and discovery. (I am learning a lot about nature myself, so when my little ones do find something it takes me forever to really identify it as I feel this is new to me. So nature study doesn’t really happen at that time, because I feel like I need to go research what we found.)
Then there is actually a planned nature study time that uses an object lesson, like questions from the Handbook of Nature Study.
I have SCM Journaling a Year in Nature and I am signed up for the weekly Handbook of Nature Study Outdooor Challenges, but I am just trying to piece it all together in my mind for a plan for me to be consistent and for my little ones to benefit the most from our nature time.
So my questions are..
1. Do you always include a planned nature study during your nature walks? Do you differentiate between the two?
2. When/if you plan a nature study time, do you go out looking for something specific, like milkweed, or do you just go out to look at wildflowers?
3. Do you try to plan out your object lessons in a specific order? Since I am learning things myself, I do not really know how to spontaneously have an object lesson? I feel like I would need to prepare myself with the Handbook of Nature Study and have a set plan before going out?
4. Is it better to focus your nature study/object lesson times around a specific focus area for a certain time to really familiarize yourself with that thing in nature? Should we spend part of a term really getting to know trees?
5. I am using SCM The Outdoor Secrets Companion, should I plan out more nature study/object lessons around those lessons (if so, this would not necessarily be every week) or just study something completely independent?
Please don’t feel like you have to answer all of my questions. I would just love some more thoughts about distinguishing nature walks from nature study and how object lessons fit into the picture. Thanks for your time!