The Baby IS the Lesson

by Diane Hopkins on April 8, 2010

One morning on my daily walk, I was fretting and stewing over what I could possibly do with my one-year-old during school time. I was feeling some despair with a new baby on its way. I couldn’t see any end to the disruption of babies in my home school for many years to come. I was praying and scheming at the same time: I could wait until the baby’s nap to teach school, I could rotate the children with baby-sitting chore away from our schoolroom, I could get a playpen . . . all solutions that didn’t feel right—babies needs their moms!

As I walked and pondered, suddenly the Lord introduced one sentence to my mind and revolutionized my mindset entirely! “The baby IS the lesson!” I thought I was trying to teach Math, but in reality I had been teaching, day by day, how an adult values the precious gift of children. My children, by watching how I deal with the frustration of a crying baby or keep a toddler happy and busy with some of his “own” pieces while we play a math game, are soaking up “the lesson”. Unfortunately, I had occasionally been teaching that the baby interrupts our learning.

How to be a Christlike person is the most valuable lesson a child could ever learn! The lesson is learned moment by moment; watching a parent being patient, handling frustration with kindness, pressing on for the goal in spite of numerous interruptions, valuing each child’s needs regardless of inconvenience. That valuable insight–how Mother handles the baby is the real lesson–has dramatically changed how I view my home school. I am teaching foremost my values: godly character, kindness, respect for others, individuality, sacrifice and a host of other Christlike attributes. Teaching them reading, writing, math, etc. is very important to me but my perspective has been altered. “Mimic me, follow me and I will show you the way a Christlike person acts and what he values”. That is the message every parent relays to their children whether they are aware of it or not. Children try to copy everything anyway (our mannerisms, our daily activities, etc.). We must be certain that we are providing a correct pattern for them to copy, not only in our daily activities but in our attitude, our tone of voice, and our facial expression. We need to conduct our lives so that we can say “follow me”. If our children are to “buy” our values, what a tremendous responsibility we have to make sure we are living our best so the lesson is clear and well learned! What more could you ask for from your homeschool than to produce Christlike people?!

Teaching your children basically means getting your own personal life in order and striving daily to be the leader for them to follow. Of course, we fall short and they must look to Christ for the perfect being but they need to see daily how one acts, speaks, lives, solves problems. We are acting as a proxy, in a sense, for Christ. Since they can’t have his daily role model, then he has given his children parents to be an example, to point the way. Along with lesson preparations, we need to prepare ourselves by asking: is the pattern I live the way Christ would act? Can I say today that I have marked the path for my children to follow? Children learn from seeing their parent’s role model. Watching an adult make a simple mistake (such as being too punitive with a child) and go through the process of repenting is 100 times more effective than your devotional lesson on repentance. This means children must be intimately involved with you in your daily life. A few hours a day after school won’t do it.

Children should be involved in the adult’s life rather than daily life rotating around the children. Research has shown that children who have grown up to be productive well-adjusted adults are those who have been drawn into the parent’s world; their daily activities, work, and interests; rather than having parents who centered their world on the child. When I began home schooling, I never could find the time to do the things I felt were important for my life; such as writing in my journal, corresponding with relatives, studying my scriptures, and more. Somehow, in my busy-ness of trying to teach the kids how to write in their journals, I was neglecting my own journal writing. Thankfully, we now have journal writing time in school daily, and we write letters to relatives together as a family on Sunday. Homeschool life should help parents do the daily necessities, rather than usurp the time needed for them. Home maintenance, chores, food preparation, gardening, food preservation, budgeting, clothing care (mending and sewing), planning family social relationships, caring for small children, record keeping, quilting, wallpapering, etc. are all wonderful life skills that can be done together that enhance a child’s education!

The parent’s joyful task is to lead and guide the child into the real world–not set up a contrived pseudo-world to teach skills that the children would easily learn if they spent their time around adults who were striving to live good lives. What constitutes an adult trying to live a “good life”? Being a productive adult would constitute a full-time curriculum! Plant a garden, read good literature, serve the needy, be politically aware, keep a journal, vote for honest men, develop your talents, etc. The exciting part about leading a child into the real world is that they are self-motivated. The moment I sit down to play the piano, all my children want to play and want me to teach them to play something. No sooner than I begin typing on the computer, I have the whole family “needing” to type. My efforts at writing have, humorous to me, stimulated the production of “books” from my youngest children. Modeling is so much more effective than lecturing.

Studies show that the biggest determining factor for a child’s success in reading in school is if they have seen a parent reading in the home on a regular basis. This is especially true for boys if the parent who reads is their father, rather than their mother. Somehow, the example says far more about the value of reading than endless hours in school reading groups.

In every area, it takes instruction to teach skills to little people. Children need to master the basic academic skills (reading, writing, arithmetic), social manners, music competence, and a host of other abilities and that does take focused concentration and time from mother/teacher to accomplish. It isn’t realized just by living in a family. But shared family life practices and contributes to those skills. Having taught my little girl the numbers and the plus, minus and equal signs and how they worked, she jumped right into figuring out how many plates she needed to set the table using her new skills: (“We have 9 and the boys are gone to college so that is minus 3, so we need six”).

When we think of homeschool, sometimes we get tunnel vision, and think “academics”, “keeping up to speed” and other worrisome concerns that don’t really tell the whole story. Homeschool is the growing and nurturing of fine, upright people.

So, how we treat and value the baby really is the lesson.

Class never dismissed.

(Note: This article was originally written years ago, when my children were young.  It is the most often requested thing I’ve ever written.)

{ 14 comments… read them below or add one }


     I'd sure love to hear your comment!

Emily October 3, 2012 at 12:07 pm

I just read this and it's wonderful! I have 3 kids right now, 8, 5, 2, and one due in 5 weeks and am wondering how I'm going to juggle it all. Especially since the 2yo is the worst one. ;-) But I've been trying to be less upset about "interruptions" and more calm and purposeful about them. Also, we were having dinner w/my two nieces ages 9 and 7 and they were talking about how many kids they were going to have when they grew up. My oldest said she wanted 5 or 6 kids, my middle daughter said 12 (he-he), my 7yo niece said 100! (just to beat out everyone else), and my 9yo niece said she's never having any kids. :-( Her mother is not a great mom, very self-centered, they go to ps and they're w/dad #3 right now. Needless to say it was quite eye-opening for my sister-in-law. But for me as well, to see that my kids value our time together and want to keep the legacy of big families and hs'ing going w/their future families!!

Tricia November 16, 2011 at 9:24 am

Diane,

I am so glad you keep this blog post up and always searchable and shareable. It has helped me so much over the last couple of years. This year more than ever. And now, I add my own version, that "Grandma IS the Lesson" where my children will learn of compassion and treating elders with dignity, that we must protect the dignity of human life from conception to natural end, and we must do it without ever letting them lose their esteem. My invalid Mother in Law is about to move in with us. I prayed for her to come, I begged my husband to go get her and bring her to me, but I am very afraid of what all the work will mean to me, my children, my health, and my household. Another friend is praying for me for Courage, and that is what I so desperately need, great Courage – to know that I can do all things through Him who strengthens me. So now my academics are pushed aside for a while and I concentrate on the mechanics of running a household with 2 more needy people in it, a household run by a weak-in-body person who wishes she could do so much more than pray. But pray I can, even when the oncology nurse has the needle in my arm, and pray I can, when I feed the baby at 1 am, and pray I can, when I wash sheets for a mother-in-law I hardly know, but love very much. St. Anne, Grandmother of Jesus, Pray for me!

Brenda September 30, 2011 at 1:40 pm

I immediately thought of your article this morning after reading this one:
http://responsibility-project.libertymutual.com/q-and-as/the-tiniest-teacher?src=OB_B278_Tiniestteacher#fbid=a6lWwh1Pf5A&src=OB_B278_Tiniestteacher.

Interesting how even "the experts" recognize what you wrote so many years ago. I hadn't read your article in years. I think my middle daughter was an infant and she's now almost 12. Then, a few years later I had a 27-week micropreemie….her birth and 3-month hospitalization and then the challenging first year really brought this truth home….she really WAS the lesson for my 3 older children (ages 7-17 at the time). I've passed this along to younger homeschoolers in the hopes they will be encouraged too. Hard to believe that now I'm one of those "seasoned" homeschoolers after 18 years. :)

Thanks again for writing this, and keeping it alive on your blog!

Charlotte Twitchell August 16, 2011 at 6:39 pm

Diane,
How funny is it that it took my sweet friend from California to remind me of your blog. Not sure that you know we are expecting number five to join our family in February 2012. I am so excited but very overwhelmed at the idea of having another thing to do. This was a very inspired article that I needed to hear today! This is such a reminder that my life is just as imporrtant as theirs are. I need to remember that the tomatoes needing to be canned is a life lesson that my children NEED to know and not something I need to wait until after bedtime to accomplish. Diane I love you thank you for being such a great friend and mentor.
Love,
Charlotte

Eve April 27, 2011 at 6:07 am

This article you wrote of one of my all-time favorites!

Jennifer January 23, 2011 at 8:55 pm

Diane, I'm so grateful for the wisdom you shared in this article, and for the friend gave me a copy when I was pregnant with our 2nd child. Now we have 4, and I've revisited this article at least once each school year, and sometimes more. On hard days, my husband will even quote you–"Remember, the baby IS the lesson!" Thank you for your wise reminder of what's really important in the Lord's eyes.

Emily April 14, 2010 at 6:18 pm

Diane,
Thank you for helping to set me up with HomeschoolING a couple years back. I have had a wonderful experience there, we are moving to Minnesota soon. Lately, I have become pregnant with my fourth, and was feeling I should re-read your article The Baby is the Lesson, and so I was pleasantly surprised to find it readily available on your blog. This was just what the spirit was directing me to re-visit. :) Thank you so much. Also, a life altering article I have of yours from your old magazines, which my mom gave me, was something like "Raising Boys". I was terrified of having my first boy. And this article equipped me with so much love and understanding. Raising my boy has been a delight and yesterday he said "I use my rough to protect others from strangers but I use my gentle with my sisters". He is coming along and is so boyish in romping outside, climbing trees, making bows, arrows and swords, that I know I am raising an old fashioned, good strong treat for this world! Thank you! ~Emily B.

Sharleen Lake April 13, 2010 at 4:57 pm

Diane, I just have to tell you that I love your blog. I had never heard your experience of deciding to homeschool until today, when I read your side bar. I never sent my kids to public school, but I identify with your similar experience of a moment of crisis, something happening inside me, praying for an answer, and feeling in my heart that there was something much better for them and for me. I'm grateful that I decided to homeschool! I love that I can include Christian values and character as part of our learning. I love that I can pick and choose wonderful books that are engaging and exciting for my kids to learn from. And I love that homeschooling has blessed my family by drawing us close as we work together, play together, and learn together.

Thank you so much for sharing your experiences, encouragement and advice. You are a gem!

Sharleen Lake

Linda Ratigan April 12, 2010 at 1:13 am

Wow! I always just love to read your uplifting and educational postings.
They motive me and help me be better. I always forward what you've written to my older girls (ages 23, 21 and 20) , it's never too early to learn. My one married daughter, Sandra, says that she is now keeping a collection for future reference. Thank you Diane; you are serving us all.
Linda

Nicole April 11, 2010 at 9:20 pm

I am expecting my fourth and this was such a good reminder to me about the reasons I do homeschool my children. Thank you.

Wendy April 10, 2010 at 6:22 pm

This is my favorite article of all time and one of the reasons I love and adore you! Although we have never met in person I think of you as one of my great mentors and teachers. Thanks so much for all you do

Wendy

Monique April 10, 2010 at 1:54 pm

Just wanted to you to know someone passed this on to me. It was so meaningful that I passed it on to 2 homeschool loops and am linking it on my facebook.
Hope that you are able to maintain this perspecitve thoughtout the years. May the Lord prosper the work of your hands.
Monique

Abby Hanson April 9, 2010 at 3:48 am

I am so thankful you are posting these bits from when your kids were younger. They have been good for me. Just what I've needed lately. My girls are 8, 6, 3, and 1 so we are right in the thick of this. It is so good to remember today that the baby IS the lesson and that I want to find more ways to weave our daily things into all we do.

Incidentally, I now can't remember how I found your blog. I'm pretty sure it was a link through a yahoo group I'm part of. But it wasn't till today that I realized you run Love to Learn — which I have ordered from a few times! Small world, indeed.

Thank you for sharing your experiences.

Dawn April 8, 2010 at 7:16 pm

This is a nice article. I have 3 girls. 6 and under. We homeschool. I keep the paperwork short, and that helps with the baby. Seems like a lot of homeschooling, is talking about everything around you. Say, its garbage day, so you talk about where the garbage goes, the truck, the man who drives it, the landfill, the bill, etc. I've also had to accept that kids are a lot of work, and that's ok. And when they are grown, it will be over, and I'll be very glad I did it.

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{ 14 comments… read them below or add one }


     I'd sure love to hear your comment!

Emily October 3, 2012 at 12:07 pm

I just read this and it's wonderful! I have 3 kids right now, 8, 5, 2, and one due in 5 weeks and am wondering how I'm going to juggle it all. Especially since the 2yo is the worst one. ;-) But I've been trying to be less upset about "interruptions" and more calm and purposeful about them. Also, we were having dinner w/my two nieces ages 9 and 7 and they were talking about how many kids they were going to have when they grew up. My oldest said she wanted 5 or 6 kids, my middle daughter said 12 (he-he), my 7yo niece said 100! (just to beat out everyone else), and my 9yo niece said she's never having any kids. :-( Her mother is not a great mom, very self-centered, they go to ps and they're w/dad #3 right now. Needless to say it was quite eye-opening for my sister-in-law. But for me as well, to see that my kids value our time together and want to keep the legacy of big families and hs'ing going w/their future families!!

Tricia November 16, 2011 at 9:24 am

Diane,

I am so glad you keep this blog post up and always searchable and shareable. It has helped me so much over the last couple of years. This year more than ever. And now, I add my own version, that "Grandma IS the Lesson" where my children will learn of compassion and treating elders with dignity, that we must protect the dignity of human life from conception to natural end, and we must do it without ever letting them lose their esteem. My invalid Mother in Law is about to move in with us. I prayed for her to come, I begged my husband to go get her and bring her to me, but I am very afraid of what all the work will mean to me, my children, my health, and my household. Another friend is praying for me for Courage, and that is what I so desperately need, great Courage – to know that I can do all things through Him who strengthens me. So now my academics are pushed aside for a while and I concentrate on the mechanics of running a household with 2 more needy people in it, a household run by a weak-in-body person who wishes she could do so much more than pray. But pray I can, even when the oncology nurse has the needle in my arm, and pray I can, when I feed the baby at 1 am, and pray I can, when I wash sheets for a mother-in-law I hardly know, but love very much. St. Anne, Grandmother of Jesus, Pray for me!

Brenda September 30, 2011 at 1:40 pm

I immediately thought of your article this morning after reading this one:
http://responsibility-project.libertymutual.com/q-and-as/the-tiniest-teacher?src=OB_B278_Tiniestteacher#fbid=a6lWwh1Pf5A&src=OB_B278_Tiniestteacher.

Interesting how even "the experts" recognize what you wrote so many years ago. I hadn't read your article in years. I think my middle daughter was an infant and she's now almost 12. Then, a few years later I had a 27-week micropreemie….her birth and 3-month hospitalization and then the challenging first year really brought this truth home….she really WAS the lesson for my 3 older children (ages 7-17 at the time). I've passed this along to younger homeschoolers in the hopes they will be encouraged too. Hard to believe that now I'm one of those "seasoned" homeschoolers after 18 years. :)

Thanks again for writing this, and keeping it alive on your blog!

Charlotte Twitchell August 16, 2011 at 6:39 pm

Diane,
How funny is it that it took my sweet friend from California to remind me of your blog. Not sure that you know we are expecting number five to join our family in February 2012. I am so excited but very overwhelmed at the idea of having another thing to do. This was a very inspired article that I needed to hear today! This is such a reminder that my life is just as imporrtant as theirs are. I need to remember that the tomatoes needing to be canned is a life lesson that my children NEED to know and not something I need to wait until after bedtime to accomplish. Diane I love you thank you for being such a great friend and mentor.
Love,
Charlotte

Eve April 27, 2011 at 6:07 am

This article you wrote of one of my all-time favorites!

Jennifer January 23, 2011 at 8:55 pm

Diane, I'm so grateful for the wisdom you shared in this article, and for the friend gave me a copy when I was pregnant with our 2nd child. Now we have 4, and I've revisited this article at least once each school year, and sometimes more. On hard days, my husband will even quote you–"Remember, the baby IS the lesson!" Thank you for your wise reminder of what's really important in the Lord's eyes.

Emily April 14, 2010 at 6:18 pm

Diane,
Thank you for helping to set me up with HomeschoolING a couple years back. I have had a wonderful experience there, we are moving to Minnesota soon. Lately, I have become pregnant with my fourth, and was feeling I should re-read your article The Baby is the Lesson, and so I was pleasantly surprised to find it readily available on your blog. This was just what the spirit was directing me to re-visit. :) Thank you so much. Also, a life altering article I have of yours from your old magazines, which my mom gave me, was something like "Raising Boys". I was terrified of having my first boy. And this article equipped me with so much love and understanding. Raising my boy has been a delight and yesterday he said "I use my rough to protect others from strangers but I use my gentle with my sisters". He is coming along and is so boyish in romping outside, climbing trees, making bows, arrows and swords, that I know I am raising an old fashioned, good strong treat for this world! Thank you! ~Emily B.

Sharleen Lake April 13, 2010 at 4:57 pm

Diane, I just have to tell you that I love your blog. I had never heard your experience of deciding to homeschool until today, when I read your side bar. I never sent my kids to public school, but I identify with your similar experience of a moment of crisis, something happening inside me, praying for an answer, and feeling in my heart that there was something much better for them and for me. I'm grateful that I decided to homeschool! I love that I can include Christian values and character as part of our learning. I love that I can pick and choose wonderful books that are engaging and exciting for my kids to learn from. And I love that homeschooling has blessed my family by drawing us close as we work together, play together, and learn together.

Thank you so much for sharing your experiences, encouragement and advice. You are a gem!

Sharleen Lake

Linda Ratigan April 12, 2010 at 1:13 am

Wow! I always just love to read your uplifting and educational postings.
They motive me and help me be better. I always forward what you've written to my older girls (ages 23, 21 and 20) , it's never too early to learn. My one married daughter, Sandra, says that she is now keeping a collection for future reference. Thank you Diane; you are serving us all.
Linda

Nicole April 11, 2010 at 9:20 pm

I am expecting my fourth and this was such a good reminder to me about the reasons I do homeschool my children. Thank you.

Wendy April 10, 2010 at 6:22 pm

This is my favorite article of all time and one of the reasons I love and adore you! Although we have never met in person I think of you as one of my great mentors and teachers. Thanks so much for all you do

Wendy

Monique April 10, 2010 at 1:54 pm

Just wanted to you to know someone passed this on to me. It was so meaningful that I passed it on to 2 homeschool loops and am linking it on my facebook.
Hope that you are able to maintain this perspecitve thoughtout the years. May the Lord prosper the work of your hands.
Monique

Abby Hanson April 9, 2010 at 3:48 am

I am so thankful you are posting these bits from when your kids were younger. They have been good for me. Just what I've needed lately. My girls are 8, 6, 3, and 1 so we are right in the thick of this. It is so good to remember today that the baby IS the lesson and that I want to find more ways to weave our daily things into all we do.

Incidentally, I now can't remember how I found your blog. I'm pretty sure it was a link through a yahoo group I'm part of. But it wasn't till today that I realized you run Love to Learn — which I have ordered from a few times! Small world, indeed.

Thank you for sharing your experiences.

Dawn April 8, 2010 at 7:16 pm

This is a nice article. I have 3 girls. 6 and under. We homeschool. I keep the paperwork short, and that helps with the baby. Seems like a lot of homeschooling, is talking about everything around you. Say, its garbage day, so you talk about where the garbage goes, the truck, the man who drives it, the landfill, the bill, etc. I've also had to accept that kids are a lot of work, and that's ok. And when they are grown, it will be over, and I'll be very glad I did it.

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