Atmosphere Archives - Ambleside International https://amblesideschools.org/tag/atmosphere/ Fri, 24 Oct 2025 18:28:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://amblesideschools.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-Skylark-RGB-32x32.png Atmosphere Archives - Ambleside International https://amblesideschools.org/tag/atmosphere/ 32 32 213948178 Charlotte Mason on the Importance of Atmosphere https://amblesideschools.org/charlotte-mason-on-the-importance-of-atmosphere/ Fri, 24 Oct 2025 18:28:52 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=2689 “To Be the Father’s People” calls us to live in covenant with God — belonging to Him, belonging to one another, and learning daily what that means.

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Charlotte Mason on the Importance of Atmosphere

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Charlotte Mason on the Importance of Atmosphere
Breathing Life into Education

“A child draws inspiration from the casual life around him.” — Charlotte Mason, Parents and Children

 

Charlotte Mason’s philosophy of education is deeply rooted in the idea that children are not merely vessels to be filled, but persons to be nourished by the very air they breathe, the atmosphere of their homes and schools. In her view, education is not confined to textbooks or lesson plans; it is the subtle, pervasive influence of the environment, the tone, the relationships, the unspoken values, that shapes a child’s character and affections.

 

Atmosphere as the Breath of Life

 

Mason writes that the child “breathes” the atmosphere around them, absorbing ideas not through direct instruction but through the lived experience of daily life. This atmosphere is not something artificially constructed; rather, it emanates naturally from the parents and teachers, from their tone of voice, their habits, their reverence for truth and beauty. It is in this environment that the child develops what Mason calls an “appetency,” a deep, often unconscious longing for what is good, true, and beautiful.1

 

This is a sobering thought for educators and parents alike. We are always teaching, even when we are not speaking. Our presence, our demeanor, our way of being, these are the silent lessons that shape a child’s soul.

 

How Atmosphere Shapes Us

 

Mason’s insight is that atmosphere is not a tool to be wielded, but a reality to be lived. It is not something we “use” to influence children; it is something we are. When we live with integrity, gentleness, and joy, we create a space where children can grow in freedom and confidence. But when we are anxious, controlling, or inconsistent, we create an atmosphere of fear or confusion.

 

In schools, this difference is palpable. A classroom where the teacher is calm, respectful, and genuinely interested in the students creates a sense of safety and curiosity. In contrast, a classroom dominated by stress, micromanagement, or emotional volatility stifles initiative and joy.

 

The Danger of Manipulative Influence

 

Mason warns against the temptation to use atmosphere as a means of control. She critiques the “goody-goody” literature of her time (and ours) that encouraged adults to consciously influence children through their personality or charm. This, she argues, leads to dependency rather than growth. A child who idolizes a teacher may fail to develop their own convictions and become a “parasitic plant,” always clinging to someone stronger.2

 

The true educator does not seek to impress or dominate, but to step back and allow the child to grow. This requires humility and trust, a willingness to let the child wrestle, question, and discover.

 

The “Overmuch” Teacher

 

We’ve all seen the teacher who is “overmuch” with her students, constantly explaining, correcting, hovering. While well-intentioned, this over-involvement can smother a child’s initiative. Children need space to think, to try, to fail, and to try again. The best teachers know when to step in and when to step back. They trust the process of growth and resist the urge to control every outcome.

 

Atmosphere Alone Is Not Enough

 

Mason is clear: atmosphere is essential, but it is not sufficient. “Though we cannot live without air, neither can we live upon air.” A child raised on atmosphere alone, without ideas, without effort, without challenge, becomes passive, bored, and dependent on external stimulation. This, Mason argues, is why modern culture craves spectacle. We have lost the habit of attention, the joy of discovery, the discipline of thought.3

 

Spectacle vs. Life-Giving Atmosphere

 

Many schools today rely on spectacle, flashy events, elaborate productions, constant entertainment, to keep students engaged. But Mason sees this as a symptom of educational malnourishment. True education does not dazzle; it nourishes. It awakens curiosity, fosters wonder, and cultivates habits of attention and reflection.

 

A life-giving atmosphere is not loud or showy. It is quiet, steady, and rich with meaning. It invites the child to engage with the world, not as a passive consumer, but as an active participant in the great conversation of humanity.

 

Final Thoughts

 

Charlotte Mason’s vision of atmosphere challenges us to examine not just what we teach, but how we live. Are we creating spaces where children can breathe deeply of truth, beauty, and goodness? Are we modeling the kind of life we hope they will one day live?

 

Atmosphere is not a strategy. It is a way of being. And in the end, it is the air our children breathe.

1 Charlotte Mason, Parents and Children

2 Charlotte Mason, School Education

3 Charlotte Mason, Philosophy of Education

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Ambleside Method – Timelines https://amblesideschools.org/ambleside-method-timelines/ Fri, 19 Jan 2024 20:27:19 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1925 One of the first things you notice in an Ambleside classroom is its distinctive timeline spanning the top of the room. Pictures, names, dates — all linked together by a seamless cord.

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Ambleside Method - Timelines

One of the first things you notice in an Ambleside classroom is its distinctive timeline spanning the top of the room. Pictures, names, dates — all linked together by a seamless cord.

 

This is not just a visual learning tool, although it is that. Rather, it helps bring to life core aspects of the Ambleside Method.

 

Given the respect due to the personhood of each child, and the fact that all true education must be self-education, the three tools available to an Ambleside teacher are the classroom/school atmosphere (the relational context that is naturally breathed in and assimilated), the discipline of habit (an intentional training for the purpose of lifting students above the limitations of their nature), and education as a life (the nourishing of each mind with living ideas).

 

One of the fundamental pedagogical convictions of our Charlotte Mason-inspired method of education is atmosphere. At Ambleside, we view the classroom as a place of living and learning, faithful to the idea that learning is a natural delight of life — children have a natural desire for knowledge.

 

A sense of beauty and order is evident in each area of our schools and in our homeschools. Classrooms are fitted with beautiful wood desks and chairs, bookshelves are carefully arranged, plants and other living things are interspersed throughout, a table is devoted to nature findings, and paintings by the master artists studied adorn the thoughtfully, beautifully painted walls.

 

From their seats, all students are able to look at the timeline, searching for faces and events. Just as the Ambleside Method begins with a carefully chosen book, the timeline is populated with carefully chosen images: beautiful portraits that reflect the personhood of the subject; famous paintings that depict scenes from history; photographs that capture influential moments in time. It is a joy to watch them take it in, without prompting, born of the natural curiosity some of us only vaguely recall.

 

Another key distinctive of the Ambleside Method is relationship … to God, self, others, ideas, great books and works of art, and historical personages. The timelines provide context and connection and help tie these together.

 

Our education is vital, dynamic, and living. Real learning occurs when the learner wonders, asks why and how. And this happens in an atmosphere that stimulates thought and is rich with ideas. A sense of wonder invites the children.

 

Our objective is to place the very best books before our students, books rich in language, content, and ideas, putting them into relationship with the finest authors. Reading from “living books,” students interact with great scientists, mathematicians, philosophers, historians, artists, poets, and explorers.

 

Timelines are a vital component of bringing these living books to our classrooms.

 

The timeline spans the breadth of history covered in the Ambleside curriculum. Timelines contain images of significant persons and events, including persons and events that are part of the year’s curriculum, and we add to the timeline as new topics are covered. Placing new images in the timeline on the wall enables teachers to provide context for that thinker, artist, leader, or composer.

 

Interestingly, Charlotte Mason herself did not use the phrase ‘timelines.’ Rather, the use of timelines grew in a way that remains faithful to the intention of the Founder while also piquing children’s imaginations and providing context for the texts being studied.

 

Timelines bear silent witness to the unfolding of civilization, helping students grasp the passage of time and the sweep of the human story, one guided by God and shaped by human actors, in which they, too, play a part.

 

As an Ambleside teacher, I fondly remember my first year teaching in the early years of the Ambleside School in Virginia.

 

Among the many tasks to get a new school up and running, putting up the timeline was the last piece. The school secretary was busy for weeks carefully putting the timelines together for each classroom (9 of them). She thoughtfully collected the images, typed the labels, mounted these on black paper, and laminated each one with great care. She knew she was giving a great gift to us. All the teachers were eagerly looking forward to the timeline going up in their classrooms, one by one. I among them also waited and waited, but having no experience with a timeline myself, I didn’t really see the value or understand what all the fuss was about and why the hurry to get them up.

 

Then one morning, when I arrived in my classroom, I was surprised and delighted to see the timeline had been put up! It certainly looked beautiful and added to the classroom décor. To my amazement, when the students arrived, they were so excited to see it. They oooh’d and aaah’d and chattered among themselves making comments like “Ohhhh, I didn’t realize that Mary Cassatt lived at the same time as Brahms and Christina Rossetti! I wonder if they knew each other.” From that day on through the rest of the school year, as they read and learned new things, the children would often refer to the timeline and want to know where these new people and events fit.

 

Ultimately, they understood that they fit somewhere in that timeline, too, and that time is precious, it does march on, and they were ‘made for such a time as this.’

 

by Shannon Seiberlich

Director of Community Relations and Homeschooling, Ambleside Schools International

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Video Series Part 10. Chapter Seven: Cultivating Tastes https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-10-chapter-seven-cultivating-tastes/ Fri, 27 Oct 2023 18:34:06 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1800 In prior times, children grew up with a mind to work—it was breathed in by the atmosphere of the home. Many children and many duties required many hands. As society has changed, however, much of our work is accomplished outside of the home, and parents labor in workplaces unseen by their children. Taking this into account, it is important to be purposeful to train a child in a view toward work.

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Video Series Part 10. Chapter Seven: Cultivating Tastes

In prior times, children grew up with a mind to work—it was breathed in by the atmosphere of the home. Many children and many duties required many hands. As society has changed, however, much of our work is accomplished outside of the home, and parents labor in workplaces unseen by their children. Taking this into account, it is important to be purposeful to train a child in a view toward work. Charlotte Mason gives us several principles in training children to work well.

 

In Part 10 of our video and discussion guides, Charlotte Mason describes this idea of cultivating tastes as developing a penchant for ways to live a full and free life.

Time-table;Definite Work in a Given Time1–– In the first place, there is a time-table, written out fairly, so that the child knows what he has to do and how long each lesson is to last. This idea of definite work to be finished in a given time is valuable to the child, not only as training him in habits of order, but in diligence; he learns that one time is not ‘as good as another’; that there is no right time left for what is not done in its own time; and this knowledge alone does a great deal to secure the child’s attention to his work…. The sense that there is not much time for his sums or his reading, keeps the child’s wits on the alert and helps to fix his attention; he has time to learn just so much of any one subject as it is good for him to take in at once: and if the lessons be judiciously alternated––sums first, say, while the brain is quite fresh; then writing, or reading––some more or less mechanical exercise, by way of a rest; and so on, the program varying a little from day to day, but the same principle throughout––a ‘thinking’ lesson first, and a ‘painstaking’ lesson to follow,––the child gets through his morning lessons without any sign of weariness.

 

Training in Attention––It is evident that attention is no ‘faculty’ of the mind; indeed, it is very doubtful how far the various operations of the mind should be described as ‘faculties’ at all. Attention is hardly even an operation of the mind but is simply the act by which the whole mental force is applied to the subject in hand. This act of bringing the whole mind to bear, may be trained into a habit at the will of the parent or teacher, who attracts and holds the child’s attention by means of a sufficient motive.

 

Attractiveness of Knowledge––Of course, the most obvious means of quickening and holding the attention of children lies in the attractiveness of knowledge itself, and in the real appetite for knowledge with which they are endowed. But how successful faulty teachers are in curing children of any desire to know, is to be seen in many a school room.

 

Training in the WillBeing Self-Compelled2––As the child gets older, he is taught to bring his own will to bear; to make himself attend in spite of the most inviting suggestions from without. He should be taught to feel a certain triumph in compelling himself to fix his thoughts. Let him know what the real difficulty is, how it is the nature of his mind to be incessantly thinking, but how the thoughts, if left to themselves, will always run off from one thing to another, and that the struggle and the victory required of him is to fix his thoughts upon the task in hand. ‘You have done your duty,’ with a look of sympathy from his mother, is a reward for the child who has made this effort in the strength of his growing will. But it cannot be too much borne in mind that attention is, to a great extent, the product of the educated mind; that is, one can only attend in proportion as one has the intellectual power of developing the topic. It is impossible to overstate the importance of this habit of attention. It is, to quote words of weight, “within the reach of everyone, and should be made the primary object of all mental discipline”; for whatever the natural gifts of the child, it is only so far as the habit of attention is cultivated in him that he is able to make use of them.

 

A Reason for Weariness––If it were only as it saves wear and tear, a perpetual tussle between duty and inclination, it is worthwhile for the mother to lay herself out to secure that her child never does a lesson into which he does not put his heart. And that is no difficult undertaking; the thing is, to be on the watch from the beginning against the formation of the contrary habit of inattention. A great deal has been said lately about overpressure, and we have glanced at one or two of the causes whose effects go by this name. But truly, one of the most fertile causes of an overdone brain is a failure in the habit of attention. I suppose we are all ready to admit that it is not the things we do, but the things we fail to do, which fatigue us, with the sense of omission, with the worry of hurry in overtaking our tasks. And this is almost the only cause of failure in the work in the case of the healthy schoolboy or schoolgirl: wandering wits hinder a lesson from being fully taken in at the right moment; that lesson becomes a bugbear, continually wanted henceforth and never there; and the sense of loss tries the young scholar more than would the attentive reception of a dozen such lessons.

 

A Child should Execute Perfectly––No work should be given to a child that he cannot execute perfectly, and then perfection should be required from him as a matter of course. For instance, he is set to do a copy of strokes, and is allowed to show a slateful at all sorts of slopes and all sorts of intervals; his moral sense is vitiated, his eye is injured. Set him six strokes to copy; let him, not bring a slateful, but six perfect strokes, at regular distances and at regular slopes. If he produces a faulty pair, get him to point out the fault, and persevere until he has produced his task; if he does not do it to-day, let him go on to-morrow and the next day, and when the six perfect strokes appear, let it be an occasion of triumph. So with the little tasks of painting, drawing, or construction he sets himself––let everything he does be well done. An unsteady house of cards is a thing to be ashamed of. Closely connected with this habit of ‘perfect work’ is that of finishing whatever is taken in hand. The child should rarely be allowed to set his hand to a new undertaking until the last is finished. The Habit of turning out Imperfect Work. ––’Throw perfection into all you do’ is a counsel upon which a family may be brought up with great advantage. We English, as a nation, think too much of persons, and too little of things, work, execution. Our children are allowed to make their figures or their letters, their stitches, their dolls’ clothes, their small carpentry, anyhow, with the notion that they will do better by-and-by. Other nations––the Germans and the French, for instance––look at the question philosophically, and know that if children get the habit of turning out imperfect work, the men and women will undoubtedly keep that habit up. I remember being delighted with the work of a class of about forty children, of six and seven, in an elementary school at Heidelberg. They were doing a writing lesson, accompanied by a good deal of oral teaching from a master, who wrote each word on the blackboard. By-and-by the slates were shown, and I did not observe one faulty or irregular letter on the whole forty slates. The same principle of ‘perfection’ was to be discerned in a recent exhibition of schoolwork (held throughout France. No faulty work was shown, to be excused on the plea that it was the work of children.

 

Ye Are not Your Own3––But if children are brought up from the first with this magnet––’Ye are not your own’; the divine Author of your being has given you life, and a body finely adapted for His service; He gives you the work of preserving this body in health, nourishing it in strength, and training it in fitness for whatever special work He may give you to do in His world,––why, young people themselves would readily embrace a more Spartan regimen; they would desire to be available, and physical transgressions and excesses, however innocent they seem, would be self-condemned by the person who felt that he was trifling with a trust. It would be good work to keep to the front this idea of living under authority, training under authority, serving under authority, a discipline of life readily self-embraced by children, in whom the heroic impulse is always strong. We would not reduce the pleasures of childhood and youth by an iota; rather we would increase them, for the disciplined life has more power of fresh enjoyment than is given to the unrestrained. Neither is it lawful for parents to impose any unnecessary rigors upon their children; this was the error of the eighteenth century and of the early decades of our own age, when hunger, cold, and denial, which was by no means self-denial, were supposed wholesome for children. All we claim is that every young person shall be brought up under the sense of authority in the government, management, and training of his body. The sense that health is a duty, and that any trifling with health, whether vicious or careless, is really of the nature of suicide, springs from this view––that life is held in trust from a supreme Authority.

 

Question and Thoughts to Consider:

 

  1. Why is a set work for a set time an important principle to consider? What would have to change for you and your child to institute this principle in the home?
  2. Think for a moment of a time that you gave focused attention. What characterized this time?
  3. What does Mason say about attention which is contrary to modern thought on attention?
  4. Charlotte Mason instructs parents and teachers to teach children what is natural to human beings. Regarding self-compelling power, what is natural to human persons? How might we instruct children to have this power in their own lives?
  5. What is the habit of perfect work? If perfect work is the mean, what are the excessive and deficient areas that parents/teachers need to be aware of in this instruction?
  6. How does Mason show potential and capacity of persons through this habit of perfect work?
  7. Talk about authority and duty and how this principle relates with work.

1 Charlotte Mason, Home Education, 8-9.

2 Charlotte Mason, Home Education, 145-147.

3 Charlotte Mason, School Education, 103-104.

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Video Series Part 9. The Importance of Atmosphere Chapter Six: Aesthetics and Atmosphere https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-9-the-importance-of-atmosphere-chapter-six-aesthetics-and-atmosphere/ Fri, 20 Oct 2023 20:54:47 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1794 Beauty is all around us, but we must learn to notice and recognize it. We begin in the classroom with beautiful music, art on the walls, wooden furniture. These all play a part in developing the aesthetic sense in a child while at the same time valuing the child as a person who has great capacity.

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Video Series Part 9. The Importance of Atmosphere
Chapter Six: Aesthetics and Atmosphere

At Ambleside we learn to cultivate a taste for the good, true, and beautiful. We consider these in the atmosphere we foster in the classroom and in how we’re living. Beauty is all around us, but we must learn to notice and recognize it. We begin in the classroom with beautiful music, art on the walls, wooden furniture. These all play a part in developing the aesthetic sense in a child while at the same time valuing the child as a person who has great capacity. The children learn from the adults around them and respond to what is in the Atmosphere. As teachers we realize our part in setting an example as seekers of truth, beauty, and goodness.

 

In Part 9 of our video and discussion guides, Charlotte Mason explains the importance of fostering this ‘beauty sense’ in the atmosphere.

Both the circle of the family and that of social intercourse are subjected to forces that are active in the entire social body, and that penetrate the entire atmosphere of human life in invisible channels. No one knows whence these currents, these ideas arise; but they are there. They influence the moods, the aspirations, and the inclinations of humanity, and no one, however powerful, can withdraw himself from their effects; no sovereign’s command makes its way into their depths. They are often born of a genius to be seized upon by the multitude that soon forgets their author; then the power of the thought that has thus become active in the masses again impels the individual to energetic resolutions: in this manner it is constantly describing a remarkable circle.1

 

Our Beauty Sense. ––There is another region open to Intellect, of very great beauty and delight. He must needs have Imagination with him to travel there, but still more must he have that companion of the nice ear and eye, who enabled him to recognize music and beauty in words and their arrangement. The aesthetic Sense, in truth, holds the key of this palace of delights. There are few joys in life greater and more constant than our joy in Beauty, though it is almost impossible to put into words what Beauty consists in; color, form, proportion, harmony––these are some of its elements. Words give some idea of these things, and therefore some idea of Beauty, and that is why it is only through our Beauty Sense that we can take full pleasure in Literature.

 

Beauty in Nature. ––But Beauty is everywhere––in white clouds against the blue, in the gray bole of the beech, the play of a kitten, the lovely flight and beautiful coloring of birds, in the hills and the valleys and the streams, in the wind-flower and the blossom of the broom. What we call Nature is all Beauty and delight, and the person who watches Nature closely and knows her well, like the poet Wordsworth, for example, has his Beauty Sense always active, always bringing him joy.

 

We cannot get away from Beauty, and we delight in it most perhaps in the faces and forms of many little children and of some grown-up people.

 

The Palace of Art.––We take pleasure, too, in the arrangement and coloring of a nice room, of a nice dress, in the cover of a book, in the iron fittings of a door, when these are what is called artistic. This brings us to another world of beauty created for us by those whose Beauty Sense enables them not only to see and take joy in all the Beauty there is, but whose souls become so filled with the Beauty they gather through eye and ear that they produce for us new forms of Beauty––in picture, statue, glorious cathedral, in delicate ornament, in fugue, sonata, simple melody. When we think for a moment, how we must admire the goodness of God in placing us in a world so exceedingly full of Beauty––whether it be of what we call Nature or of what we call Art––and in giving us that sense of Beauty which enables us to see and hear, and to be as it were suffused with pleasure at a single beautiful effect brought to our ear or our eye.

 

The Hall of Simulation. ––But, like all the good gifts we have received, this too is capable of neglect and misuse. It is not enough that there should be a Beauty World always within reach; we must see to it that our Beauty Sense is on the alert and kept quick to discern.

 

Our great danger is that, as there is a barren country reaching up to the very borders of the Kingdom of Literature, so too is there a dull and dreary Hall of Simulation which we may enter and believe it to be the Palace of Art. Here people are busy painting, carving, modeling, and what not; the very sun labors here with his photographs, and he is as good an artist as the rest, and better, for the notion in this Hall is that the object of Art is to make things exactly like life. So the so-called artists labor away to get the color and form of the things they see, and to paint these on canvas or shape them in marble or model them in wax (flowers), and all the time they miss, because they do not see, that subtle presence which we call Beauty in the objects they paint and mold. Many persons allow themselves to be deceived in this matter and go through life without ever entering the Palace of Art, and perceiving but little of the Beauty of Nature. We all have need to be trained to see, and to have our eyes opened before we can take in the joy that is meant for us in this beautiful life.

 

The Intellectual Life. ––I cannot tell you more now of the delightful and illimitable sources of pleasure open to Intellect and his colleagues; but, if you realize at all what has been said, you will be surprised to know that many people live within narrow bounds, and rarely step into either of the great worlds we have been considering. The happiness of the intellectual life comes of knowing and thinking, imagining and perceiving or rather, comes of the range of things, which we know and think about, imagine and perceive. Everybody’s mind is occupied in these ways about something or other, but many people know and think about small matters. It is quite well to think of these for a little while, but they think about them always, and have no room for the great thoughts, which great things bring to us.

 

Thus, a boy’s head may be so full of his stamp collection or of the next cricket match that there is no room in it for bigger things. The stamps and the cricket are all right, but it is not all right by any means to miss the opportunities of great interests that come to us and pass unnoticed, while we think only of these small matters. Not only so: boys and girls may be so full of marks and places, prizes and scholarships, that they never see that their studies are meant to unlock the door for them into this or that region of intellectual joy and interest. School and college over, their books are shut for ever. When they become men and women, they still live among narrow interests, with hardly an outlook upon the wide world, past or present. This is to be the slaves of knowledge and not its joyful masters. Let it be said of us as it was of the late Bishop of London, “His was the rare gift of mastering knowledge as his splendid servant, not being himself mastered by it as its weary slave.”2

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider

 

  1. What is the power of atmosphere? What are its influences in the 19th Century in the 21st Century?
  2. Show that the beauty sense opens a paradise of pleasure.
  3. Why do schools so often lack a beauty sense in their buildings, classrooms, and grounds? How does this affect the student?
  4. Describe a school with beauty sense. Why is this important?
  5. What kind of happiness does the intellectual life afford?
  6. Contrasttheboywiththoughtsofhisstampcollectionandcricketgameswith the boy who has intellectual interests from books?

1 Charlotte Mason, School Education

2 Charlotte Mason, Ourselves

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Video Series Part 8. The Importance of Atmosphere Chapter Five: Masterly Inactivity https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-8-the-importance-of-atmosphere-chapter-five-masterly-inactivity/ Fri, 06 Oct 2023 19:42:47 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1784 Masterly Inactivity is the peaceful presence held by an Ambleside teacher that gently invites a child to strengthen his will to do as he ought – for example, to sit up correctly, or show kindness. Masterly Inactivity is not heavy-handed but is peaceful and natural.

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Video Series Part 8. The Importance of Atmosphere
Chapter Five: Masterly Inactivity

Masterly Inactivity1 is the peaceful presence held by an Ambleside teacher that gently invites a child to strengthen his will to do as he ought – for example, to sit up correctly, or show kindness. Masterly Inactivity is not heavy-handed but is peaceful and natural. The wise teacher gently and easily preserves attention with love and joy and a light touch.  This requires both mastery (authoritative skill) and inactivity (a peaceful presence).

 

In Part 8 of our video and discussion guides, Charlotte Mason describes for us in detail this masterful approach in educating a child. Her reference to the ‘serenity of the Madonna’ gives an insightful vision of the posture of the educator.

Increased Sense of Responsibility. ––It would be an interesting task for a literary expert to trace the stages of ethical thought marked by the uses, within living memory, of the word responsibility. People, and even children, were highly responsible in the (eighteen) fifties and (eighteen) sixties, but then it was for their own character, conduct, and demeanor. It is not at all certain that we hold ourselves responsible in this matter to the same degree. We are inclined to accept ourselves as inevitable, to make kindly allowance for our own little ways and peccadilloes,…

 

Parental Responsibility––If we all feel ourselves responsible for the distressed, the suffering, the sick, the feeble in body or mind, the deficient, the ignorant, and–– would that we all felt this particular burden more––for the heathen, there is one kind of responsibility which is felt by thoughtful people with almost undue acuteness. Parental responsibility is, no doubt, the educational note of the day. People feel that they can bring up their children to be something more than themselves, that they ought to do so, and that they must….

 

Anxiety the Note of a Transition Stage––Every new power, whether mechanical or spiritual, requires adjustment before it can be used to the full. In the scientific world there is always a long pause between the first dawn of a great discovery––as the Röntgen rays for example––and the moment when it is applied to the affairs of everyday life with full effect and without the displacement of other powers whose functions are just as important and as necessary. We should regard with suspicion any attempt to make the Röntgen rays supply the place of stethoscope, thermometer, and all other clinical apparatus. Just so is it in the moral sphere. Our keener sense of responsibility arises from a new development of altruistic feeling–– we have greater power of loving and wider scope for our love; we are more leavened by the Spirit of Christ, even when we do not recognize the source of our fuller life. But to perceive that there is much which we ought to do and not to know exactly what it is, nor how to do it, does not add to the pleasure of life or to ease in living. We become worried, restless, anxious; and in the transition stage between the development of this new power and the adjustment which comes with time and experience, the fuller life, which is certainly ours, fails to make us either happier or more useful.

 

A Fussy and Restless Habit––It is by way of an effort towards this adjustment of power that I wish to bring before parents and teachers the subject of ‘masterly inactivity.’ We ought to do so much for our children, and are able to do so much for them, that we begin to think everything rests with us and that we should never intermit for a moment our conscious action on the young minds and hearts about us. Our endeavours become fussy and restless. We are too much with our children, ‘late and soon.’ We try to dominate them too much, even when we fail to govern, and we are unable to perceive that wise and purposeful letting alone is the best part of education. But this form of error arises from a defect of our qualities. We may take heart. We have the qualities, and all that is wanted is adjustment; to this we must give our time and attention.

 

Masterly Inactivity.’ ––A blessed thing in our mental constitution is, that once we receive an idea, it will work itself out, in thought and act, without much after-effort on our part; and, if we admit the idea of ‘masterly inactivity’ as a factor in education, we shall find ourselves framing our dealings with children from this standpoint, without much conscious effort. But we must get clearly into our heads what we mean by masterly inactivity. Carlyle’s happy phrase has nothing in common with the laisser allez (letting go) attitude that comes of thinking ‘what’s the good?’ and still further is it removed from the sheer indolence of mind that lets things go their way rather than take the trouble to lead them to any issue. It indicates a fine healthy moral pose, which it is worthwhile for us to analyze. Perhaps the idea is nearly that conveyed in Wordsworth’s even more happy phrase, ‘wise passiveness’. It indicates the power to act, the desire to act, and the insight and self-restraint which forbid action. But there is, from our point of view at any rate, a further idea conveyed in ‘masterly inactivity.’ The mastery is not over ourselves only; there is also a sense of authority, which our children should be as much aware of when it is inactive as when they are doing our bidding. The sense of authority is the sine quâ non (a necessary condition with out which something is not possible) of the parental relationship, and I am not sure that without that our activities or our inactivity will produce any great results. This element of strength is the backbone of our position. ‘We could an’ if we would’ and the children know it–– They are free under authority, which is liberty; to be free without authority is license.

 

The Element of Good Humor (temperament, disposition). ––The next element in the attitude of masterly inactivity is good humor––frank, cordial, natural, good humor. This is quite a different thing from overmuch complacency, and a general giving-in to all the children’s whims. The one is the outcome of strength, the other of weakness, and children are very quick to see the difference. ‘Oh, mother, may we go blackberrying this afternoon, instead of lessons?’ The masterly and the abject ‘yes’ are quite different notes. The first makes the holiday doubly a delight; the second produces a restless desire to gain some other easy victory.

 

Self-confidence. ––The next element is confidence. Parents should trust themselves more. Everything is not done by restless endeavor. The mere blessed fact of the parental relationship and of that authority which belongs to it, by right and by nature, acts upon the children as do sunshine and shower on a seed in good soil. But the fussy parent, the anxious parent, the parent who explains overmuch, who commands overmuch, who excuses overmuch, who restrains overmuch, who interferes overmuch, even the parent who is with the children overmuch, does away with dignity and simplicity of that relationship which, like all the best and most delicate things in life, suffer by being asserted or defended.

 

The fine, easy way of Fathers. ––Fathers are, sometimes, more happy than mothers in assuming that fine easy way with their children which belongs of right to their relationship, but this is only because the father is occupied with many things, and the mother is apt to be too much engrossed with her children. It is a little humiliating to the best of us to see a careless, rather a selfish mother, whose children are her born slaves and run to do her bidding with delight. The moral is, not that all mothers should be careless and selfish, but that they should give their children the ease of a good deal of letting alone, and should not oppress the young people with their own anxious care. The small person of ten who wishes to know if her attainments are up to the average for her age, or he who discusses his bad habits with you and the best way of curing them, is displeasing, because one feels instinctively that the child is occupied with cares which belong to the parent only. The burden of their children’s training must be borne by the parents alone. But let them bear it with easy grace and an erect carriage, as the Spanish peasant bears her water-jar.

 

Omniscience of Parents and Teachers. ––Parents and teachers must, of course, be omniscient; their children expect this of them, and a mother or father who can be hoodwinked is a person easy to reckon with in the mind of even the best child. For children are always playing a game––half of chance, half of skill; they are trying how far they can go, how much of the management of their own lives they can get for the taking, and how much they must leave in the hands of the stronger powers. Therefore the mother who is not up to children is at their mercy, and need expect no quarter. But she must see without watching, know without telling, be on the alert always, yet never obviously, fussily, so. This open-eyed attitude must be sphinx-like in its repose. The children must know themselves to be let alone, whether to do their own duty or to seek their own pleasure. The constraining power should be present, but passive, so that the child may not feel himself hemmed in without choice. That free-will of man, which has for ages exercised faithful souls who would prefer to be compelled into all righteousness and obedience, is after all a pattern for parents. The child who is good because he must be so, loses in power of initiative more than he gains in seemly behavior. Every time a child feels that he chooses to obey of his own accord, his power of initiative is strengthened. The bearing-rein may not be used. When it occurs to a child to reflect on his behavior, he should have that sense of liberty, which makes good behavior, appear to him a matter of his preference and choice.

 

‘Fate’ and ‘Freewill’––This is the freedom which a child enjoys who has the confidence of his parents as to his comings and goings and childish doings, and who is all the time aware of their authority. He is brought up in the school proper for a being whose life is conditioned by ‘fate’ and ‘freewill.’ He has liberty, that is, with a sense of must behind it to relieve him of that unrest which comes with the constant effort of decision. He is free to do as he ought, but knows quite well in his secret heart that he is not free to do that which he ought not. The child who, on the contrary, grows up with no strong sense of authority behind all his actions, but who receives many exhortations to be good and obedient and what not, is aware that he may choose either good or evil, he may obey or not obey, he may tell the truth or tell a lie; and, even when he chooses aright, he does so at the cost of a great deal of nervous wear and tear. His parents have removed from him the support of their authority in the difficult choice of right-doing, and he is left alone to make that most trying of all efforts, the effort of decision. Is the distinction between being free to choose the right at one’s own option, and not free to do the wrong, too subtle to be grasped, too elusive to be practical? It may be so, but it is precisely the distinction which we are aware of in our own lives so far as we keep ourselves consciously under the divine governance. We are free to go in the ways of right living, and have the happy sense of liberty of choice, but the ways of transgressors are hard. We are aware of a restraining hand in the present, and of sure and certain retribution in the future. Just this delicate poise is to be aimed at for the child. He must be treated with full confidence, and must feel that right-doing is his own free choice, which his parents trust him to make; but he must also be very well aware of the deterrent force in the background, watchful to hinder him when he would do wrong.

 

The Component Parts of Masterly Inactivity. ––We have seen that authority, good humor (temperament or disposition), confidence, both self-confidence and confidence in the children, are all contained in masterly inactivity, but these are not all the parts of that whole. A sound mind in a sound body is another factor. If the sound body is unattainable, anyway, get the sound mind. Let not the nervous, anxious, worried mother think this easy, happy relation with her children is for her. She may be the best mother in the world, but the thing that her children will get from her in these moods is a touch of her nervousness––most catching of complaints. She will find them fractious, rebellious, unmanageable, and will be slow to realize that it is her fault; not the fault of her act but of her state.

 

Serenity of a Madonna. ––It is not for nothing that the old painters, however diverse their ideas in other matters, all fixed upon one quality as proper to the pattern Mother. The Madonna, no matter out of whose canvas she looks at you, is always serene. This is a great truth, and we should do well to hang our walls with the Madonnas of all the early Masters if the lesson, taught through the eye, would reach with calming influence to the heart. Is this a hard saying for mothers in these anxious and troubled days? It may be hard, but it is not unsympathetic. If mothers could learn to do for themselves what they do for their children when these are overdone, we should have happier households. Let the mother go out to play! If she would only have courage to let everything go when life becomes too tense, and just take a day, or half a day, out in the fields, or with a favorite book, or in a picture gallery looking long and well at just two or three pictures, or in bed, without the children, life would go on far more happily for both children and parents. The mother would be able to hold herself in ‘wise passiveness,’ and would not fret her children by continual interference, even of hand or eye––she would let them be.

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider

 

  1. What did it look like for people to be responsible for their own character, thought and demeanor? How and why has the change occurred for children to have less responsibility for themselves?
  2. What is parental responsibility?
  3. What is the effect of anxiety on parents? On children?
  4. Give examples of “doing too much for our children” at the various stages of their lives. How does anxiety provoke these actions?
  5. Contrast laisser allez (letting go) and a wise passiveness. How do license and liberty relate with these ideas?
  6. Describe what masterly inactivity looks like at four, fourteen, twenty-four.
  7. Describe how the component parts of masterly inactivity are used in relating with children.
  8. How do the examples of the father, the sphinx, and the Madonna give way to more understanding of masterly inactivity?

1 Charlotte Mason, School Education

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Video Series Part 7. The Importance of Atmosphere Chapter Four: The Teacher and the Atmosphere https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-7-the-importance-of-atmosphere-chapter-four-the-teacher-and-the-atmosphere/ Fri, 29 Sep 2023 16:33:49 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1781 Charlotte Mason proposes the need to ‘rectify’ our view of authority and how authority rightly ‘vested in the office’ of the teacher impacts the learning atmosphere. Miss Mason explains how authority is not autocratic rule but rather it is a mantle to wear with dignity and confidence. The teacher walks in authority, is under authority, and is ever aware that she stands always on Holy ground before the children.

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Video Series Part 7. The Importance of Atmosphere
Chapter Four: The Teacher and the Atmosphere

Charlotte Mason proposes the need to ‘rectify’ our view of authority and how authority rightly ‘vested in the office’ of the teacher impacts the learning atmosphere. Miss Mason explains how authority is not autocratic rule but rather it is a mantle to wear with dignity and confidence. The teacher walks in authority, is under authority, and is ever aware that she stands always on Holy ground before the children.

 

In Part 7 of our video and discussion guides, we explore and consider what right authority looks like at Ambleside Schools.

Authority, vested in the Office. –It is by these countercurrents, so to speak, of mind forces that we have been taught to rectify our notion of authority. Easily within living memory we were upon dangerous ground. We believed that authority was vested in persons, that arbitrary action became such persons, that slavish obedience was good for the others. This theory of government we derived from our religion; we believed in the ‘divine right’ of kings and of parents because we believed that the very will of God was an arbitrary will. But we have been taught better; we know now that authority is vested in the office and not in the person; that the moment it is treated as a personal attribute it is forfeited. We know that a person in authority is a person authorized; and that he who is authorized is under authority. The person under authority holds and fulfills a trust; in so far as he asserts himself; governs upon the impulse of his own will, he ceases to be authoritative and authorized, and becomes arbitrary and autocratic. It is autocracy and arbitrary rule, which must be enforced, at all points, by a penal code; hence the confusion of thought which exists as to the connection between authority and punishment. The despot rules by terror; he punishes right and left to uphold his unauthorized sway. The person who is vested with authority, on the contrary, requires no rigors of the law to bolster him up, because authority is behind him; and, before him, the corresponding principle of docility.

 

… Autocracy is defined as independent or self-derived power. Authority, on the other hand, may qualify as not being self-derived and not independent. The centurion in the Gospels says: “I also am a man set under authority, having under me soldiers, and I say unto one, ‘Go,’ and he goeth; another, ‘Come,’ and he cometh; and to my servant, ‘Do this,’ and he doeth it.” Here we have the powers and the limitations of authority. The centurion is set under authority, or, as we say, authorized, and, for that reason, he is able to say to one, ‘go,’ to another, ‘come,’ and to a third, ‘do this,’ in the calm certainty that all will be done as he says, because he holds his position for this very purpose––to secure that such and such things shall be accomplished. He himself is a servant with definite tasks, though they are the tasks of authority. This, too, is the position that our Lord assumes; He says: “I came not to do mine own will, but the will of Him that sent me.” That is His commission and the standing order of His life, and for this reason He spake as one having authority, knowing Himself to be commissioned and supported.

 

Behaviour of Autocracy. –Authority is not uneasy; captious, harsh and indulgent by turns. This is the action of autocracy, which is self-sustained as it is self-derived, and is impatient and resentful, on the watch for transgressions, and swift to take offence. Autocracy has ever a drastic penal code, whether in the kingdom, the school, or the family. It has, too, many commandments. ‘Thou shalt’ and ‘thou shalt not,’ are entanglements about the would-be awful majesty of the autocrat. The tendency to assume self-derived power is common to us all, even the meekest of us, and calls for special watchfulness; the more so, because it shows itself fully as often in remitting duties and in granting indulgences as in inflicting punishments. It is flattering when a child comes up in the winning, coaxing way the monkeys know how to assume, and says, ‘Please let me stay at home this morning, only this once!’ The next stage is, ‘I don’t want to go out,’ and the next, ‘I won’t!’ and the home or school ruler, who has no principle behind his own will, soon learns that a child can be autocratic too–autocratic and belligerent to an alarming extent.

 

Behavior of Authority. –Authority is neither harsh nor indulgent. She is gentle and easy to be entreated in all matters immaterial, just because she is immovable in matters of real importance; for these, there is always a fixed principle. It does not, for example, rest with parents and teachers to dally with questions affecting either the health or the duty of their children. They have no authority to allow to children in indulgences–in too many sweetmeats, for example–or in habits which are prejudicial to health; nor to let them off from any plain duty of obedience, courtesy, reverence, or work. Authority is alert; she knows all that is going on and is aware of tendencies. She fulfills the apostolic precept–”He that ruleth (let him do it), with diligence.” But she is strong enough to fulfill that other precept also, “He that showeth mercy (let him do it), with cheerfulness”; timely clemency, timely yielding, is a great secret of strong government. It sometimes happens that children, and not their parents, have right on their side: a claim may be made or an injunction resisted, and the children are in opposition to parent or teacher. It is well for the latter to get the habit of swiftly and imperceptibly reviewing the situation; possibly, the children may be in the right, and the parent may gather up his wits in time to yield the point graciously and send the little rebels away in a glow of love and loyalty.1

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider

 

  1. What and how does our culture communicate about authority?
  2. Describe what authority is like when it is invested in persons rather than the office? What are its consequences for the governed?
  3. Describe what authority is like when it is invested in the office? What are its consequences for the governed?
  4. Explain the terms authorized and autocracy using the example of the centurion.
  5. When is it most likely as parents and teachers that we become arbitrary or autocratic?
  6. Contrast the behavior of authority and the behavior of the autocrat?
  7. What does it look like to be authorized when a child wants his way? In the course of daily life?

1 Charlotte Mason, School Education

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Video Series Part 6. The Importance of Atmosphere Chapter Three: Cultivating an Atmosphere for Learning https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-6-the-importance-of-atmosphere-chapter-three-cultivating-an-atmosphere-for-learning/ Fri, 22 Sep 2023 16:18:11 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1771 In cultivating an atmosphere for learning, we at Ambleside are ever-mindful of our responsibility and vocation as educators to nurture the children, providing a place for them to grow and thrive — a place that encourages and supports the development of their mind and capacities through their own worthy efforts to apprehend knowledge.

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Video Series Part 6. The Importance of Atmosphere
Chapter Three: Cultivating an Atmosphere for Learning

In cultivating an atmosphere for learning, we at Ambleside are ever-mindful of our responsibility and vocation as educators to nurture the children, providing a place for them to grow and thrive — a place that encourages and supports the development of their mind and capacities through their own worthy efforts to apprehend knowledge.

 

In this next in our series of video and discussion guides, we explore Charlotte Mason’s idea that a child ‘has to know as he has to eat’ and that ‘we must eat every day to live every day’ and what that entails.

That, it is not for a man to choose, “I will learn this or that, the rest is not my concern”; still less is it for parent or schoolmaster to limit a child to less than he can get at of the whole field of knowledge; for, in the domain of mind at least as much as in that of morals or religion, man is under a Divine Master; he has to know as he has to eat.

 

That, there is not one period of life, our school days, in which we sit down to regular meals of intellectual diet, but that we must eat every day to live every day. That, knowledge and what is known as “learning” are not to be confounded; learning may still be an available store when it is not knowledge; but by knowledge one grows, becomes more of a person, and that is all that there is to show for it. We sometimes wonder at the simplicity and modesty of persons whose knowledge is matter of repute; but they are not hiding their light; they are not aware of any unusual possessions; they have nothing to show but themselves, but we feel the force of their personalities. Now, forceful personalities, persons of weight and integrity, of decision and sound judgment, are what the country is most in need of; and, if we propose to bring such persons up for the public service, the gradual inception of knowledge is one condition amongst others.

 

“With all thy getting, get understanding,” is the message for our needs, and understanding is, in one sense, the conscious act of the mind in apprehending knowledge, which is in fact relative, and does not exist for any person until that person’s mind acts upon the intellectual matter presented to it “Why will ye not understand?” is the repeated and poignant question of the Gospels.1

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider:

 

  1. Reflect upon your community and your children’s community. What affections are they forming?
  2. Talk about the relationship of knowledge and the problem of the educator or the child choosing?
  3. What does the intellectual diet look like every school day? Weekends? Summer break? Holiday breaks?
  4. Why do persons take a fast from knowledge?
  5. What does Charlotte Mason mean by this phrase, “by knowledge one grows, becomes more of a person, and that is all that there is to show for it?”
  6. What is understanding?
  7. Reflect upon your intellectual diet? Your children’s?

1 Charlotte Mason, School Education

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Video Series Part 5. The Importance of Atmosphere Chapter Two: How Atmosphere Sets Affections https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-5-the-importance-of-atmosphere-chapter-two-how-atmosphere-sets-affections/ Fri, 15 Sep 2023 20:18:04 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1764 In this next part in our video and discussion guides, we flesh out Charlotte Mason’s ideas on how to ‘excite appetency … toward things lovely, honest, and of good report.’ And we wholeheartedly agree that this is the earliest and most important ministry of the educator.

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Video Series Part 5. The Importance of Atmosphere
Chapter Two: How Atmosphere Sets Affections

With the idea in mind that ‘children are persons’ born with vast capacity and an innate desire for knowledge, at Ambleside we take care in considering how we are contributing to or forming a child’s affections—what is taking up space in the child’s sacred heart and mind?

 

In this next part in our video and discussion guides, we flesh out Charlotte Mason’s ideas on how to ‘excite appetency … toward things lovely, honest, and of good report.’ And we wholeheartedly agree that this is the earliest and most important ministry of the educator.

Ideas may invest as an atmosphere, rather than strike as a weapon. ‘The idea may exist in a clear, distinct, definite form, as that of a circle in the mind of a geometrician; or it may be a mere instinct, a vague appetency towards something, … like the impulse which fills the young poet’s eyes with tears, he knows not why:

 

To excite this ‘appetency towards something’–towards things lovely, honest, and of good report, is the earliest and most important ministry of the educator.

 

How shall these indefinite ideas
which manifest themselves in appetency be imparted?

 

They are not to be given of set purpose, nor taken at set times. They are held in that thought-environment which surrounds the child as an atmosphere, which he breathes as his breath of life; and this atmosphere in which the child inspires his unconscious ideas of right living emanates from his parents. Every look of gentleness and tone of reverence, every word of kindness and act of help, passes into the thought-environment, the very atmosphere which the child breathes; he does not think of these things, may never think of them, but all his life long they excite that ‘vague appetency towards something’ out of which most of his actions spring. Oh, wonderful and dreadful (awe inspiring) presence of the little child in the midst!1

 

Next, that knowledge, in this light, is no longer sacred and secular, great and trivial, practical and theoretical. All knowledge, dealt out to us in such portions as we are ready for, is sacred; knowledge is, perhaps, a beautiful whole, a great unity, embracing God and man and the universe, but having many parts which are not comparable with one another in the sense of less or more, because all are necessary and each has its functions. Next, we perceive that knowledge and the mind of man are to each other as are air and the lungs. The mind lives by means of knowledge; stagnates, faints, perishes, deprived of this necessary atmosphere.2

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider:

 

  1. In the video, Dr. St Cyr referred to a “child’s atmosphere.” What does this look and feel like? And why does this atmosphere inhibit growth?
  2. Explain the nature of ideas – how they are invested in the atmosphere and how they strike as a weapon. Give examples.
  3. What is the most important role of the educator according to Charlotte Mason? Why?
  4. How are these ideas imparted?
  5. Contrast ideas given in through a thought-atmosphere and those given during a set purpose and a set time.
  6. Describe the nature of knowledge in the thought-atmosphere presented by the educator.
  7. What might we deduce from this statement, “The mind lives by means of knowledge; stagnates, faints, perishes, deprived of this necessary atmosphere”?

1 Charlotte Mason, School Education, 326.

2 Charlotte Mason, School Education, 94.

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Video Series Part 4. The Importance of Atmosphere Chapter One: The Foundation of Joy https://amblesideschools.org/video-series-part-4-the-importance-of-atmosphere-chapter-one-the-foundation-of-joy/ Fri, 08 Sep 2023 20:34:08 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1751 Charlotte Mason emphasized cultivating an atmosphere conducive to learning and growing. At Ambleside, we take great care to develop such an atmosphere, and our teachers are actively engaged and attuned to what is ‘going around’ in the classroom, on the playground, and through the school hallways.

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Video Series Part 4. The Importance of Atmosphere
Chapter One: The Foundation of Joy

Charlotte Mason emphasized cultivating an atmosphere conducive to learning and growing. At Ambleside, we take great care to develop such an atmosphere, and our teachers are actively engaged and attuned to what is ‘going around’ in the classroom, on the playground, and through the school hallways. Teacher and student learn to consider their influence on the atmosphere—does it reflect our best self and is it for the good of others? One of the most important responsibilities of a teacher is to set an atmosphere of joy in the classroom, the sense “it is good to be me here with you!” The sense of joy is non-verbal-—it is in the air, breathed in by the children.  A joyful atmosphere allows children to feel safe and free of anxiety so their brains are freed to learn and explore. Visitors to Ambleside Schools often remark, “There is peace here. The students’ and teachers’ expressions are genuine, full of delight and full of joy.”

 

This week we continue our video and discussion guide series in the words of Charlotte Mason and with consideration of the importance of a joyful atmosphere in a child’s education.

Both the circle of the family and that of social intercourse are subjected to forces that are active in the entire social body, and that penetrate the entire atmosphere of human life in invisible channels. No one knows whence these currents, these ideas arise; but they are there. They influence the moods, the aspirations, and the inclinations of humanity, and no one, however powerful, can withdraw himself from their effects; no sovereign’s command makes its way into their depths. They are often born of a genius to be seized upon by the multitude that soon forgets their author; then the power of the thought that has thus become active in the masses again impels the individual to energetic resolutions: in this manner it is constantly describing a remarkable circle. Originating with those that are highly gifted, these thoughts permeate all society, reaching, in fact, not only its members, but also through these its youth, and appearing again in other highly gifted individuals in whom they will perhaps have been elevated to a definite form. Whether the power of these dominant ideas is greater in the individual, or in the body of individuals as a whole, is a matter of indifference here. Be that as it may, it cannot be denied that their effect upon the one is manifested in a reciprocal action upon the other, and that their influence upon the younger generation is indisputable.1

 

But, supposing that ‘Education is an Atmosphere’ brings a fresh and vigorous thought to our minds, suppose that it means to us, for our children, sunshine and green fields, pleasant rooms and good pictures, schools where learning is taken in by the gentle act of inspiration, followed by the expiration of all that which is not wanted, where charming teachers compose the children by a half-mesmeric effluence which inclines them to do as others do, be as others are,––suppose that all this is included in our notion of ‘Education is an atmosphere,’ may we not sit at our ease and believe that all is well, and that the whole of education has been accomplished? No; because though we cannot live without air, neither can we live upon air, and children brought up upon ‘environment’ soon begin to show signs of inanition; they have little or no healthy curiosity, power of attention, or of effort; what is worse, they lose spontaneity and initiative; they expect life to drop into them like drops into a rain-tub, without effort or intention on their part.2

 

Questions and Thoughts to Consider:

 

  1. Charlotte Mason talks about forces that penetrate human life through invisible channels, which influence moods, aspiration, and inclinations. Talk about your experience in both a positive and a negative light how these channels have influenced you and others you know.
  2. What are the channels that communicated joy, the idea of “It is good to be me here with you.” when you were growing up?
  3. What are the messages from society that travel through this invisible channel? On what are they based?
  4. What would happen if the air we breathe in a class or home would be all ease?
  5. Describe a joy filled classroom and home when there is challenge and when there are daily rhythms?

1 Charlotte Mason, School Education, 326.

2 Charlotte Mason, School Education, 94.

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What is in the Air? https://amblesideschools.org/what-is-in-the-air/ Wed, 22 Mar 2023 10:00:40 +0000 https://amblesideschools.org/?p=1403 We are shaped by the ideas that are seeded in us and the relational air that we breathe. And we are continuously exhaling ideas and relational air which those around us will inhale. The question is “What’s in the air?”

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What is in the Air?

Ideas may invest as an atmosphere, rather than strike as a weapon. The idea may exist in a clear, distinct, definite form, as that of a circle in the mind of a geometrician; or it may be a mere instinct, a vague appetency towards something, … like the impulse which fills the young poet’s eyes with tears, he knows not why: To excite this ‘appetency towards something’ — towards things lovely, honest, and or good report, is the earliest and most important ministry of the educator.

— Charlotte Mason —

 

I remember a retreat I hosted more than thirty years ago – 40 high school students, a dozen college students, and my faithful parents behind the scenes, cooking and doing the dishes. On the final morning, shortly after breakfast, we began to sing. Drying his hands from the dish water, my father came out to join us. His voice still sounds in my ears, fervent and timid. (He never wanted to bring attention to himself).

 

“I have decided to follow Jesus.
I have decided to follow Jesus.
No turning back, no turning back.

“Though none go with me still I will follow.
Though none go with me still I will follow.
No turning back, no turning back.

“The cross before me and the world behind me.
The cross before me and the world behind me.
No turning back, no turning back.

 

An idea wrapped in a relational atmosphere. All my life, I shall carry it as one of those seeds which has shaped me.

 

This is not only the human condition “on retreat.” But, it is our continuous condition. We are shaped by the ideas that are seeded in us and the relational air that we breathe. And we are continuously exhaling ideas and relational air which those around us will inhale. Parent, teacher, pastor, office manager, engineer, machinist, flight attendant, temp-secretary, everyone creates a relational atmosphere and sows it with ideas. Most frequently, we do so unconsciously. The question is “What’s in the air?”

 

Bill St. Cyr

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