Copywork
{an assignment}

Pippa's Song by Robert Browning
We actually pulled this exercise from Spelling Wisdom to coincide with our spelling list from Spell to Write and Read. I love that Javen adds his personal touch to all his work. This time drawing in the illuminated first letter. He's very clever.
My rule for copywork is that it has to be a perfect copy the first time. This includes spelling, punctuation and handwriting. So, obviously I am careful in which passages I choose for them. Normally they would have the selection right in front of them printed off the computer using a cursive font. Today, since most of the words are words they have either had on their spelling lists or words that I thought they should have no problem with, we decided to do straight dictation. I read the passage phrase by phrase (giving prompts where necessary). They in turn wrote the passage down. We are just beginning to do this and haven't done very much so I'm very proud of them! This is not Javen's best work as far as neatness, but I was rather excited about his illumination! :) We got a double whammy with this selection as we were then able to discuss the poetry in a casual way, rhyme, repetition, etc.
"No work should be given to a child that he cannot execute perfectly, and then perfection should be required of him as a matter of course. For instance, he is set to do a copy of strokes, and is allowed to show a slateful of 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 tomorrow and the next day, and when the six perfect strokes appear, let it be an occasion of triumph. So with the little tasks of 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."
We started with easy copywork from pretty young age. In those earlier days my husband felt a lot more pressure to keep our kids on the level. Anyone else have experience with this? A husband who doesn't really get the whole more Charlotte Mason realm? Well, he has loosened up somewhat as he sees the benefit of the 'education is an atmosphere, a discipline, a life.' Bria (recently 7yo) in AOY1 has started copywork, but it isn't forced at all. She does a lot of copywork apart from school entirely of her own initiative (writing letters, making play money and receipts, etc.). I have not officially taught her handwriting yet. Though over the last several months she has started to write on her own, having taken the last year to really master all the letters (we learn them in the form of the 70 basic phonograms a la SWR). She is definitely learning by a more relaxed route. We are still very much in the stage of fostering her love for learning.Charlotte Mason's Original Homeschooling Series - Vol. 1, pg. 160
How do you do copywork and dictation? What age do you start?