Encyclopedias without screens.

Commenter SteveG asks:

First, you mention using good Pictorial Encyclopedias for history, and specifically reference Usborne and History Odyssey….but do you have/use a more general Encyclopedia as well (beyond history)?Both the boys (7 and almost 5) are in the mode of constantly asking ‘how does that work?’ or ‘how do they make that?’ type questions. The response is often…’We’ll have to look into that.’ But more often than we’d probably like to admit, life gets in the way of follow up.

It would be great to have a resource that’s more handy (that doesn’t involve a screen) that we could readily turn to.

I don’t have a general encyclopedia (yet), except for the Dorling Kindersley Children’s Illustrated Encyclopedia, which is okay but not at all comprehensive.  I bought it not so much to be an encyclopedia as to be a "browsing" book — something interesting that kids could pick up, leaf through, look at pictures and read as they like. 

As for answering kids’ questions without a screen, you could do what  my friend Hannah  does (she also knows too well how distracting the "screen" can be).  When her son (age 8 and reading well) asks her a question, she Googles the answer and finds a good website written at his reading level.  Then she prints out the page and gives him the paper.  ๐Ÿ™‚

Do you have a regular routine of visiting your local branch library?  Another idea (also Hannah’s) is to keep a Question Book — write down the questions in it and take it with you to look up the answers when you stop by your library, or wherever the answer can be found.  If you’re really together, the Question Book could be a record of the answers too, and serve as a scrapbook or journal of your investigations.


Comments

3 responses to “Encyclopedias without screens.”

  1. SteveG Avatar
    SteveG

    I like the ‘no screen’ approach of you friend to getting information off the computer without the temptation for him to get stuck on it. What a great cheat!
    The other idea is so obvious we just missed it. Yes, we are constantly at the library, and a simple small notebook as a place to log the questions makes perfect sense.
    Already picked up a little spiral bound notebook for just that purpose, and already have a question logged.
    Thanks again for all the great ideas!
    We are still eternally indebted to you for introducing use to Neufeld’s work…and now the we’ve got even more we owe you! ๐Ÿ˜›

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  2. Christy P Avatar
    Christy P

    Love the question book – our LO isn’t big enough for questions yet, but J and I are. Sometimes I have been known to leave myself a voicemail with the question or make a note on my PDA. That’s not as useful for a logbook, but it works for my rather digital and fractured (more than one office) lifestyle.

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  3. I really wish I could be together enough to make a Question Book and follow up on it. It strikes me as ideal for the sort of people who are really into scrapbooking and nature journaling and such things. I have never been able to establish the habit. But I think it’s a fabulous idea. If you were the “unschooling” type, I imagine that a well-kept and frequently used question book could be the core of a preK-2 curriculum.

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