Thursday, December 29, 2011

Core Phase Tune-up

I am learning a lot right now about the Phases of Learning as taught by Oliver and Rachel DeMille in Leadership Education: The Phases of Learning.  I thought I understood them quite well but I’ve recently had a humbling experience that has showed me how little I’ve understood.  I’ve heard and read many times that you never leave the foundational phases, you just add to them but until now, I didn’t really get it. 

I “did” core phase and love of learning phase several years ago and have spent the last few years focused on scholar, depth, and mission phases.  When you begin Leadership Education as an adult, you typically will be working on a couple or a few phases simultaneously – not ideal, but if you miss the opportunity to take on the foundational phases as a child, you will probably have to do them while building and caring for your family.  In the last 6 months, I’ve noticed more things going wrong in my life than right.  As I’ve pondered and examined, I realized that 99% of my problems are rooted in core phase issues.  After being painfully humbled I accepted the fact that I needed to put my scholar and depth phase studies on hold while I focused my mental and emotional energy on a core phase tune up.

At first I worried that I had developed major character flaws and was becoming a bad person.  I worried that my personal core had become rotten.  This horrified me.  I want badly to be a good person and live with integrity.  After a lot of talking and pondering and processing I realized that I hadn’t totally lost my integrity and character, I had lost the habits that keep my character in check and protect my integrity.  I realized that making these habits is what Core Phase is all about.  For me these habits include things like:

  • Reading from my core book daily
  • Praying daily
  • Being a good friend, daughter, sister, wife, and mother
  • Following my family’s routine for personal hygiene and personal chores, especially taking care of myself before the kids wake up (things like going to bed and waking up on time, making my bed, exercising, showering, etc.)
  • Using a system for family work, meal preparation, family finances, and shopping,
  • Keeping my home organized and clean


At one time I had habits that addressed all of these things.  But in the last 3 years, my life has seen a fair amount of upheaval. 3 years ago, me, my husband and our then 5 yr old daughter moved to Utah for 3 months to adopt and be with our twins who were then very sick micro-preemies in a NICU (Born at 25 weeks at 1.5 pounds each).   Then, when the twins were 10 months old, on my oldest daughter’s 6th birthday, I had to have brain surgery.  It has been a wild ride.   Miraculously everyone is healthy and happy and together.  We survived. 

What didn’t, were my fundamental habits and systems.  We have been limping along for the last three years with a routine and systems that were designed around a different family in totally different circumstances.  And the most important of my personal habits?  They've all but disappeared.  Of course I’ve made changes along the way and we aren’t doing things the same way we used to but mostly, I’m just not doing half the things I used to.  I understood that with all the upheaval I would need to take a break from scholar and depth phases and I did.  I pulled out of my GWU classes, said no to every commitment outside of my home, and focused on my family for a couple years.  But what I missed, what I just didn’t get, what I’m being forced to learn now is:  When my circumstances change in any significant way, I need to redesign and reestablish all the habits, routines, and systems that keep me and my home running well.  Establishing or reestablishing a habit, routine, or system takes an enormous amount of mental and emotional energy.  I have found that I can’t work on more than one thing at a time, with any degree of success.  This is a very frustrating truth but I see no way around it.  Leo Babauta, one of my favorite bloggers, wrote an amazing post on this concept: The Single Changing Method.   I use a little bit different language to talk about this than Mr. Babauta (I’m not opposed to the word goal) but in principle, I’m with him 100%.

I evaluate the success of each day on whether or not I accomplished my one mini-goal for that day.  Of course I do a lot more than one thing each day, but it is all pretty much out of habit or in response to someone asking (or hollering) for my help.  The only thing I give a lot of mental and emotional energy to is my daily mini-goal.  Right now it is reading from my Core Book first thing in the morning.  When I don’t have to think about it anymore and it just happens, I’ll work on something else. Hopefully within a year, but maybe longer, I will have my new and improved routines and systems running in a smooth, habitual way.  Only then, will I be able to add scholar and depth phase back into the mix.  

Monday, July 18, 2011

Leadership Education Family Builder

In my last post I mentioned a new resource I recently learned about, Leadership Education Family Builder.  I'm a huge fan of this program.  A new online group, mentored by Diann Jeppson, co-author of TJED Home Companion, is beginning this month and you can join it if you want to.  Here is what Diann says about it:


Are you ready to significantly improve the education of your family? Then…


I invite you to join with me, and parents from many communities, as we meet monthly to help YOU…

1.           Create your own unique family vision

2.           Develop a family master education plan

3.           Design and implement your own custom made family systems

The Leadership Education Family Builder program is designed to mentor parents who wish to implement Leadership Education in their homes. (This methodology is also known as Thomas Jefferson Education, or “TJEd”).



It is ideal for the homeschooling family; both beginner and veteran, and also for any parent wishing to improve the quality of their family’s education.



Click HERE for information about the Family Builder Program, and for registration details.

Thursday, July 07, 2011

You, Not Them is the Way To Begin

I love helping people learn about and live TJED principles.  TJED is a lifestyle and for most people it takes a lot of conscious effort to develop a TJED lifestyle in their own home and family.

A lot of people read one of the TJED Books and then ask, “But how do I really do it?”  There are a lot of really great answers to that question.  Some of my favorite answers are in the books Leadership Education and The TJED Home Companion

Family Builder
I’ve also learned of a new resource that aims to mentor families and groups of adults through the process of developing a TJED lifestyle:  Family Builder.  It is amazing.  I whole-heartedly recommend it.  The first 3 audio downloads are free.  Listen to them and you’ll know if Family Builder is for you.  The program consists of audio lectures and worksheets that take you through the Family Builder process.  Ideally, you would be part of a local Family Builder group, led by a Family Builder Facilitator that would meet regularly to work through the Family Builder program together.  I hope to get trained as a Facilitator and lead a group in my area someday.  You can also do the program on your own or with an online group. 

I have my own way of answering the question, “But how do I really do it?” and my way really isn’t different from what all those other resources say but sometimes it is helpful to hear the same information in a variety of ways.  My thoughts draw heavily on the TJED books and an audio lecture titled, Adult Phases, given by Julie Earley at a TJED Forum. You can buy it here.  So here is how I answer the question, "But how do I really do it?"

A Shiny New Dream
Most often (definitely not always) it is the mother in a family who discovers TJED and decides she wants to “use it” with her family.  My thoughts apply to fathers and singles who want to “use” or “do” TJED too.  My imaginary narrative will be about a typical aspiring TJED mom.  Mom has usually discovered TJED at an event or after talking to a good friend who “does” TJED.  She is really excited and dreaming of a home cleaned by her children who spend their afternoon studying Calculus, Greek, and Philosophy and then relax with a family reading of a novel like Les Miserables.  When her children grow up, they save the world in half a dozen different ways.  Her dream really inspires her and she wants to see it become a reality, tomorrow. 

I think that dream sounds lovely and living a TJED lifestyle will very likely yield some if not all of those results but that is not what TJED is about.  TJED is about building leaders, also known as statesmen.  Building leaders works best when the future leader grows up in a certain kind of home environment with a certain kind of family lifestyle that inspires and helps them to progress through the phases of learning.  An individual who progresses through the phases of learning will become a leader no matter how old they are when they begin the process.  Success is not limited to children, homeschoolers or farmers. 

Reality: a Rocky Start
Mom comes home with a stack of classics and half a dozen plans for how to start “doing” TJED.   She begins to share her dream with her family, sure that they will feel just as inspired by it and get right to work on fulfilling it.  But they aren’t and they don’t.  And she isn’t even sure what to tell them to do.  She is sure that if she can just figure out what “they” should do, it will all come together.  At this point she is seriously tempted to give up and go back to what she was doing before she heard about TJED. Or, she may ask, "But how do I really do it?"

The answer is one of the 7 Keys of Great Teaching, from A Thomas Jefferson Education:

You, Not Them, is the Way to Begin

If you want to develop a TJED lifestyle for yourself and your family, you must begin with yourself and leave everyone else alone.  You must progress yourself through the phases of learning, beginning with Core Phase.  You cannot inspire someone to pursue a Core Phase or mentor them through it if you haven’t experienced it yourself.  This is hard to swallow for most people and it probably sounds all wrong but I know it works.  It doesn’t just work, it shoots the moon.  You won’t believe the results you’ll see if you give this a try.  I’m talking totally transformational, revolutionary results.

But it will sound so simple you might be tempted to dismiss it.  I beg of you, just try it.  You will probably be able to do steps 1-5 in an evening.  One week of working on step 6 will probably convince you the process works.  Here’s the specific steps I recommend:

1.  Don’t change a thing.
Whatever your family has been doing, don’t change it, just let them keep on keepin’ on.  Whatever routine your family has right now, maintain it.  Of course if someone in your family is in a dangerous or harmful situation then get them out of it immediately but don’t make them do anything else.  Even if you’ve pulled your kids out of school and the default routine is for them to play all day, let it happen.  Sometimes nothing really is better than an inferior something.  A little detox time with lots of play will not hurt your family while you figure out what you are going to do.

2.  Determine your Core Book and Authority Figure.
Fundamental to TJED and Core Phase is a learning good/bad, right/wrong, true false.  Your Authority Figure and Core Book define these for you.  An Authority Figure is often a higher power or a transcendent human being.  Someone like God, a Prophet, a Political Leader, a Philosopher etc. that you turn to for answers to Life’s Big Questions.  A Core Book does the same kind of thing and some people use a Core Book as their Authority Figure.  Some examples of Core Books are The Bible, The Bhagavad Gita, The Torah, The Koran, Shakespeare’s Collected Works, The Declaration of Independence, and The Humanist Manifesto.  Some people use a combination of 2 or 3 books/documents as their Core Book.  What is your Core Book and who is your Authority Figure? 

3.  Assess your current routine.
Write down your current personal daily and weekly routine. We are creatures of habit.  Most of what we do every day, we do on autopilot, out of habit.  What do you habitually do every day?  Every week? What time do you wake up?  When do you eat and what do you eat?  When do you work?  When do you play?  When are you home?  When are you somewhere else?  What else do you do?  When do you sleep?  Do not include anything you are not personally involved in. It is important to focus on your routine, no one else’s.  Write it all down, in chronological order.

4.  Determine an ideal routine.
Now remember, we are talking about your routine, the things you will do daily or weekly in an ideal world, not what you hope anyone else in your family, workplace, etc. will do. 

An ideal TJED Core Phaser routine includes:


  •       Time to read your Core Book
  •       Time to pray, meditate, or otherwise communicate with your Authority Figure
  •       Time to work (This includes your responsibilities inside and outside of your home)
  •       Time to play
  •       Time to be inspired
  •       Time to eat
  •       Time to sleep
  •       Time for relationships
  •       Time to take care of personal needs and hygiene

There will be other things in your ideal routine.  What are they?  It’s also important to note that I’m using the word routine, not schedule.  If you are most comfortable with a minute-by-minute schedule, I suspect that is routine for you.  But it isn’t necessary.  A routine is a flow of events that happens habitually.  It is good for a routine to be flexible and allow for deviations.  Specific activities take more or less time on a given day.  Where people and their needs are concerned, it is especially important to take the time it takes to meet those needs.  Often you will be doing two or more basics at once. For example, most of my work and play is also time for relationships. 

Now review your current routine and compare it to your ideal routine.  What do you notice about your current routine?  What is good about it?  Are there important things missing from it?  How happy are you with this routine?  How happy do you think you would be if you were following your ideal routine?

5. Begin Implementing Your Ideal Routine

Proceed with caution.  Remember three things as you begin. 

  • We are only talking about your routine, not what your family, roommates, or coworkers are doing.  Just leave them alone. 
  • You will be successful if you focus on 1 or 2 small changes to your routine at a time.  If you try to change a lot of things all at once, or you try to make a drastic change you are unlikely to stick with it.  I know limiting yourself to 1 or 2 small changes seems like it won’t work.  I promise that it does. 
  • The process is more important than what is accomplished.  This is another way of saying, Trust the Process.  Something magical happens when you consistently work on something small – it becomes a habit.   If the change is a good one, the positive effects ripple throughout your life and world.  Say for example, that time to study your Core Book is not part of your current routine but you decide to work on developing the habit of reading your Core Book for 5 minutes every day.  Even though it is only 5 minutes, it will take a tremendous amount of mental and emotional energy to work this into your routine.  It will take at least 3 weeks of tremendous daily effort to make this a habit.  But, you will experience positive results after just 1 day of reading for 5 minutes.  Some of those results will likely be that your family and/or those around you will see your example and be inspired to do likewise.  Seriously, it will happen. The positive results will make you feel great.  They will motivate you to keep working at it.  They will increase with each successful day.  Resist the urge to start requiring more of yourself.  Define your daily success by whether or not you read your Core Book for 5 minutes.  If your ideal goal is to read for 30 minutes each day and on day 2 you kept going and read for 10 minutes, that is just fine but what really matters is that you read for at least 5 minutes.  Developing the habit is the point.  Once reading your Core Book for 5 minutes a day is a habit, you can work on increasing the amount of time.  Going from 5 minutes to 10 minutes won’t be such a stretch.  Going from no minutes to 10 minutes would be a big change.  And bigger changes are a lot harder to turn into habits.  I was once told that it is our habits that determine our destiny, and I believe it.

After you have made one permanent (habitual) change to your routine, you can begin working on another one.  Keep working at making new habits until your current routine matches your ideal routine, most of the time.  Please note I said, most of the time, not every single day.  Unless you are perfect, you will never be able to follow the ideal routine every day.  If you obsess about perfection you will prevent yourself from fulfilling your potential and you will teach those around you to do likewise.

Depending on how different your current routine and your ideal routine are, this process may take a few months or a few years.  Your definition of ideal is likely to evolve, especially as you progress through the phases.   And you will fall out of some habits and have to make them again.  I have a pretty good personal routine that I’ve worked on for years but I am continually improving it.  This week I’m recreating the habit of making my bed before breakfast.

When you don’t have to think about your ideal routine to make it happen, you can begin working on Creating an Inspiring Environment.  And that’s a post for another day…

Monday, April 18, 2011

American History Dates

I'm at the tail end of the American History class I'm taking through George Wythe University, online.  For this class we read and discussed the following books:

John Adams by David McCullogh
A History of the American People by Paul Johnson
Abraham Lincoln by Lord Charnwood
Great Speeches by Native Americans
Great Speeches by American Women
Great Speeches by African Americans
Famous Documents and Speeches of the Civil War

For part of the written final, I'm supposed to memorize 100 dates from American History.  The class mentor supplied half the dates and each student chooses the other half of the dates they'd like to memorize.  Each student's list of 100 dates will be unique.  Based on my love of books and authors, I chose a lot of book publication dates.  For the curious, here is my list of 110 American History dates to memorize.  When I started making my list I had about 200 dates that seemed important to me - it was tough to cut it down.  I knew hardly any of these at the start of the class but I'm almost there on memorizing them all and even better, based on the books we read and discussed, these dates actually mean something to me - I know what the events were. If you were to make up a list of your own, what would it include?


1492-1599 (1-8)

1.     1492: Columbus discovered the New World
2.     1497: John Cabot begins British Colonial presence in the Americas
3.     c.1514: Ponce de Leon “discovers” Florida and enslaves the inhabitants
4.     1520s: Spaniards, led by Cortes, invade and destroy ancient Mexican civilizations
5.     1539-1542: Hernando De Soto explores areas of Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina
6.     1540: Chief Acuera refuses to treat with De Soto
7.     1587: Roanoke Island colony founded by Sir Walter Raleigh
8.     1590: John White finds Roanoke Island deserted

1600-1700 (9-18)

9.     1607: Jamestown colony settled
10.  August 20th 1619: Yeardly and others at Jamestown purchase the first Africans as slaves.
11.  November 21st 1620: Mayflower Compact
12.  December 11th 1620: Pilgrims land at Plymouth Rock
13.  1636: Roger Williams founds Rhode Island and Providence plantations
14.  1649-1650s: Maryland passes the Toleration Acts
15.  1675-1676: King Philip’s war
16.  1676:Bacon’s Rebellion
17.  1686-89: New England directly governed by Britain until the Glorious Revolution
18.  1692: Salem Witch Trials

1700-1799 (19 – 40)

19.  1730s-1740s: First Great Awakening led by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield
20.  1754-1763: French and Indian War
21.  March 5, 1770 Boston Massacre
22.  December 16, 1773 Boston Tea Party
23.  1774: First Continental Congress
24.  1775-1783:  American Revolutionary War
25.  April 1775: Paul Revere’s Ride
26.  April 19, 1775 Battles of Lexington and Concord
27.  June 17, 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill
28.  July 4th, 1776:  Declaration of Independence
29.  Oct 19, 1781: Surrender of Cornwallis
30.  Sep 3, 1783: Treaty of Paris
31.   1787:  Constitutional Convention
32.  1787: Northwest Ordinance
33.  March 4th 1789:  U.S. Government under the Constitution begins
34.  1791:  Bill of Rights
35.  1791:  First Bank of the U.S. chartered
36.  1794: Whiskey Rebellion
37.  1795:  Jay’s Treaty
38.  1798:  John Adam’s signs the Alien and Sedition acts
39.  1798: XYZ Affair
40.  Dec 14, 1799: Death of George Washington

1800-1899 (41-83)

41.  1803:  Marbury v. Madison establishes Judicial Review
42.  1803:  Lousiana Purchase
43.  1809: Washington Irving, Rip Van Winkle
44.  1812-1814:  War of 1812
45.  1820: Missouri Compromise
46.  1823:  Monroe Doctrine
47.  1825: The Corrupt Bargain
48.  1826: James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans
49.  1830: The Book of Mormon
50.  1831: Cherokee Nation v. Georgia
51.  1831: Edgar Allan Poe, Poems
52.  1832: Jackson vetoes the 2nd Bank of the US charter renewal
53.  1832: Nullification
54.  1836: Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature
55.  1836: McGuffey Readers
56.  1848: Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
57.  1850: Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter
58.  1850: Fugitive Slave Law
59.  1851: Herman Melville, Moby Dick
60.  1852: Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom’s Cabin
61.  1854: Repeal of Missouri Compromise
62.  1854: Founding of Republican Party
63.  1854: Henry David Thoreau, Walden
64.  1855: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, The Song of Hiawatha
65.  1855: Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass
66.  1857: Dred Scott decision
67.  1859: John Brown Hanged
68.  Nov 6, 1860: Lincoln elected President
69.  Dec 20, 1860: South Carolina secedes
70.  1861-1865:  Civil War
71.  1862-1863:  Emancipation Proclamation
72.  April 14, 1865: Lincoln assassinated
73.   1865-1877:  Reconstruction Era
74.  Dec 6, 1865: 13th Amendment abolishes slavery
75.   July 9, 1868: 14th Amendment allows Former slaves to become citizens
76.  1868: Louisa May Alcott, Little Women
77.  1869:  First Transcontinental Railroad completed
78.  February 3, 1870: 15th Amendment gives all men the vote
79.  1875: Mark Twain, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
80.  1881: Henry James, Portrait of a Lady
81.  1884: Mark Twain, Huckleberry Finn
82.  1889: Washington State admitted to the Union
83.  1890:  Wounded Knee Massacre




1900-1999 (84-110)

84.  1901-1909:  Theodore Roosevelt’s progressivist presidency
85.  1906: Upton Sinclair, The Jungle
86.  1911: Edith Wharton, Ethan Frome
87.  1913: Willa Cather, O Pioneers!
88.   1914-1918:  World War I
89.  1915: T. S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
90.  1916: Robert Frost, The Road Not Taken
91.  1918: Strunk and White, The Elements of Style
92.  1919: The Education of Henry Adams, receives a Pulitzer Prize
93.  Jan 16, 1919: 18th Amendment establishes prohibition
94.   Aug 18, 1920:  19th Amendment gives the vote to women
95.  1925: F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
96.  1929:  Stock Market Crash begins the Great Depression
97.  1932: Laura Ingalls Wilder, The Little House in the Big Woods
98.  December 5, 1933: 21st amendment repeals the 18th, ending prohibition
99.  1936: Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People
100.                 1939: John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath
101.                 1940: Ernest Hemingway, For Whom The Bell Tolls
102.                 1940: Mortimer Adler, How to Read a Book
103.                 1941-1945:  US Involvement in World War II, Pearl Harbor to Atomic Bomb
104.                 1947-1991:  Cold War
105.                 1952: E.B. White, Charlotte’s Web
106.                 1957: Dr. Seuss:  The Cat in the Hat
107.                 1955-1975:  Vietnam War
108.                 1960-1965:  Civil Rights Movement
109.                 1966-1969:  Hippie Movement
110.                 1973:  AIM seizes the trading post at Wounded Knee


Saturday, January 29, 2011

Being a TJEDer

As most of my family, friends, and acquaintances know, I am a big (and loud) fan of TJED or A Thomas Jefferson Education, also known as Leadership Education.  It’s the philosophy my family uses for our home schooling efforts.  You can read about it in A Thomas Jefferson Education by Oliver VanDeMille and in Leadership Education by Oliver and Rachel DeMille.  You can also learn a lot about it at www.tjedonline.com.

I am working with parents and teachers in the Puget Sound area to build a local TJED Community.  I’ve had several conversations this week that have made me think about what it is to be a “TJEDer.”

I think the idea of being a “TJEDer” is widely misunderstood and the term is much abused.  


What TJED is
First, let me clarify what TJED is (my understanding of it, you are welcome to disagree with me):

TJED is a set of principles codified by Oliver and Rachel DeMille.  They (like me) like lists and have organized the principles into 6 lists:


  •      3 Types of Education
  •       2 Views of Childhood
  •       7 Keys of Great Teaching
  •       4 Phases of Learning
  •       5 Environments of Mentoring
  •       8 Education Trends of the 21st Century

The DeMilles call these the TJED Basics.  You can listen to them discuss the basics in 2 free lectures and a Q&A with Oliver and Rachel here.  In my mind this is it – this is TJED.  If you want to learn about TJED, find those lists in the books mentioned above and study them.  The 8 Trends is an article, not in either of the books.  You can get it free here, along with other TJED Basics info.   There are lots of additional articles, books, lectures, seminars and other vehicles people have used to share the TJED Philosophy and I find them helpful and inspiring but only if used as a toolbox of resources in helping me apply the TJED principles contained in those 6 lists.  These other resources have a lot of examples of how different people and families have successfully applied TJED principles. 

Principles vs. Methods
Too often, people confuse application methods for the principles themselves.  For example, one prominent TJED family has found it works well in their home to have their bookshelves organized in a specific way.  This method or application is rooted in the TJED principles but it is not a principle itself.  I’ve actually heard someone express the concern that because they don’t organize their bookshelves this way, they aren’t a “real TJEDer.”  What?!  I consider this friend of mine an experienced and very successful TJEDer.

Guess What?  TJED is Not a Religion.
Too many people have erroneously concluded that to be a TJEDer one must accept and agree with every single principle in the philosophy. You can be inspired by and apply just some of the principles of the TJED philosophy.   There are no TJED authorities to monitor or evaluate how much or how well you live the principles.  I don’t know anyone who lives the principles 100%, including those, like myself, who buy the whole philosophy.  I personally believe the closer I get to knowing and applying all the principles, the more my family will benefit but that doesn’t mean there’s no benefit if you just learn and apply 1 principle from the philosophy.

No “Inner Rings” for Me, Thanks
In terms of building a TJED community I don’t think everyone has to agree with all the principles.  The last thing I want is an exclusive community of people who label themselves as TJEDers and consider themselves better than non-TJEDers and compare their TJEDness.  What would be the point and what does that even mean?  Who honestly is qualified to decide who "does TJED" or who doesn't? That would be an "Inner Ring" in C.S. Lewis terms (read his essay “The Inner Ring” in The Weight of Glory) and I don't have any interest in that.  I think the principles of the TJED philosophy are inspiring and useful and could change the world, and I want to band together with anyone who appreciates and tries to apply any part of the philosophy so we can all help each other - that's what I mean when I talk about a TJED Community. Membership in the community is self-declared - no one else can decide who is or isn't part of it.  

Guess What?  You Don’t Have to be a Homeschooler to be a TJEDer.
Members of my local TJED Community (and I suspect the worldwide TJED Community) are lots of things besides TJEDers. Joining the community does not mean someone has to renounce their affiliations with other philosophies, schools or education groups.   For most people in my local area, I suspect our TJED Community is not going to meet all of their families’ education or home school community needs.

What it should do is help inspire, teach, and coach families who want to learn about and apply any of the TJED principles.  It should also be a community of friends.  There’s not even a membership fee or a registration form.  Joining is as simple as coming to a bookclub, class or workshop and saying, “Hi, my name is Jen and I’m a TJEDer.”


Update as of 2/1/11:  The TJED Community organization I serve with just launched our own website.  We are hosting an event on 2/19, TJED Basics Workshop.  Check it out!  www.leapsnw.weebly.com