I returned from the library yesterday with media selections. Well, I also picked up some books but the media drew all of the attention. Our local library has a great media room featuring a wide assortment of educational as well as entertainment DVDs and audio books. So, my son was thrilled when I came home with a special treat, grabbed it from my hands and ran up to his room to play it.
Dora?
Transformers?
Sponge Bob?
Nope, an Ivanhoe audiobook.
I’ve written before that the absence of television in our house leaves room for great literature. And so we buy him children’s version of classic novels, plays and operas – on CD, in print and yes, also on DVD.
Great Illustrated Classics
Barefoot Books
Jim Weiss CDs
All designed for kids age 3 or 4 and up…much more interesting for parents to discuss than the latest adventures of Dora. Introducing kids to classics serves several purposes. Educating them and, at least in my case, educating me too!
We generally pick one classic to concentrate on at a time. Then beat it to death. Children, it seems, prefer this method, as any parent who has read Good Night Moon 25 times can tell you. We often work our way up to a performance, the adult kind.
Right now we’re gearing up for a performance of The Magic Flute, an opera by Mozart. Since I’ve never been an opera fan; this is a new one for me too. I suspect I'm not an opera fan because my first exposure to it was a performance. In contrast, we've taken several months to prepare.
First we bought this CD
A few months later, we bought this book and CD
Then recently, we bought this book and CD too.
Then I hunted and hunted and hunted until I found a full performance of the opera where tickets weren’t $275 a seat. In January we’ll go to see it – the “student preview” (which I think means dress rehearsal). At $30 per seat, if we find ourselves leaving halfway through, that will be OK. Which may be because we are thrown out, since the opera is in German with English subtitles we’re still trying to figure out how to read the subtitles to the kids without disturbing the rest of the audience.
In the meantime, my son is engrossed in Ivanhoe.
This isn’t actually on our after schooling list right now. We do however have an abridged version with lots of pictures which my other half picked up one day to read to our son…and read to him and read to him. Since I got sucked in and then a bit tired of reading the same 200 plus pages over and over, I picked up the audio book at the library.
Cop out. Oh well.
When he finishes the 4 cassette abridged version he’s eager to rent the 14 cassette adult version. We’ll see about that as I suspect the abridged version cuts out some of the violence.
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