Carol Barnier

 
 

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Christian women's speaker

 
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Carol Frequently Contributes to:

 

Carol Barnier--ker

     Delightful speaker

           Entertaining author 

                  Adequate wife

                         Pitiful housekeeper

     

     Carol Barnier is a fresh, fun and popular conference speaker. Her objective in all her communication is to have the wit of Erma Bombeck crossed with the depth of C. S. Lewis, but admits that, truth be told, most days she only achieves a solid Lucy Ricardo with a bit of Bob the Tomato.

     While her humor will have you leaning sideways, her faith is solid stuff. Whether speaking about her first born son's 13 surgeries, her family's many ADHD challenges, or her own walk from being a God-denying atheist to the most grateful recipient of God's amazing grace, this woman speaks from the heart. She knows why she knows what she knows.

     Her slightly irreverent humor coupled with her insightful perspective has led to speaking engagements in over 25 states, and made her a regular radio guest, including becoming a frequent provider of commentary for Focus on the Family's Weekend Magazine. She is the author of three books and has written articles for many magazines including Proverbs 31 Woman, Clubhouse Junior, Focus on the Family Magazine, The Old Schoolhouse, Homeschool Enrichment, as well as others.

Note from Carol--

Whenever I finish a speaking trip, my husband always asks me 3 questions?     

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Did anybody laugh? 

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Did anybody cry?

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Did anybody want to hug you?

 

It's not that I'm a big hugger. In fact, due to my vertical challenges, hugging me is an odd exercise (best done quickly and in dim lighting).  But these questions are how I decide if what I did mattered. I want to know that I've touched you somehow, in a way that was meaningful. Otherwise, you might as well have stayed home and gotten the laundry finished. I know that if you've responded with your heart, you're more likely to then respond with your actions. And that's where the real take-home gift is found.

Go Ahead...Open The Gift

     We all love gifts from God.  At least we love them when they're what we've always hoped for and wanted. But I believe that we miss many of God's greatest gifts in ourselves and in our children because we fail to truly OPEN THE GIFTS. Instead we long for our gifts to look and walk and talk like all the gifts we see in others. We aren't comfortable being different in any way.

     My goal is to convince you that these differences ARE the gifts,and to plunge into the delicious process of opening the gifts sent to us by our heavenly Father, learning to use our uniqueness to live out the wondrous plan made on our behalf.

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       For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."               Jeremiah 29:11
 

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How To Teach Your Platypus
By Carol Barnier


"My boy's a platypus!" she gushed enthusiastically.
 

"He's a what?" I was certain I must have misunderstood her.
 

"He's a right brained, quasi-lateral, confrontational platypus!"
 

"Oh," was all I could muster. I was really hoping my cynicism wasn't showing. "Well that is great."


My friend had recently purchased the latest learning styles program and clearly, she had just completed the what-type-is-he questionnaire. This also explained why I had heard her walking around muttering questions to herself like, "Is he happier alone or in a group?" "Does he prefer throwing stones across a quiet lake or leaping through a fast moving stream?" "If he could be an ice cream flavor, would he be vanilla or pistachio ripple with chunks of dried corn?". She'd been at it for almost a week. But now her efforts had paid off.
She had a name for him.


The problem, it seemed to me, is that the name didn't tell her anything she didn't already know. And of greater importance, if this program was like many others, it wasn't going to give her a whole lot of information from this point forward. I mean, I want to know how to teach my little Platypus when he doesn't understand why the denominators of fractions need to match before adding. I want to know what do you do when a Platypus can't remember how to spell "familiar" even though he tested perfectly on it just yesterday? And I want this fancy program to tell me why he is upside down in his seat just as often as he's right side up. Frankly, I was growing a little wearing of teaching to his tookis (just how does one spell tookis?) more often than his adorable face.

But instead I often found information that I didn't quite know what to do with. "Be proactive in teaching this child." "Get them more involved physically with the lesson." Much of it seemed like valuable advice, but I usually came away saying, "Okay, how?" When Monday morning would roll around and I faced my struggling learner once again, I usually had no idea what to change in order to accommodate his new name. Where was the book on Platypus Math?
 

Eventually I came to the conclusion that it was time to experiment. So I went on a hunt for unique ways of teaching every academic subject. I found every different teaching method that I could and then, are you ready for the really complex system I put into place?...I simply tried it with my child. I found ways to teach that were unfamiliar. I found ways to teach that were surprising. I found ways to teach that were downright odd. I passed no judgment on any possible idea until I had given it a try. And that's when I began to discover some wonderful things about my own dear little Platypus. He could learn. He could learn well, and fast and with enthusiasm, once I found ways in which he did learn. And along the way, there were many surprises that most learning style programs would never have predicted.

For example, I one day discovered my son repeating his spelling words over and over until a natural rhythm developed. This one really surprised me as I had been absolutely certain, at least up to that moment, that he was completely without musical ability. Thus, rhythm as a learning vehicle had been completely ignored by me. I tested this idea and set several things to either rhyme or to a beat. Wow! It burst open a new avenue for learning. The result was that we now have a simply daily recitations section to our schooling. During the years he (and all my children) learned the names of the Presidents in order, many different rules of math, the Books of the Bible, the elements of the Periodic Table, parts of speech, the planets in order from the sun, and a gazillion dates and events from history.
I learned that this child, who most definitely is not a visual learner, was nonetheless, able to work through material better that was color coded. Go figure.

-- If he struggled to remember the "gh" in right or fight, he practiced it and then boxed in the "gh" with a bright green marker. This additional step, plus the bold reminder in green, made it easier to remember the otherwise forgotten silent letters.

-- If he often added when he should have subtracted, have him start by boxing in all plus signs with a bright blue color and circling all subtraction signs with a yellow marker. This extra step will help his eye to catch the symbol's required action before he plunges ahead.

-- Keep a red pen nearby, and whenever you give him an assignment, have him write it in red. It will always call out to him as something with some urgency attached to it.

Additionally, I learned that each new success was cross-useful. In other words, once I found a method that worked well in teaching him spelling, I soon tried it in geography. If a new idea worked well in math, we found it worth a try in history. Successes were crossing over at a rapid rate.

So now I'm always on the lookout for new ideas to teach an otherwise struggling learner. In fact, I've come to find myself at odds with the word choice of "struggling learner." If he isn't learning because I've been teaching him with methods that don't sync up with his learning style, then he's not a struggling learner, I'm a struggling teacher. I'm not doing the job of finding what he needs to unlock his understanding of a particular concept. It would be easy to see this as a burden. But I've come to find the fun in this part of my job; the joy of the hunt. I now have my "radar" out all the time, looking for something different to try.

So what was the oddest learning activity we ever did? My children might pick some of the history recreations we've done. Then there was the time we practiced spelling on the bathroom wall by writing through smeared shaving cream. But I still place my vote on the crawl through digestive tract my son created. We just need to open our minds to all the different ways there are in which material could be presented, find the oddest, strangest, most unlikely of possible methods of teaching and then, give it a whirl. It's in such whirls that learning takes flight.
 

Carol Barnier is the author of three books about working with non-traditional minds (which includes her own), the latest entitled The Big WHAT NOW Book of Learning Styles. Check her out at www.CarolBarnier.com or www.SizzleBop.com
 

 

 

 

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How to Teach a Platypus

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  Carol's Books

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News

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Carol will be all over this year, from South Carolina to Minnesota, Texas to California. Find out if she's coming your way.

 

The much requested Ditties CD is finally in production. Look for it soon!

 

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To hear samples of Carol speaking, click on "Hear Carol Online."

 

Read about Carol's prodigal years in the Minnesota Christian Chronicle HERE

 

Carol's Web Corner

To visit Carol's website with top teaching tips for highly distractible or just plain fidgety kids, click here.

 

 

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