Peaceful Catholic Homeschooling / Charlotte Mason, Homeschool, SAHM, Liturgy, Curriculum

12 | Narration: The Charlotte Mason Tool That Changes Everything

Graced House Press Episode 12

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0:00 | 8:32

I closed the book and started asking questions. What year did he arrive? Who was the king? What was the name of the place where he built the church?

She stared at me blankly. I don't remember.

My heart sank. We had just read it together. I watched her listening. And now she couldn't tell me anything.

Then a friend told me to stop quizzing her and just ask her to tell me the story in her own words. I was skeptical. But the next day I tried it and everything changed.

That's narration. And it might be the simplest, most powerful shift you can make in your homeschool today.

What You'll Learn:

  • What narration actually is  and why it works so much better than comprehension questions
  • How to start with just one read aloud and one simple question: tell me what happened
  • What to do when your child says "I don't know" or only remembers one part
  • How narration works across ages, from your four-year-old to your ten-year-old
  • When and how to move from oral narration to written narration naturally

I pray this encourages your heart today. 

Go be the peace God created you to be. 

— Dana

Resources Mentioned:

Narration, Gently (free) Learn how to truly listen to your child after read alouds, no quizzing, no correcting, just receiving what they give you.  thepeacefulcatholicmom.com/narration-gently

Charlotte Mason for Catholic Moms (free) A deeper look at atmosphere and how it shapes your child's faith formation. thepeacefulcatholicmom.com/charlotte-mason-for-catholic-moms

Subscribe to Peaceful Catholic Homeschooling: 

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Related Episodes:

Episode 7 — Living Books vs. Twaddle: Why the Books You Choose Matter More Than the Curriculum You Buy

Episode 9 — How Habit Training Transforms Family Life: Charlotte Mason's Secret to a Peaceful Home

Episode 10 — How Morning Time Builds Peace, Focus, and Family Culture



Send us Fan Mail

Discovering Narration

SPEAKER_00

Welcome to the Peaceful Catholic Mom. I'm so glad you're here. I want to tell you about the day I discovered narration. My daughter was six. We just finished reading a chapter from a history book, a beautiful, engaging story about Saint Patrick coming to Ireland. I closed the book and started asking her questions. What year did he arrive? Who was the king? What was the name of the place where he built the church? She stared at me blankly. I don't remember. My heart sank. We just read it together. She was paying attention. I saw her listening. But now she couldn't tell me anything. I thought, she's not learning. This just isn't working. Then a friend told me about something called narration.

What Narration Looks Like For Littles

SPEAKER_00

Just ask her to tell you the story in her own words, she said. Don't quiz her, just let her tell it back. I was skeptical, but the next day I tried it. We read another chapter, I closed the book, and instead of asking questions, I said, Tell me what happened. And she did. Not perfectly, not in order, but she told me the story in her own words with the parts that mattered most to her. And I realized she was learning. I just needed to ask differently. That is what narration is. It's the simple practice of asking a child to tell back what they've heard or read. For littles, narration is simple. You read a picture book, you close the book, and you say, Tell me about the story. And they tell you, not every detail, not in perfect order, but they tell you what stuck with them. Your four-year-old might say, the bunny was naughty and ate the carrots, and then he got sick. That's narration. She's engaged with the story, she remembered what happened, she told it back in her own words. You don't correct her, you don't say, actually, he ate the radises first. You just listen. Because narration isn't about perfect recall, it's about engagement.

Growing Narration In Elementary Years

SPEAKER_00

For elementary kids, narration grows. You read a longer passage, a chapter from a history book, a section about science, a story about a saint. You close a book, you say, Tell me what you learn, and they tell you. Your eight-year-old might narrate a whole story with details you don't even remember. Your 10-year-old might focus on one part that fascinated him and skip the rest. That's okay. They're making connections. They're thinking about what matters. And over time, their narrations get richer, more detailed, and more connected. But it starts simple. Just tell me what you heard.

Why Narration Beats Comprehension Questions

SPEAKER_00

Now here's why narration works so much better than comprehension questions. When you ask comprehension questions, you're doing the mental work. You're deciding what's important. You're choosing what to remember. Your child has to hunt for the answer you want and repeat it back. But when you ask for narration, they do the mental work. They have to decide what's important, they have to organize their thoughts, they have to put it into their own words. That right there is real learning. Charlotte Mason said the mind can only really assimilate what it has received and then given back again in some form or another. Read it, think about it, tell it back. That's how knowledge becomes yours.

Step‑By‑Step: How To Start

SPEAKER_00

So, how do you actually do this? Start with read alouds. This is the easiest place to begin. Read a short section, one chapter, one story, one passage. Keep it short enough that your child can hold it in their mind. Close the book, put it down, look at your child. Say, tell me what happened, or tell me what you remembered, or tell me about the story. Then be quiet. Let them think, don't rush them, and don't interrupt. Some kids will start immediately. Others need a moment to gather their thoughts. And then they'll tell you. Maybe a few sentences, maybe a whole retelling. It depends on the child and the day. When they're done, you say, thank you for telling me about that. I love how you remembered that part. And that's it. That's narration.

Troubleshooting Common Roadblocks

SPEAKER_00

Now let me address the questions I know some of you had. What if your child says, I don't know, or I don't remember? First, make sure the passage wasn't too long. If they genuinely can't remember anything, you might need to read shorter sections. Second, prompt gently. Well, who was in the story? Where were they? What happened first? Just enough to get them started and then let them take over. Third, understand that narration is a skill. It gets better with practice. The first few times it might be really rough, but the tenth time they'll be much stronger. What if my child only narrates one part part and ski the rest? That's totally fine. They're telling you what stuck with them, what mattered, and what they made a connection with. You can gently ask, was there anything else you remember? But don't push. Over time, as they get more practice, their narrations will get fuller. What if I have multiple kids? Do they all narrate? Yes, but take turns. One narrates first, then the next. Or if they're different ages, let the older child narrate first, then ask the younger child, can you add anything? What do you remember? Everyone participates and everyone engages.

What Changed In Our Homeschool

SPEAKER_00

Here's what changed in our homeschool once I started using narration regularly. First, I stopped worrying about whether they were learning because I could hear them learning in their own words, in their own way. Second, they started paying attention better because they knew I was going to ask them to tell it back. No zoning out, no passive listening. Third, and this surprised me, they actually enjoyed it. Narration wasn't a test, it was just a conversation. They got to share what they thought was interesting, and I learned what mattered to them, what captured their imagination and what they were thinking about. It made our homeschool feel more alive. On a practical note, for kids ages six and under, narration is always oral.

Adding Written Narration

SPEAKER_00

They tell you out loud. But around seven or eight, you can start adding written narration. They tell the story first, then once a week they write it down. Not every time, just once a week. This becomes their writing practice, and it's so much more meaningful than copy work or fill in the blank worksheets. They're writing about ideas they've engaged with, stories they love, things they learn. That's real writing.

Two‑Week Challenge

SPEAKER_00

So here's your challenge this week. Choose one book you're reading aloud. After you finish the chapter or section, close the book and ask, tell me what happened, then listen. Really listen. Don't correct, don't interrupt, don't quiz. Just let them tell you. Try it once, see how it goes. Then try it again the next day and the next, give it two weeks. I promise you, something will shift. Your child will engage more deeply, you'll understand their thinking better, and learning will feel less like pulling teeth and more like sharing ideas.

Resources And What’s Next

SPEAKER_00

If you want more guidance on using narration with your children, what to expect at different ages, how to prompt gently, how to troubleshoot common struggles, I have two resources. First, narration gently, a free guide that walks you through the basic step by step. Second, Charlotte Mason for Catholic Mom goes deeper into narration as part of a full Charlotte Mason education. Both are linked in the show notes at the peacefulcatholicmom.com. Next week we're talking about something every homeschool mom needs, but few of us have community. Why you can't do this alone and how to find your people. Thank you for being here. Thank you for caring about your children, actually learning, not just what boxes that you need to check. Narration is simple, but it's powerful and it works. Try it, trust it, and watch what happens. Until next time, peace be with you.