Lois

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She wanted children to have the opportunity to explore the world and interact with the people in it—to learn to conduct themselves with their “betters” as well as their servants. She doesn’t suggest that no safeguards be taken of course, as parents have a duty to make sure truly vicious influences do not intrude, but she believed children should partake of real life, not an artificial environment.
Consider This: Charlotte Mason and the Classical Tradition
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