April 1, 2026
Charlotte Mason Student Work Showcase: Part 2


"One thing at any rate we know with certainty, that no teaching, no information becomes knowledge to any of us until the individual mind has acted upon it, translated it, transformed, absorbed it, to reappear, like our bodily food, in forms of vitality."
~Charlotte Mason, Towards a Philosophy of Education, p.240
Creating is a big part of a Charlotte Mason education, from handicrafts and poems to artwork, compositions, and lab reports. All this creating comes out of Charlotte Mason's key idea that our minds must do some sort of work on what we take in for it to become truly part of us. This showcase is an invaluable window into the learning journey of various students using the Charlotte Mason's methods. They demonstrate the power of a relational education in action.
- Join the showcase! Any students educated with Charlotte Mason's methods are invited to submit work here.
A quick note
While we encourage you to enjoy these examples of what a Charlotte Mason education can look like, we urge you to resist the temptation to compare them with your own child's progress. Every student is on a unique path, and these samples are meant to illustrate how different children reflect on their observations and readings, not to set a benchmark for individual comparison.
*Note, this post contains Amazon affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Caleb, Age 9: Mallard Duck, Soft Pastels on mixed media paper

Marcy, Age 13: Geography project from Mapping the World with Art
Maya, Age 10: Science exam in response to the Alveary exam question on The Bat Scientists, "Tell about or draw three unique characteristics of the bat."

Liam, Age 13: Slide Deck Narration/Composition Assignment, Mission Report: George Washington, Spymaster
Prompt: "Agent, your mission is to uncover and report on the secret ways George Washington used spies to help the Americans win the Revolutionary War. You will gather intelligence from your source, George Washington, Spymaster by Thomas B. Allen, and deliver your findings in a clear report."
Annabelle, Age 16: Architecture Notebook – Woodworking Tools in Colonial America
Did you enjoy this showcase? We would love to include your work in our next Student Work Showcase. You can submit any work completed that highlights the Charlotte Mason method here.
