

Excerpt from The Mothercraft Manual By Mary Lillian Read, 1922(downloadable and free):
For the child under six years, and possibly under ten, the most educative environment, in every sense, is in the country with hills, valleys, woods, water, plants and trees, wild and domestic animals, other young children, the freedom of the kitchen, the necessity for personal physical care, and elders who enter sympathetically into his life, not obtrusively but intelligently, ready to give assistance when it is needed. With good library facilities, wholesome neighborhood recreations, and occasional trips to a city for its opportunities of art galleries, great music, wholesome plays, industrial activities, the simple home life and rural surroundings, even with mediocre teaching in a rural school, provide through early adolescence the environment most favorable for developing richness of life, greatness of personality, social efficiency.
Intellectual and Play Interests. 2 to 6 years.Interest in color, sound, tasting, strongest at 4 to 6 years
Constant sensory experimentation and exploration
Experimental science; taking apart; finding source of motion or noise Nature interest; animals, birds, insects, flowers; watching actions, noting striking characteristics of appearance
Interest in experimenting with material (2 to 4 years); in making for use (4 to 6 years)
See entire curriculum here, baby to early childhood. Some ideas are obviously outdated, but others are still relevant.
"Knowledge has little or no intrinsic value in and of itself. Like light, knowledge is good not to see but to see by. . . . Ignorance is doubtless better than knowledge that does not make us better."
— G. Stanley Hall.
"Where children are fed only on book knowledge, one fact is as good as any other." . —John Dewey.
"If we seek the kingdom of heaven, educationally, all other things shall be added unto us — which, being interpreted, is that if we identify ourselves with the real instincts and needs of childhood, and ask only after its fullest assertion and growth, the discipline and information and culture of adult life shall all come in their due season." — Ibid.
...developing character, — the ideals and the realization of noble living, — which has its roots deep in the feelings and the soul, and depends upon these far more than upon mere thought, knowledge, and reasoning.
"Play is the highest phase of child-development — of human development at this period (childhood); for it is self-active representation of the inner, from inner necessity and impulse."
"The plays of childhood are the germinal leaves of all later life; for the whole man is developed and shown in these."
"Come, let us live with our children."
— F. Froebel
Where does it come from? Does it grow in sunny or shady places? How high does the plant grow? How many blossoms on one plant? What are the leaves like? Are daisies ail alike? Compare the white and yellow daisy, as to form, size, color, etc. What does the white daisy look like? What do we call the yellow center? (The disk.) What do we call the white flowers around the yellow center? (Rays.) They make the daisy look like a star.
If you do not look very carefully at the daisy, it will fool you. You will think that the little green leaves underneath the flower head make up the calyx and the white leaves above the corolla. You will believe, as many other people do, too, that the yellow center is made up of a number of stamens. But this would not be true, and we will need to look again more carefully. What you hold in your hand is not one daisy flower, but a great many flowers.
The yellow center of the daisy is composed of a great many little tube-shaped blossoms, and the circle of white flower leaves is really a circle of flowers. You will find one pistil. The pollen is brought from the yellow flowers in the center to this pistil.
Do you know why it is called a daisy? Because it awoke so early in the morning? What month of the year does it bloom? How long can we gather daisies?
1 LITERATURE.Read one of the poem by Robert Burns' "To a Daisy."
"The Daisy and the Lark," Hans Anderson.
DRAWING.
Draw a daisy plant as it looks growing in the field.
Draw or cut and paste a daisy border.
Make a silhouette of daisies with grasses
THE DAISY.
I'm a pretty little daisy,
Always coming with the spring;
In the meadows green I'm found.
And my stalk is covered flat
With a white and yellow hat.
My stalk is green and very tall,
At night I am a yellow ball;
But in the morning when I wake,
A lovely little cup I make.
THE DAISY.
The daisy is the meekest flower
That grows in wood or field;
To wind and rain and footsteps rude,
Its slender stem will yield.
In spring it dots the green with white,
And blossoms all the year,
And so it is a favorite flower, .,
With all the children dear.
Before the stars are in the sky,
The daisy goes to rest,
And folds its little shining leaves
Upon its golden breast.
So children when they go to bed
Should fold their hands in prayer,
And place themselves and all they love,
In God's protecting care. —Set.