There is an update here.
The early years with Charlotte  Mason require a bit of a different focus than most of us are used to.   Instead of academic goals, we focus on the "many relations waiting to be  established; relations with places far and near, with the wide  universe, with the past of history, with the social economics of the  present, with the earth they live on and all its delightful progeny of  beast and bird, plant and tree; with the sweet human affinities they  entered into at birth; with their own country and other countries, and,  above all, with that most sublime of human relationships–their relation  to God." (Charlotte Mason’s Original Homeschooling Series, Volume 6, pp.  72-73)  The rest will come!  I do know that even this sounds like a  lot, but I think the key is that they will get these relations through  the living books we’re reading and the time (lots and lots of time)  spent outside.  We don’t have to plan out a scope and sequence!
The most important Year 0 goal,  according to Charlotte Mason, is time spent outside.  “. . .[T]he chief  function of the child––his business in the world during the first six  or seven years of his life––is to find out all he can, about whatever  comes under his notice, by means of his five senses; that he has an  insatiable appetite for knowledge got in this way; and that, therefore,  the endeavour of his parents should be to put him in the way of making  acquaintance freely with Nature and natural objects. . . .”  (CM’s OHS,  V1, p.96)
A close second in priority  behind outside time is habit formation.  “. . . [T]he education of habit  is successful in so far as it enables the mother to let her children  alone, not teasing them with perpetual commands and directions––a  running fire of Do and Don’t; but letting them go their own way and  grow, having first secured that they will go the right way, and grow to  fruitful purpose.” (CM’s OHS, V1, p.134)  CM has much to say about the  why, what, and how of habit formation, which involves far more than just  establishing a routine.  CM refers to such habits as obedience,  attention, imagining, cleanliness, and more.  Suffice to say it is the  key to CM’s methods.  Take the time now to learn about it and implement  it.
As for scheduling, that depends  on the age of the child.  Many moms (or dads, grandparents, etc.) on  this list have one or more children in Year 1 or higher.  For those  children they are probably planning 2 or 3 hours (or so) of formal  lessons each school day.  Sometimes when a post talks about scheduling  and planning, it’s referring to children in that age range (6 or 7 and  up).
Year 0 is sort of a  kindergarten year, so some moms are using it for a 5 or 6 year old.   Those moms may be beginning some formal lessons, like reading. Generally  those wouldn’t be more than 1 hour a day.  Year 0 doesn’t require this  sort of structure, but as long as it is kept short and lots of time is  left for time outside and other non-academic pursuits, it’s still in  line with CM.
Year 0 also encompasses the  preschool years, below the ages of 5 or 6.  Those years should not have  formal academics, but some moms may plan short activities each day.  The  most important objectives at this age, though, are lots of time outside  and habit formation.  Reading is good, but select only the very best  books, and don’t let reading keep you from time outside and habit  training.
If you want to cover academics,  the best thing to do is read a few really great books.  We have some  booklists on the Yahoo group site (see below).  Children in these early  years should be working with concrete objects from the real world, like  planting a flower and watching it grow. Between reading great books and  spending time with nature, you’ll be amazed what they’ll learn.  For  more learning goals for the preschool years, look at the items on the  Formidable List of Attainments for a Child of Six, an excerpt from a  curriculum outline from one of CM’s schools.  You can read it at the  bottom of the page here:  http://www.amblesideonline.org/00.shtml.   Remember that this list was meant to be addressed after a child turned  six, not prior to the child turning six.
In my family, we do the  Ambleside art appreciation, hymn study, folk song, and classical music  (although we sometimes don’t use the assigned selection).  We work on  Spanish and sign language on an occasional basis.  My dd’s know quite a  few folk songs, including lots of patriotic songs and a few obscure  ones.  They recognize some classical selections and musical  instruments.  They know a handful of hymns at least.  They can recognize  several of the art selections from previous terms.  They memorize  Psalms and other scriptures, not through drill but through my reading it  every morning and then after a few days of that we all try to say it  together.  We read some of the Ambleside poetry selections, particularly  AA Milne and Robert Louis Stevenson.  They have (infrequent) tea  times.  The older dd is learning to sew and draw.  We play card games  and board games.  These are all CM friendly activities for the Year 0  ages.
Check out our Yahoo group site at  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ambleside_year0/ . Look in the Links  section, the Files, and the Database. All three sections have the  content categorized by subject, so be sure to look at more than one  category.  You’ll find many helpful resources.  Then read Charlotte  Mason’s writings.  They are the key to implementing a Charlotte Mason  education.
***UPDATED to reflect a new understanding of the relative priority of outside time versus habit formation.

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