I agree that a child this very young age does not need school, they need attention, opportunities and experiences. Parents can set the tone of a childs love of learning or dreading learning.
As each child shows an interest, you continue to feed that interest. When the child moves on, so does the parent. A child trying to run? You put them on the grass and let them go for it even if they are only 8 months old.
I learned to not underestimate what our child could do, but also not to expect her to be able to do what other children her age had mastered. They are so individual.
A child wanting to know colors, you speak about colors each time you are doing anything around your child that has colors.
Puzzles, our daughter has always loved them, still does.
She would go through them so fast, I would flip them over and have her draw her own picture on the back, so that she could put them together on the opposite sides. used to take 2 puzzles and mix up all of the pieces and she could put 2 together at once.. Then 3 puzzles this way..
My BIL once gave her a 300 piece puzzle and we laughed that it was WAY too advanced. She got on the floor and started putting it together she was 4 and a half!
I recall our daughter loving certain books. She would pick the same ones out over and over. The book "Stone soup" fascinated her at one point. How all of these people shared to make enough soup for every one. She loved the pictures of all of the vegetables. the "Chopping" etc.
The next time we went to the store, she wanted to see ALL of the vegetables and for me to tell her "What this called?" Only took 1 time and she could name all sorts of vegetables and greens.
I suggested we make our own soup and so we went out to find the perfect "stone".. You get the idea.. She was 3.
Another time it was dinosaurs. Same thing, we started pointing out different ones and their names, If they were Carnivorous.. Took her to the local Natural History museum, and then she moved onto the next thing. Never played with dinosaurs again. (did use some of their features in her art work). She even make "clawed shoes" out of newspaper and tape. Rolls of tape are a great creative toy for kids.
SHE LOVED to draw that is something that still has not changed. We had a tool box full of colors and colored pencils and colored pens. in the house and another that was kept in the car along with pads of plain paper. Then she would name her creatures and so she wanted to know how to write "Names".. We just went with her lead based on her interest.
Sometimes, I would find interesting games, toys etc and present them to her, but if she was really not interested that was fine.
Our local Grocery Store is H.EB. those were the first letters our daughter learned. On her own. The next letter was M - Yep from the giant M in McDonalds, we passed by it all of the time. So at home with her letters all laid out I would ask her, where is HEB.. and she would pick them out.
When she had just turned 4, I wondered if she would be ready to read. I purchased a set of BOB books and on the way home she read the whole set. I turned the car around and purchased the second set and man, she devoured the books.
I asked her, "why didn't you tell me and dad you could read?" She said "Because I was afraid you would not read to me anymore!"
We promised we would never stop reading to her, but we wanted her to read to us also. She was quite satisfied and said "That is a deal!"
FYI, We never owned a set of flash cards.
Our daughter did like workbooks, she called them "homework", so we let her pick out a work book and she would do her homework whenever SHE wanted. I never said ok, "lets work on homework. "
Instead she would want to be the teacher and gave me homework.
Then she would "grade it" Of course I would make mistakes, but she would "Allow me to make it right".
FYI, Our daughter did not lose any creativity. Her artwork won contests, was published and then one of her degrees is Studio Art. She is now making a living doing Marketing.
I get excited hearing what children are interested in and how they are constantly learning things, they are so smart and intuitive. They fascinate me.