photo by Christine Milne
Just Add Light and Stir
Inspiration and Encouragement for Unschooling Parents
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
Clear the paths
photo by Christine Milne
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Changing Gears
|
Deschooling is like changing gears. Go slowly. Go deliberately. SandraDodd.com/gradualchange Don't goof around. Don't stall. SandraDodd.com/doit How can both be true? The clutch and the gas. |
photo by Sandra Dodd, of
coloring by Holly Dodd, years ago, and
light switch plate by Sandra, years ago
Monday, May 25, 2026
Easy because...
I thought, wow, what a perfect expression of humanity in this day and age unschooling is! We can get our hands on so much information, we can get to so many places, we can access so many people because of this very cool moment in history of the Internet, fairly easy transportation, and enough leisure time (versus time spent focused on surviving) to explore ideas and try skills and make friends and connections.
People have a lot of resources these days, and they are mostly very accessible; of course it makes sense that some of them would seek to use what's available to them when they want it, not just what the schools offer between 8 and 3. It possibly has never been easier to learn about as many different things from so many different sources as it is right now.
—Teresa/Treesock
photo by Cátia Maciel
Something looks like this:
birds,
collection,
display
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Payback
Sometimes people measure too much.
Try not to go by the clock or the numbers or the calendar so much as you go by the emotional and personal and physical needs of your child. It will pay you back. It will be a good deal.
SandraDodd.com/clock
photo by Jasmine Baykus

Try not to go by the clock or the numbers or the calendar so much as you go by the emotional and personal and physical needs of your child. It will pay you back. It will be a good deal.
photo by Jasmine Baykus

Saturday, May 23, 2026
Safer safety
I am writing as a parent who believes that the risk of my child being harmed by using the Internet is overblown.
Children are far more at risk from sexual predation by people known to the family than by strangers they meet on the Internet. Even if a predator does manage to contact a child via email or chatting, a lot would have to happen for that contact to lead to a physical meeting. Limiting children's use of the Internet is based on fear mongering and gives parents a false sense of security.
I monitor my children's Internet use by spending time with them while they are on-line. I encourage them to show me web sites they like to visit and how they use them. I show them web sites that I think they might enjoy. We speak about safety issues on an ongoing basis, just as we discuss safety in other areas of our lives.
—Mary Ellen (nellebelle)
photo by Holly Dodd
Friday, May 22, 2026
Fun, healthy and useful
SandraDodd.com/authentic
photo by Alex Polikowsky
Something looks like this:
architecture,
bridge,
color,
reflection
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Seeing and enjoying children
To see children through school eyes is like continually longing for a fish to climb a tree. It's a view that insists on an improbable future or that looks mostly for a child's potential, perhaps never able to enjoy the present moment.
To see children as they are is to have the capability to enjoy them now. Without that view, I think unschooling is hard or impossible.
—Katherine
photo by Colleen Prieto
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