Image by an engineering student in the UK whose Fiverr name was Spartali, in 2014
Just Add Light and Stir
Inspiration and Encouragement for Unschooling Parents
Friday, March 6, 2026
Word tree
Image by an engineering student in the UK whose Fiverr name was Spartali, in 2014
Thursday, March 5, 2026
A bigger big world
It's a big world and school does not own it.
And the big world is not just right now, as is. It's all its history, all its future, all its imaginings and myths and fantasies and alternate endings. School presents a little package of one version of history, a little package of one summary of science, etc., and leaves all else out.
photo by Sobia Itwaru

Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Choosing food
It should make sense. Early people wouldn't have continued to eat what wasn't good for them if they weren't starving. If they had options, they would have chosen the things that seemed (for whatever range of reasons they might be choosing) good. There are food taboos and preferences all over the world. Some are credited to religion or superstition. Some are medicinal. All were, originally, local.
In a situation in which there is an abundance of food shipped and traded all over the world, then how does one choose? This is what is coming to be called "a first-world problem." In terms of learning, though, in the context of the life of a family choosing unschooling and mindful parenting, the question is answered every time food is bought, presented, consumed or considered.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
That was all!?
I'm amazed at how easily some things are learned. My five year old is learning to read. He was playing a computer game that had him putting together words to make compound words (sand + box gives you sandbox, etc.). He wasn't sure of a word, so I told him what it was and explained about how words ending in "e" work. Pointed out one or two more examples as they came out and presto! He understands Silent E.
Then I stood there not sure what to do. That's it? That was all it took to learn about Silent E?? But, but...it was a huge deal when I learned to read in school! There were many lessons. Drills. That song on the Electric Company. How could all of that fuss have been needed for something that took Mikey about 30 seconds to grasp? Ah, the wonders of learning something when you are ready and not before!
—aj (mamaaj2000)
"that song on the Electric Company"
photo by Karen James
Monday, March 2, 2026
Be glad

Surprises
Living in moments
photo by Andrea Taylor
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Let go!
Formal learning is being certain you can't let go of the side of the pool. Unschooling is paddling around in the deep end.
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Slipping through the cracks?
Deschooling is all about letting go. Letting go of your schoolish ideals, and even more important than that (in my opinion) is letting go of your expectations for your kids. When you expect something, it's so easy to set those expectations too high, and that can lead to feelings of failure, for both you and your child. No two kids are alike, and they should not be treated as though they are just another face in the crowd, and that is what happens in school.
There is no one-size-fits-all educational system that works, contrary to what any public school advocate will tell you. How many times have you heard about children "slipping through the cracks" at public school?
With unschooling, no child slips through the cracks, because the cracks don't exist.
—Lyle Perry
photo by Janine Davies
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