Formal learning is being certain you can't let go of the side of the pool. Unschooling is paddling around in the deep end.
Just Add Light and Stir
Inspiration and Encouragement for Unschooling Parents
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
Friday, February 27, 2026
Values
"Meredith Meredith" wrote:
If you value something, make it part of your life. If you value music, play music, listen to music, dance and sing. Invite the people you love to join you—maybe they will. If you value scientific thinking, think like a scientist. If you enjoy math, play with numbers and relationships. The catch is to live your own values without trying to foist them off on other people—because that's not a very good way of sharing what you love, and because personality matters. All your singing and dancing won't make your kids musicians if they're not so inclined—but they'll know a few things about music. If you push music at them, they may associate what they know with drudgery and unhappiness—and then you've failed and failed more utterly than if you never sang a note in their presence.
—Meredith Novak
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Marty kid-art

Thursday, February 26, 2026
See your child
Seeing a child in comparison to an ideal, imaginary child can lead to heartbreak all the way around.
photo by Tara Joe Farrell
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Learn and be an example
Realize your unschooling life and someone else’s unschooling life won’t look exactly just the same, and that’s because your kids and their kids, your partner and their partner, your house and their house, your interests and their interests… they’re not the same either. But still read, talk, and think about what you are doing, and listen to what others are doing. Learn from the example of people who have been there/done that, and be an example for those who will come after you on the unschooling path.
—Colleen Prieto
photo by Sandra Dodd

Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Joyous but careful
photo by Megan Valnes
Monday, February 23, 2026
Seeing what learning is
The basis of unschooling comes from seeing learning as a substantial human drive and seeing that learning depends absolutely on the perceptions of the learner. The second part is what makes everything tricky - you can't control what someone else learns. At best you can work on seeing the world from another person's perspective and try to create an environment which helps that person learn.
It can help a lot to think about how people learn via their hobbies. In a way, that's what real life unschooling looks like: people learning through hobbies. It usually involves a lot of playing around - and the playing around parts are just as important to learning as the parts where you need to go look something up, or network with another hobbyist, or take a class or workshop to improve a skill.
One of the common parenting/educational myths is that it's possible to imbue children with "good habits" by making them do certain things over and over. It Seems like it Should work... but when you look at adults there's no evidence it does. The results are pretty random. It's not a strategy that helps people learn about the world.
—Meredith Meredith
July 2012
July 2012
photo by Carolyn Vandenbusch Neves
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