photo by Roya Dedeaux
Showing posts with label repeat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label repeat. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Clearer and easier
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Friday, January 16, 2026
Epiphanies
Those quotes are from a collection of just a few of the unschooling epiphanies reported over the years. Not one of them is anything akin to "Yeah, I read that, but..." They're not about reading at all. They're about seeing, about realizing, about having acted in a new way after months or years of the percolation of ideas through a mind and heart open to learning.
Ah-HA!
I recently saw how far I've come.
I knew that. Now I *know* that.
I am pretty sure I understand now!
photo by Sandra Dodd

Wednesday, January 7, 2026
Your part
photo by Eva Witsel
Friday, January 2, 2026
Games

Games can be family history, and art. Games can be culture and togetherness.
It's okay if games are old and made of wood, and seeds or stones. Some use cards, dice, markers. Don't worry about it if they involve computers, or smart phones and long walks.
photo by Pushpa Ramachandran
Thursday, December 18, 2025
A warm welcome
Deb Lewis wrote:
If you could not have both or if it was rare to have both, consider which would be more important, having your daughter’s help with housework or having a warm and loving relationship with her. Which will serve her better? Children who do not have a loving connection with parents *will* look for one elsewhere. They may find it with people who don’t have their best interest at heart.
SandraDodd.com/nest
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Generosity
As my kids get older...I'm seeing more vividly the results of parenting choices, not just in them, but in their more conventionally parented peers, as well. Generosity begets generosity.
—Caren Knox
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp

Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Who thinks what?
The parents need to be truly interested in their children as people, not just as symbols or irritants or mistakes or property. They need to care more what their children think than what other adults think, and that is very rare in the world.
I'm glad she saved it.
photo by Elise Lauterbach

Friday, November 14, 2025
Parents know...because
Q: How will you know if they're learning?
A: Teachers need to measure and document because they need to show progress so they can get paid, and keep their jobs. They test and measure because they don't always know each child well.
Parents know a child is learning because they're seeing and discussing and doing things together every day. Not five days a week, or most of the year, but all of the days of their whole lives.
photo by Sarah Lawson

Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Less methodical
If there is a method to unschooling it's certainly not a simple one. It involves changing one's stance and viewpoint on just about everything concerning children and learning. That's not "a method." That's a life change.
The first time I used this quote, in 2011,
Karen James responded:
SandraDodd.com/unschool/definition
photo of "the rock house", from Sandia Tram, by Sandra Dodd
(The rock layers really are at that angle,
at the top of the Sandia Mountains.)
The first time I used this quote, in 2011,
Karen James responded:
It really is a life change, that keeps changing and evolving. Actually, I find, the less methodical I am, the more fluent the learning and living become.
photo of "the rock house", from Sandia Tram, by Sandra Dodd
(The rock layers really are at that angle,
at the top of the Sandia Mountains.)
Tuesday, September 23, 2025
Tricked by "knowledge"
A great deal of parenting "wisdom" is made up of things "everyone knows" because everyone repeats them back and forth, over and over. Like "you have to go to school to learn" and "children need rules". Some of the things "everyone knows" are completely wrong, but because "everyone knows" them, it's very, very difficult for people to change their attitudes even in the presence of evidence to the contrary.
It was really shocking for me to discover just how much of what I "knew" was a result of that repetition. I accounted myself an intelligent, thoughtful person, with strong "alternative" viewpoints, but most of what I thought I knew about parenting was based in a kind of cultural conditioning. The ideas in my head weren't my own. That's humbling.
—Meredith
photo by Sandra Dodd
Friday, August 29, 2025
Unexpectedly...
Gail Higgins, an unschooling mom, wrote of this photo: "Opossum staredown. Surprise photo op 😀"

It reminds me of those unexpected moments that pop up in any parent's life. Unexpectedly, someone is looking at you expectantly. It could be one of your children, your partner, a relative, a neighbor, a friend or a stranger.
Confidence in unschooling principles will make those moments increasingly easy to deal with. After becoming an unschooler, one can respond as an unschooler. It does take a while.
As Gail's confidence in her photographic skills increases, she can respond as a photographer, when surprises come along.
SandraDodd.com/becoming
photo by Gail Higgins


It reminds me of those unexpected moments that pop up in any parent's life. Unexpectedly, someone is looking at you expectantly. It could be one of your children, your partner, a relative, a neighbor, a friend or a stranger.
Confidence in unschooling principles will make those moments increasingly easy to deal with. After becoming an unschooler, one can respond as an unschooler. It does take a while.
As Gail's confidence in her photographic skills increases, she can respond as a photographer, when surprises come along.
photo by Gail Higgins

Friday, August 15, 2025
No shoving, please
That line is from small talk I gave once, to dads only. I was talking about logic—to draw it in, not to hit people with it. But "Set it out, don't try to shove it in" can apply to many things—food, interesting things, ideas, and to unschooling itself.
Saturday, August 9, 2025
Be the safest place
I've seen other people's children run away from them in parking lots, and the parents yell and threaten. At that moment, going back to the mom seems the most dangerous option.
Make yourself your child's safest place in the world, and many of your old concerns will just disappear.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, July 28, 2025
Responding directly
It will be personal, and real, and at exactly the right moment.
photo by Chrissy Florence
The post was used six years ago, too, but here is a new link to go with it:
SandraDodd.com/conversation
Sunday, July 13, 2025
Various doorways
Joyce Fetteroll wrote:
Learning is defined not just as sucking in information about something the child is interested in. Learning is also figuring out the big picture and how things connect. Figuring out how stuff works, figuring out how people work, making connections, seeing patterns. This is a mechanical, biological process. It's how humans—all learning animals really—naturally learn, how kids are born learning.
Natural learning is like a doorway. We can't change the doorway but we can change the outside world so kids can more easily reach what intrigues them.
—Joyce Fetteroll
(original)
(original)
photo by Sandra Dodd, in Pérouges, France
Something looks like this:
passageway,
repeat,
stonework
Monday, July 7, 2025
Purely learning
Facebook Memories showed me that someone on another continent had quoted me, years ago:
Mastering ideas about learning
As some of my articles are being translated (now into Japanese, French and Italian) I see how much of my writing and thinking is about language itself, and so some of these ideas won't translate. But sometimes, that fact is very good. Some of our confusion about teaching and students and study and learning, in English, has to do with the words we use, and if the problems don't exist in other languages, that's wonderful for them.
In Romance language (Italian, French, Spanish and so on) our "teacher" translates to something along the lines of "maestro," a word we have too in regards to music direction. And we have the English cognate "master" which is more currently left in "master of arts" and other college-degree titles. Once that meant a person was qualified to teach at the university level. That meaning is gone in the U.S., pretty much.
Considering the word family from which "maestro" comes (and not knowing all its connotations in other languages), the English verb "to master" means to learn. It means to become accomplished in the doing of something. Whether mastering horseback riding or blacksmithing or knowing and controlling one's own emotions, it's not something someone else does to you or for you.
So for any translators or bilinguals reading here, have sympathy for English speakers who can't get to natural learning without disentangling all the graspy words and ideas about teaching and education and their implications that learning is passive and teaching must be done to a person.
SandraDodd.com/wordswordsother
photo by Sandra Dodd

Learning does not teach us, but from learning we learn.I still haven't found her source, but in looking I found its "wordier" cousin posted here in 2011:
Mastering ideas about learning
In Romance language (Italian, French, Spanish and so on) our "teacher" translates to something along the lines of "maestro," a word we have too in regards to music direction. And we have the English cognate "master" which is more currently left in "master of arts" and other college-degree titles. Once that meant a person was qualified to teach at the university level. That meaning is gone in the U.S., pretty much.
Considering the word family from which "maestro" comes (and not knowing all its connotations in other languages), the English verb "to master" means to learn. It means to become accomplished in the doing of something. Whether mastering horseback riding or blacksmithing or knowing and controlling one's own emotions, it's not something someone else does to you or for you.
So for any translators or bilinguals reading here, have sympathy for English speakers who can't get to natural learning without disentangling all the graspy words and ideas about teaching and education and their implications that learning is passive and teaching must be done to a person.
photo by Sandra Dodd

Saturday, June 28, 2025
Thinking and maybe rethinking
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, June 23, 2025
Be very engaged
"I made my marriage very important to me. I chose to be very engaged in my marriage as a part of raising children."
SandraDodd.com/spouses
photo by Sandra Dodd

photo by Sandra Dodd

Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Unschooling, Time and Energy
Someone asked:
Is unschooling more exhausting than having a child in school?
Is unschooling more exhausting than doing school at home?

SandraDodd.com/unschoolingtime
photo by Sandra Dodd
Is Unschooling Exhausting?My first thought is "compared to what?"
Is unschooling more exhausting than having a child in school?
Is unschooling more exhausting than doing school at home?

photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, May 26, 2025
Good habits
If you want to establish good habits, be gentle with your kids' feelings. Make their lives warmer and softer and easier so the habits they develop are those of warmth and joy, comfort and care.
—Meredith Novak
April 13, 2014
April 13, 2014
photo by Sandra Dodd

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