"What I know for sure is that a sad or angry moment turned into a happy and playful one will always be better."
photo by Sandra Dodd



Sometimes you will understand what your kids *could* be learning from something. Always they'll be learning much more, making connections with ideas that seems to have no relation to what they're doing, learning thousands of little bits about peripheral things like music, social interactions, history, math, who they are, who you are and so much much more.

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"I found early on the less I talked the more I was heard." —Karen James |
photo by Jayn Coburn, years ago
Two religions are involved already, in that 19th century steam-powered music machine. Also, it having been made in the late 19th century, it was an engineering situation involving the latest technologies. I couldn't decide whether to link this to Connections or to Mechanical Music, so here are both links. The green and flowery French Calliope down on that page is a video I made, and I went around the back to show the punch card that plays the particular song. The one pictured above works that way, too. You can go exploring from home! |




It's not that unschoolers ignore the difference between entertainment and education. It's that we come to see that it's a false division.
For educators, entertainment is a sugar coating that can be put on the important stuff to make it easier to get it in.
For unschoolers, that division doesn't make sense. For unschoolers the division is interested in and not (yet) interested in.
Engagement, joy, interest, fascination are all indications a child is making connections between ideas. Unschoolers come to realize that the connections are not just the important part of learning but the only real learning.
"Facing fears" sounds scary, intimidating and negative. Stepping toward learning is much more positive. Being with children is easy; they're already right there. Move toward them, instead of milling around with fears and vulnerability.


SandraDodd.com/doit
art by Robert and Robbie Prieto; photo by some Prieto or another
My Favorite things about Unschooling
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It is natural for people to learn—each in their own way. It is natural for children to want to understand the world around them. They also want to join the adult world and become competent and capable adults themselves. They'll strive for this in their own natural ways. Unschooling parents work on creating a home environment that supports their children's natural desire to learn and grow.
Each child is unique and experiences the world in a different way than any other person and expresses themselves in ways that are different from every other person.


This is a first run of a trick Vlad Gurdiga has arranged for my site to do—a tool for using folders as slide shows. Vlad's pretty great. For me, the photos loaded quickly on my MacBook, semi-quickly on an iPad, and a subset of them loaded, after a while, on my iPhone.
The first photos are pub lunch in Liphook, animals on the property near the car park, some of Hollycombe's collection of wagons that travelling-fair workers used to live in, and of various things inside the park.

The real answer is not to "approach math," but to learn how to see all of the patterns, measuring, relationships, weights, game play, sports stats, poker hands that are math in its natural environment.Jo Isaac wrote:
The question you really want to ask is how do you deschool enough that you know you don't need to 'approach math' at all.
The history of science, the history of technology, and in this case art and music, too, can help fill in a lot of connections and timelines.

It's amazing to see doing for others as a gift. It takes the whole angst about servitude away
There isn't any servitude in it when it's a gift.


Thread literally is a tiny cord, but thread figuratively is a series of connections, and so it comes full circle.
Pam Sorooshian wrote:
"Unschooling is more like a dance between partners who are so perfectly in synch with each other that it is hard to tell who is leading. The partners are sensitive to each others' little indications, little movements, slight shifts and they respond. Sometimes one leads and sometimes the other."

Beautiful moments of stillness and calm are around us all the time. Sometimes we notice.