photo by Cathy Koetsier
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
Tuesday, April 22, 2025
Reflections and shadows
The effects of different factors on lives and situations can change appearances and perceptions. Life keeps moving, and we can miss things by not looking, not noticing.
Days and moments can flow too quickly, too loudly, exhaustingly, for parents, and for growing kids. Try to appreciate the lights and shadows and patterns.
photo by Sandra Dodd
The swirls are reflections from the car windows. Stripes are light through a slat gate. Row of spots is sun through the decorative top row of the cinderblock wall.
Something looks like this:
light,
patterns,
reflections,
shadows
Monday, April 21, 2025
People, writing, improvement (really)
Writing to real people for real purposes improves writing in real ways.
There are some people who haven’t been born yet who will, someday, read things Jo Isaac wrote, and other people here. It might be hard for them to find it, or it might not be. But good ideas, written well, can outlive the writers.
SandraDodd.com/realwriting
photo by Karen James
photo by Karen James
Sunday, April 20, 2025
Gather and glean
I've always felt strongly that unschooling should be about the ideas and not about the individuals. No one book, website, speaker or conference should try to be (nor be expected to be) everything for anyone, but unschooling parents should gather and glean what they can from all the real world around them. We don't need to all agree, or all be on the same list or at the same conference for families to learn and grow with unschooling.
photo by Karen James
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Extraordinary doings
It helped me think more clearly about unschooling when I realized unschooling isn’t something kids do. Unschooling is something parents do. Unschooling is *parents* creating a learning environment for kids to explore their interests in.
Unschooled kids aren’t doing anything out of the ordinary. They’re merely doing what comes naturally. They’re doing what all animals with lengthy childhoods do. They learn by doing what interests them in an environment that gives them opportunities to explore.
Unschooling is parents doing something extraordinary. It’s deliberately creating an environment where kids are supported in pursuing their interests.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Rosie Moon
Friday, April 18, 2025
A Respected Child
I really believe unschooling works best when parents trust a child's personhood, his intelligence, his instincts, his potential to be mature and calm. Take any of that away, and the child becomes smaller and powerless to some degree.
Give them power and respect, and they become respected and powerful.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, April 17, 2025
How to help
Sometimes help is just encouragement or acknowledgment, but sometimes it might need to be transportation or procurement or something physical.
photo by Megan Valnes (of Holly Dodd)
Something looks like this:
dance,
Dodd,
playground,
sunlight
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
All fun and games
I know in the nitty gritty of my heart, I'm not okay with a life philosophy that centers on "if it's fun I'm here, and if it's not, I'm gone."Joyce Fetteroll responded:
Don't think of what we're talking about as fun, then. Think of it as joy. Or fulfilling. Or satisfying.
Even the most joyful life isn't all peaches and cream. Sometimes it rains when we wanted it sunny. Sometimes a friend cancels when we wanted to do something together. Sometimes accomplishing something means working through a period of frustration.
Life will naturally throw lemons at us fairly regularly. But what we don't need is to squirt life with artificial lemon juice to prepare us.—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Karen James
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Learning by watching
My son spends a lot of his time playing video games. I have accepted that this is his passion... and maybe very well play a part in his career path. but lately he's also been watching videos of other people playing video games on YouTube! Please help me see a reason that this is not just a waste of time... I know you'll have a good way to look at this latest passion.
An idea:
Musicians watch videos of other musicians. Athletes watch videos of other athletes. Chess players have even been known to watch other people play chess with something approaching awe and rapture. Woodworkers watch woodworking shows. Cooks watch cooking shows. Dancers watch better dancers and learn like crazy!
Don't worry about what kids choose to do. Make sure they have lots of choices, and don't discriminate between what you think might be career path and what might "only" be joyful activity and self-expression, or what might seem to be nothing more than relaxation or escapism. Let them choose and be and do.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, April 14, 2025
More joyful ways to live
Joyce Fetteroll wrote:
The first step is finding something that's better than what you have.
The second step is wanting to change.
The third step is figuring out how to change.
So, as you read along, you may wonder why I suggest that parents basically make life more difficult for themselves. The reason is because I believe it leads to a much better place. And that better place is a more joyful life for our children and our families.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Janine Davies
Sunday, April 13, 2025
A grid over which to lay other things
If someone knew almost nothing in the world but trivia relating to popular music for the past 100 years, that would make a HELL of a good grid over which to lay other things. And I don't think a thorough knowledge of pop music (in any culture or language) over this particular past hundred years, which saw the proliferation of recorded music available in homes, the advent of radio broadcasts, movies with music, television variety shows, transistor radios, cassette players in cars, CDs, iPods and cell phones that store a ton of music could help but create a timeline of the culture. Wouldn't songs from Marx Brothers or Fred Astaire movies remind people of The Great Depression? Can anyone hear big-band swing music and not also think of the hairdos and costumes? Does "Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy" not remind anyone of WWII? Knowing some of the context of Gene Autrey and Roy Rogers brings up LOTS of stories about where those songs were first heard.
The lyrics of some of the songs make specific mention of historical events, and that could help dating things, too, if a person were trying to figure out what came first.
Any hobby delved into deeply becomes another portal to the whole world—real and imagined; past, present and future.
video from Young Frankenstein, 1974
Directed by Mel Brooks
Written (in part) by, and starring, Gene Wilder
Saturday, April 12, 2025
What do trees, cats, and people need?
What does a cat need for its brain to develop more?
They need a lack of abuse. They need water and food, sunshine. The cats can use things or people to play with, and people or other cats to groom them, pet them, lie down next to them sometimes. The tree might need to be less in the shade of other trees for optimal growth, or might need not to be where the wind is banging their branches against a cliff or building or fence or something.
If you think of people as the natural, biological beings they are, rather than as school kids who either are or are not in school, things become much clearer.
Longer version here, with some Pam Sorooshian commentary
photo by Jo Isaac
Friday, April 11, 2025
How unschooling works
Schooling works by pouring expertly selected bits of the world into a child. (Or trying to, anyway!)
Unschooling works by the child pulling in what he wants and needs. It works best by noticing what the child is asking for and helping him get it. It works best by running the world through their lives so they know what it's possible to be interested in.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Thursday, April 10, 2025
Persuasion and explanations
photo by Elise Lauterbach
Wednesday, April 9, 2025
Choices yes; "freedom," maybe not
Some unschoolers become confused on that, and they begin to frolic in the "freedom" that they are pretty sure some stranger online granted them, and that unschoolers have inalienably from God, bypassing all forms of government and the limitations of wallboard. And so if an unschooling family is up at 3:00 a.m. playing Guitar Hero, they seem mystified that the neighbors have called the landlord.
I'm exaggerating. I hope I'm exaggerating.
(where there's more of that)
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
Conversations and insights
If he had a bedtime, we would have missed our 2:00 am chat about My Little Pony, Doctor Who, Star Trek, Shakespeare, cellular peptide cake with mint icing, the two Queen Elizabeths, the nature of cats in general and ours in specific, word play, fan fiction, Lord of the Flies, specism (like racism and ageism), Harry Potter, and Heinlein.
It's something I would never have known I was missing out on, and I love these conversations and insights, and how they change as he grows.
—Shan Burton
image by mudpuppycomics (dot com)
Monday, April 7, 2025
School Days
Don't forget school days completely, though, because you can plan outings when the museums and playgrounds are empty. There won't be a crowd at the cinema.
Old information has new purposes.
photo by Cátia Maciel

Sunday, April 6, 2025
New and better
Lean, one choice at a time, one conscious thought at a time, until your choices and thoughts are solidly in the range where you want to be, and you no longer lean that other way so much.
Your new range of balance will involve better choices and options than your first attempts did.
photo by Sandra Dodd

Saturday, April 5, 2025
Soothing touch and gaze
I responded:
There is touch. There is gaze. Have you never just looked into the eyes of your child, communicating? Have you not touched them soothingly, and felt them touch you back sometimes? They can tell the difference between an angry look and a gentle look.
photo by Destiny Dodd, I think
Friday, April 4, 2025
Will they learn...
Joyce Fetteroll's
ANSWER: How did you prepare your newborn to be a toddler? How did you prepare your toddler to be a 6 yo?
They learn what they need now. The nows just naturally keep coming along and the kids end up where they are today already knowing what they needed last year and acquiring what they need for today.
I love Joyce's answers. My own to such questions has usually been "Does high school prepare people for adulthood? Does a university degree teach them everything they need to know?"
photo by Karen James
(of water on an artichoke)
Wednesday, April 2, 2025
As kids deschool...
Joyce Fetteroll's advice for helping kids deschool when needed:
The best thing you can do while they're deschooling is let them play. And help them play. Make play dates. Make sure they have things they enjoy playing with. *Be* with them. Find out why they enjoy something so much. When they feel free—rule of thumb is one month for each year they've been in school, starting from the time when you last pressured them to learn something—be more active about running things through their lives: movies, TV shows, books, places to go: ethnic restaurants, museums, monster truck pulls, walks in the woods, funky stores ....
Look for the delight in life and it will infect your kids. 😊 As long as it's *honest* interest and delight! If it's fake interest to get them to pay attention to something you think would be good for them, they're going to notice and avoid it. It's the tactic they've been awash in since kindergarten: "Learning is Fun!"
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Cátia Maciel
Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Live, see and think
Unschooling isn't another version of a curriculum, that will take four hours a day. Unschooling is a different way to live and to see and to think.
photo by Julie T
Monday, March 31, 2025
Easier lives for children
I'm concerned only with what makes children's lives easier, not what makes their mothers feel more important or martyrly or special.
Nothing has ever made me feel better about me than the feeling that I was being a good mom.
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Yourself and the world
To read it: Living Unschooling
If you have the book Natural Born Learners, turn to page 199 for a longer version.
photo by Erika Ellis
Saturday, March 29, 2025
Emulation
—Sandra Dodd
from longer writing here
from longer writing here
and/or
SandraDodd.com/voices
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Friday, March 28, 2025
Fitting dinner into the day
I have more energy in the morning but I don't always want to use it thinking about dinner. When I do, I do better. 🙂 If I start bread and put something out to thaw, or better yet mix up a casserole or put something in the crock pot—at least a sauce or something easy like ground beef or chicken in barbecue sauce—then dinner is easy and if plans change, the thing that was started earlier can go in the fridge.
We've never made our kids wait for dinner. If they're hungry, they can snack.
—Sandra, when kids were still home
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, March 27, 2025
Not the same choices
Happy, supported, trusted kids don't make the same choices as unhappy, controlled kids.—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, March 26, 2025
Mixtures, swirls and solutions
I still see "subject areas" everywhere, but I haven't taught those categories and prejudices to my children. Science has much more to do with history than geology has to do with microbiology, but in school geology, biology, astronomy and physics are all "the same thing," and history is different altogether. Yet the best parts of history involve the knowledge cultures had and how they put it to use, whether in shipbuilding or iron tool use, medicine or communications.
Holly asked yesterday about when people discovered the world wasn't flat. I told her there was no one date or century because people discovered different things at different times, and some were shushed up when they said the world was round, or that the sun didn't orbit around the earth. I also told her, "Ask your dad, because he's really interested in the history of science."
I noticed when I said it that I had "named subject areas," but I didn't feel too bad. She's twelve, and reading, and after all "the history of science" was never part of my schooling. A science teacher wasn't certified to teach me history, and vice versa. Only outside of school did I figure out that scientific discoveries were history, and that music was science, and that art was history.
photo by Kelly Halldorson
Tuesday, March 25, 2025
Snakes and wild berries
When a science-minded kid loves to take the dog down by the river and look for wild berries and snakes, some parents say, "My kid just wants to play. He's not interested in learning. He'll never learn science just playing."
Each little experience, every idea, is helping your child build his internal model of the universe. He will not have the government-recommended blueprint for the internal model of the universe, which can look surprisingly like a school, and a political science class, a small flat map of the huge spherical world, a job with increasing vacations leading to retirement, and not a lot more.
photo by Sandra Dodd

Monday, March 24, 2025
Confident and at peace
For the first time, in what seems like my entire life, I am not terrified. Up until now, I have been wielding my alarm and anxiety like a sword and shield battling against the world. I thought that's what I was supposed to do. Isn't that what a good parent does? I thought that fear was a parenting tool that told you how to keep your children safe. I felt that letting go of that fear meant that I was a bad parent. My paranoia had spilled into every part of our lives.
—jbantau
(quoted with a link to the full original there)
photo by Colleen Prieto
Sunday, March 23, 2025
Sweet, special moments
There is something oh so sweet about a child doing something without being asked.
Vega who is 8, cleaned out our fridge one day because he saw it needed it. Dutch 6, came over on his own to help bring in plates from outside. He hated helping out when I used to make a big deal out of it. These small instances happen more and more often and are very special moments for me.
—Joanne Lopers
SandraDodd.com/chores/tales
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Saturday, March 22, 2025
Another casual part of life
To call some food "junk" is an artificial division. When food is given the status of a religion (the place where sacrifices are made to ensure a positive outcome and long/eternal life), then there IS the necessity of a devil/Satan/"the dark side."
When food is just another casual part of life, kids will choose melons over biscuits/cookies and chocolate eggs sometimes.
When a child is loudly, ceremoniously and with a big happy-face NOT ALLOWED to be in the presence of the devil/sweets, then if and when he is lured by that satanic force, he will either resist out of fright instilled by his loving mother, or he will succumb, indulge, and be one giant step away from his mother—morally, emotionally and dietarily.
photo by Tammy

Friday, March 21, 2025
Curiosity and flow
That all 'just happened,' but it happened because we've been building up to it with our whole lives and our whole style of communicating and living together in a constant state of open curiosity.. . . . Once you start looking for connections and welcoming them, it creates a kind of flow that builds and grows.
Photo by Cátia Maciel
Thursday, March 20, 2025
What is not a clock?
I do love clocks and calendars and the history of time measurement, but it is good to remember that we are not clocks, and our children are not clocks.

The clock is not hungry
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a sundial in Chichester

photo by Sandra Dodd, of a sundial in Chichester

Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Patterns and dots
Notice, contemplate, appreciate patterns.
photo by Sandra Dodd

Tuesday, March 18, 2025
Your child as a person

"Just a reminder: your kids are whole people. They're having experiences even when you're not there. They learn with you and without you."
—Holly Dodd
SandraDodd.com/holly
photo by Julie D, of Holly and Adam

Monday, March 17, 2025
Peace and change
When this was first published, November 18, 2014, the intro was:

Marty has an orthodonist appointment at 10:30 this morning, and works at noon. He has gone to ortho alone, and has taken Holly before. I asked yesterday if he wanted to go alone or me take him. He wanted me to go. He asked me to wake him up an hour before. He likes at least an hour before, and usually an hour and a half.
I forgot to wake him up, but I heard his alarm go off at 9:31 (and remembered I had forgotten).
He was tired and I offered to put a fifteen or twenty minute timer on and come and get him, but he said no, he wanted to get up.
There is a snapshot moment in the "don't have to" life of a sixteen year old boy.
I'm not saying that every child given leeway will be Marty.
I'm saying that every person who claims that leeway will inevitably cause sloth is proven wrong by Marty.
SandraDodd.com/sleeping
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Marty, a different morning in those same days
The story quoted below is from nine years ago and involves a sixteen-year-old.Today, in 2025, I update it:
Marty is twenty-five now and is getting married in a couple of days.
The story quoted below is from 20 years ago, and involves a sixteen-year-old.
Marty is 36 now, and is moving with his wife and two children to Anchorage, Alaska in six days.

Marty has an orthodonist appointment at 10:30 this morning, and works at noon. He has gone to ortho alone, and has taken Holly before. I asked yesterday if he wanted to go alone or me take him. He wanted me to go. He asked me to wake him up an hour before. He likes at least an hour before, and usually an hour and a half.
I forgot to wake him up, but I heard his alarm go off at 9:31 (and remembered I had forgotten).
He was tired and I offered to put a fifteen or twenty minute timer on and come and get him, but he said no, he wanted to get up.
There is a snapshot moment in the "don't have to" life of a sixteen year old boy.
I'm not saying that every child given leeway will be Marty.
I'm saying that every person who claims that leeway will inevitably cause sloth is proven wrong by Marty.
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Marty, a different morning in those same days
Sunday, March 16, 2025
Writing (without writing)
When they answer questions about a movie they've seen, do they take their audience into consideration? Who wants the short version, and who wants the long one? Who would rather hear about the characters than the action sequence? Writers need to think of those things.
SandraDodd.com/writing/seeing
(with samples of unschoolers' writing)
photo by Rosie Moon
Saturday, March 15, 2025
Unschooling and other marvels
- You can do it at home!
- Your kids are there!
- It makes all of life a peaceful learning lab.
Unschooling is a subset of homeschooling. Unschooling is the radical, philosophical end of homeschooling. Unschooling is living a rich life and letting learning drop into your lap and into your ears and mind while you laugh and listen to music and play games. Unschooling is seeing the magic in every day, and the joy in yourself and the people around you. If your children don't go to school, why should you bring school home? Be free! There is nothing in school that isn't also in the real world. (And if there IS, why would you be needing to know it if it doesn't exist outside?) Use primary sources, not textbooks. Look at real nature, not photos of nature in a book.
"Unschooling and other Marvels"
photo by Laurie Wolfrum
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