photo by Heather Booth, who wrote "My holiday window dream come true."
Thursday, October 15, 2020
The motion of their own spheres
photo by Heather Booth, who wrote "My holiday window dream come true."
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Frosty
Life produces some fragile, fleeting things.
Cass Kotrba photographed frost so beautifully that you can see the individual ice crystals that formed on the grass, in northern Colorado.
Some people live where this doesn't happen.
You can click it for a larger image you can zoom in on better.
photo by Cass Kotrba
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Tuesday, October 13, 2020
I do believe...
Here's a fairy door. That is clearly what it is.
Are fairies real? We all know that word, and there's that door.
"What aspect of some particular subject involves objective truth? What is folklore or mythology? What literature or fantasy has come about based on that subject or item? Consider dragons, or India, or snakes, or rainbows. Checklist Abe Lincoln, the discovery of fire, or the depths of Lake Superior. Plot WWII, Japan, electric guitars, or Egypt."
Disposable Checklists for Unschoolers
photo by Rosie Todd
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"What aspect of some particular subject involves objective truth? What is folklore or mythology? What literature or fantasy has come about based on that subject or item? Consider dragons, or India, or snakes, or rainbows. Checklist Abe Lincoln, the discovery of fire, or the depths of Lake Superior. Plot WWII, Japan, electric guitars, or Egypt."
photo by Rosie Todd
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Monday, October 12, 2020
Restricting knowledge
Many parents think they know their children. But the more they restrict, the less they know their children and the more they know how their children are under restrictions. Restrictions say I don't trust you. Restrictions say that thing is more powerful than you are. Restrictions give children reasons not to be trusted.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Lydia Koltai
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Sunday, October 11, 2020
Your eyes can't see everything.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a roadrunner in the front yard
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Saturday, October 10, 2020
Proud
If I think of it as happy relief that I didn't prevent that success or achievement, then I can be a little proud of myself, and impressed with my offspring.
Maybe the best way I've found is to feel it as gratitude that I lived long enough to be able to see successes in my now-grown children. Gratitude is good. Joy is good.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Something looks like this:
art,
equipment,
flag,
instrument
Friday, October 9, 2020
Let life entertain you
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.
photo by Elaine Santana
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