photo by Karen James
Monday, September 23, 2024
Carefully-thought-out ideas
photo by Karen James
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Growing and thriving
Unschooling is creating a rich environment where natural learning flourishes....
—Joyce Fetteroll
(longer writing, and a link to the interview)
photo by Rosie Moon
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Negotiations, commerce (not bribery)
How do you go about it without it feeling like/being bribery? I'm guessing it is in attitude and wording, but I can't imagine a way to word it that it doesn't sound like bribery to me...? Thanks for the idea!How do places of business get people to go to work without "bribery"?
How do you get an auto dealer to give you a car without bribery?
If someone's supposed to do something anyway and holds out on you until you pay them or give them something, that's a bribe. If something is not someone's job or someone's property and they negotiate for an exchange, that's commerce, not bribery.
There are some truisms that are spoken without real examination and I think the very vague rules against bribery of children are right up top there.
photo by Cátia Maciel
Friday, September 20, 2024
Choices and learning
If you tell them in advance what "will" make them feel better and what "will" make them feel bad, #1 you could be very wrong, and #2 they are NOT learning on their own about food. They're learning how to appease mom.
photo by Kirby Dodd
Quote is from an online text chat on food and eating.
Thursday, September 19, 2024
Up, up!

Up seems better than down in many ways—mythologically, linguistically, psychologically. Birds are up. Sun is up. Perk up. Cheer up.
Things are looking up.
photo by Megan Valnes
___
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Another space
I suggest making "outside" simply another space in a rich and engaging life. "Outside" is a part of the world we live in. "Outside" can be many places - parks, your backyard, a forest, the beach, a concert lawn, a hot air balloon fiesta, a carnival, a party with pleasant spaces set up outdoors ..... there's no one way to have meaningful time outdoors. Thinking about "outside" as some kind of monolith, like some people think about "screens," isn't useful.
—Brie Jontry
(ideas and cautions followed)
(ideas and cautions followed)
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
Better expectations
What gets in the way of so many new unschooling parents is unreasonable expectations. They think kids must learn to read, spell, do math by a certain age, do chores, do what they're told, not eat more sugar than Mom thinks is right, bathe and sleep when Mom wants... They think unschooling parents have a magical way of getting kids to do those.
Some parent expectations come from how they were parented. Some come from school. Some come from friends and other parents. Some are accepted as truths just because the message is ubiquitous.
For unschooling to flourish, parents need to look directly at their kids. What does *this* child need? What is *this* child reaching for? If a resource helps a parent let go of unreasonable expectations and look directly at their child, then that's supportive of creating a learning environment. If a resource helps a parent understand their child better, that's a good thing *if* it removed a barrier to directly looking at their child. It's not a good thing if it puts a new filter between parent and child. (It's funny how parents who fear TV see addiction in their children. When they let go of their fear, they see engagement.)
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Sarah Peshek
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