photo by Cally Brown
Friday, June 6, 2025
Sorting real from construct
photo by Cally Brown
Thursday, June 5, 2025
Balancing on changes
photo by Colleen Prieto
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Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Learning, input—living there
Having the television on all day is not something I want and I live here too.
Sandra Dodd's response:
We don't have the television on all day.
You live there too, but if your priority is your children's learning, then limiting input is going to make that more difficult.
SandraDodd.com/bookworship
photo by Jen
Tuesday, June 3, 2025
Choose to have choices
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, June 2, 2025
Avoiding problems

What else can be a problem with unschooling?
Trying to save time and money; skimping on attention.
I've done this, "Not now," or "please not today." But what do you tell yourself about that? If it's "Good, no problem," that's bad, and a problem.
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Sunday, June 1, 2025
How much does unschooling cost?
If a child is in a private school, unschooling won't "cost that much," meaning no one will send you a tuition bill and a steady stream of fundraising requests and tell you what clothes and shoes you have to buy.
If both parents are working and decide one should quit work and stay at home with the children, will it "cost" a full-time income? In one way of looking at it, perhaps. But counting potential is a trap.
If a family values love and relationships, unschooling can pay off in a jackpot of closeness and joy that could hardly be possible with school in the equation, and could never be bought back with a thousand hours of expensive therapy down the road. (Maybe factor in the time savings of not spending a thousand hours sitting and talking about what you could've done differently, in addition to the cost of it.)
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, May 31, 2025
What about "Educational" Materials?
Resistance to things that look schooly or educational makes sense—we're promoting letting all those things go completely, especially at the beginning stages of unschooling, and we talk about how beneficial that can be for helping people to help them understand that learning happens all the time, that much of what is "taught" in school is learned naturally by unschoolers in the course of living their complete schoolishness-free lives.
I don't think it makes sense to criticize unschoolers for being anti-schoolishness. That goes with the territory.
image by WordCloud, of words by Sandra Dodd
In 2013, someone said my facebook posts were negative. In those days, WordCloud could generate artsy data from a facebook URL (or any URL or document). The posts were candid (they were already there). The size is based on the number of times words were repeated, in that sample of 293 posts—a year's worth. Looked pretty positive!
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