photo by Tam King
Sunday, September 21, 2025
Two new views
photo by Tam King
Something looks like this:
architecture,
bridge,
signs
Saturday, September 20, 2025
Competitive efficiency
Unschooling isn’t like that at all, even in the long term it’s not about the completion of a project at all. It’s about becoming the sort of people who see and appreciate and trust that learning can happen. And who can travel with children, not just drag them along or push them along, but who can travel with children along those interesting paths together not until you get there, but indefinitely.
And for beginning unschoolers that sounds also a little esoteric, a little foofy. And not solid. They want to know what do I do when the kids wake up in the morning? So, the beginning information is very often, “What do I do?” But the information that will get people from the beginning to the intermediate is why. Why do we do this?
photo by Colleen Prieto
Friday, September 19, 2025
Depth and breadth
Sink-Like-a-Stone Method:
Instead of skimming the surface of a subject or interest, drop anchor there for a while. If someone is interested in chess, mess with chess. Not just the game, but the structure and history of tournaments. How do chess clocks work? What is the history of the names and shapes of the playing pieces? What other board games are also traditional and which are older than chess? If you're near a games shop or a fancy gift shop, wander by and look at different chess sets on display. It will be like a teeny chess museum. The interest will either increase or burn out—don't push it past the child's interest.
When someone understands the depth and breadth of one subject, he will know that any other subject has breadth and depth.
SandraDodd.com/checklists
scanner image by Sandra Dodd
Something looks like this:
collection,
game,
scanography
Thursday, September 18, 2025
Compassion spreads
Partly they weren’t taught to be cold, by school prejudices.
Partly, they have had a gentle life, and they NOTICE harshness.
Being compassionate about kids' changes can help affect how
adults respond to their own and each others' needs and changes.
(notes for a presentation in 2005)
photo by Cally Brown
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Angels and chickens

Knowing I wanted to use this photo of Lydia Koltai's daughter and a favorite chicken, I pulled up my site search and put in "angel" and "chicken," partly as a joke—thinking I might get a quote with one of them.
Up came the page on cakes. Well, then! I invite you to go there and read the brief story of how my young boys, during a viewing of Spartacus in 1994, helped me discover one of the coolest things of my whole life—that the candles on birthday cakes, and the cakes themselves, are sacrificial offerings. Also they're sweet, and fun. There's light. There are wishes. There is celebration.
Cherish those things.
photo by Lydia Koltai
__
Tuesday, September 16, 2025
Seeing more paths
The difficulty of having so many rules in your life is not that you can’t get things done; it’s that you find it hard to do things truly on your own. If you’re constantly told what to do, when to do it, and how to do it, how will you react when the people who’ve always done the telling aren’t around to do so anymore? How will you develop your own decision-making process with someone else’s rules constantly weighing in? People sometimes have a hard enough time trying to figure things out; but adding additional roadblocks only narrows the number of paths that someone can take. Rules become those roadblocks because they’re normally established for the purposes of controlling other people or events.
—Ben Lovejoy
"No Rules-Sir, Yes Sir"
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Something looks like this:
architecture,
bridge,
vehicle
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Ultimately...
photo by Roya Dedeaux
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