photo by Cátia Maciel
Saturday, November 30, 2024
The joys of unschooling
photo by Cátia Maciel
Friday, November 29, 2024
Illuminating the world
I remember being in school and asking "Why do we need to know this?" I asked it, other kids asked it, and one answer I remember was when I asked my Algebra II teacher, when I was 15, why we needed to know how to figure out square roots. He said it was in case we wanted to figure out how far away stars were. I said, "Don't we have people to do that?"
I didn't care how far away stars were. I thought it should be left to those who really are curious or have a need to know. That need to know the distance of stars has never been good for anything at all yet, as far as I know.
It wasn't long after that (six years) that I myself was a teacher in that same school. Luckily for me and for all the world, I wasn't teaching algebra or astronomy. But still I would be asked "Why do we have to learn this?" Sometimes I gave a serious answer, and sometimes a philosophical answer. Sometimes I made light of it. Sometimes the honest answer was "You don't have to learn this, but I have to try to teach it so I can get paid." Or "Only some of you will need to know it, but they don't know which ones yet, so I have to say it to everybody."
Then one day, the question came phrased a new and better way: "What is this GOOD for?" The answer I gave then changed my life and thinking. I said quickly "So you can get more jokes." I think we were reading a simplified Romeo and Juliet at the time. I could've gone into literature and history and fine arts, but the truth is that the best and most immediate use of most random learning is that it illuminates the world. The more we know, the more jokes we will get.
photo by Sandra Dodd
(click the photo if you don't know what it is)
Thursday, November 28, 2024
Wonderful, easier, more peaceful
It takes time to get it. I have been reading and applying unschooling in my home for almost 8 years and I am still getting it.
It takes time to deschool. Most of us have a minimum of 13 years of schooling and some way more. Ask questions and just sit on the answers, re-read them, think about them, read them again, try them, wait a while and watch!
So all this to say that if someone comes to unschooling thinking that it will be just sitting there while the kids fend for themselves and that it is a piece of cake think again!
That is not to say it is not wonderful and, yes, easier and more peaceful, but not in the way many think it is.
—Alex Polikosky, 2012
(her kids are at university now)
(her kids are at university now)
photo by Brie Jontry
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
Natural feelings
One interesting side benefit of unschooling can be that the parents can begin, themselves, to feel those natural feelings. It can help if they are biological parents and experienced the change that can naturally happen when seeing (touching, smelling, hearing) one's own newborn. Not every parent changes, but most do. Some adoptive parents can get a wave of instinct (whatever that biochemically-triggered parenting effect is) that can change them, too.
photo by Kinsey Norris
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Affecting emotions
Can you affect your child's emotions? Yes. Everything you do, while you have an infant or young child, will affect that child's emotions.
Can you control your own emotions? Not entirely.
Can you affect your own emotions? Absolutely.
photo by Paul Collins
of Sandra and Holly Dodd
(as Ælflæd and Asta)
Monday, November 25, 2024
Limiting Limitations
There are arbitrary limits that parents just make up, or copy from the neighbors. Then there are limits that have to do with laws, rules, courtesy, tact, circumstances, traditions and etiquette.
photo by Sandra Dodd
__
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Know what you mean
I say "What do you mean?"
Usually the question is asked by rote, the same way adults ask stranger-children "Where do you go to school?" Most people just blink and stammer, because they don't even know what they meant when they asked it.—Sandra Dodd
(with links to other sets of questions and answers)
photo by Colleen Prieto
There was an error in the e-mail version, which went to this related page Those pages are better linked back and forth now, too.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)