photo by Leon McNeill, of Holly Dodd looking at the original Bayeux Tapestry,
in France in 2005
Trust that learning is natural; trust that children are interested in lifeinstead of "Follow a schedule" :
Flow with the moment, with the inspirationinstead of "Memorize facts" :
Understand stories
To most children or people it is apparent and that is only one of MANY examples of simple things that he questions.A mom named Sandra:
If it wasn't apparent to him, so what? He asked you a question that had a simple answer. If you expect him to be other than who he is, or if you withhold simple answers, he'll learn to stop asking you. Not good.
Questions are gloriously good for unschooling. And it's possible that he understands some situations better than you do and his questions are deeper than you think they are. Try asking him a question in return. Give a simple answer and then ask a question to help him clarify what he really wants to know. It will help both of you learn to think analytically, and create a bond of inquiry and shared experience between you.
NOTE FROM SANDRA: I was speaking, not writing, so when you get past that stuttery beginning, it might flow.