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Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Every Day


Make every day a work of art.
Spend some amount of time doing something to push yourself or doing something just for the lovely enjoyment of it.  Everyday.

Make yourself uncomfortable, or surprise yourself, or follow through on a ridiculous idea.

Love yourself more than you did yesterday.  Love everyone more than you did yesterday.

"Everything is vibrating with joy and is kept together by love."
And why wouldn't it be?  Fear, anger, hate - they all separate, isolate.  Love and joy opens, pulls together.

The fact that I fell asleep last night and woke up this morning is a kind of a miracle.
I can consciously pull air into my lungs through my nostrils.  Or not.  Either way, I keep breathing.  

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Asking Questions


One reason unschooling works for our family is that I've never loved the idea of following a set curriculum.  Instead, I like to ask questions, listen to my kids' questions about the world, and look for answers, which usually lead to more questions.  Until we get to a point where the answers are more like theories or opinions - of which there may be many.  Then we can start coming up with our own theories based on what we know.  Sometimes we can test our theories, sometimes we just discuss them.

Some Examples:
Ollie was interested in the Grand Canyon.  He had heard it was a huge hole in the ground and that lots of people visited it.  His questions were:
"How did the canyon get made?"  and, "Why do so many people visit it?"

We started researching the Grand Canyon online, in books and asking family members.  We did and erosion project with different colors of sand in layers - I had read about it and it sounded like fun to me.  The kids got a kick out of it too.

We also did a project involving freezing and thawing wet rocks repeatedly to see how they changed.



We read about metamorphic, sedimentary and igneous rocks and tried to identify them based on what we read.

 We visited our Natural History Museum and found more rocks.  Finally, we went to the Grand Canyon.  We actually saw and talked about the layers, about what minerals could make the different colors in the rocks, saw a movie about the first known European expedition to canoe it, and talked to staff who knew so much about its history.

We got a lot out of these "lessons," but there was no set curriculum.  We had questions and we found different ways to look for answers.  I know that not everyone can take a week-long field trip, but you can still get a lot out of asking questions.

Around the same time Julian was interested in the Eiffel Tower.  He wanted to know, "Why was it built," "What was it made of,"  "How did they build it," and "How big is it?"  In looking for the answers to these questions, we found out that the guy Eiffel (who designed the tower) also designed and oversaw the construction of the inner skeleton of the Statue of Liberty.


Sunday, July 12, 2015

Caring and Relationships in Education



The education philosopher and writer Nel Noddings asserts that “schools should encourage the development of all aspects of whole persons: their intellectual, moral, social, aesthetic, emotional, physical and spiritual capacities.”  One would have to agree with this view, even if only because children spend a majority of their waking hours in school.  If school doesn’t attend to their development as “whole persons,” then when are they to be tended to?  In the brief morning rush to get dressed, eat and get everyone to school and work?  Or the precious little time children might have to themselves between extra-curricular activities, homework and dinner?  Or if a student isn’t so lucky, they may be more concerned with food and shelter, rather than developing any personal aspects of themselves. 
This view of education would require schools to put the care of children first (rather than their education), how they exist now, not in the way they “should” exist in a theoretical future.  It would also require the system to assist students in discovering what they are actually good at and what they enjoy doing, which one could argue is essential to happiness.  However, this is not the prominent view of education in the United States.  Politicians have argued for every student being “college ready,” but many jobs essential to our society don’t require a college degree.  These jobs are considered “unskilled work” however, from my experience, there is no such thing as “unskilled work.”  As a society, we need people to pick up trash, keep our infrastructure intact, and keep streets and buildings clean.  These jobs don’t require a college degree, but we should be grateful for those who perform these tasks.  Unfortunately, by and large, we are not. 
This expectation that college is the only way has led to misappropriated academic demands on teachers and students that mandate everyone use the same curriculum, without thought to individual aptitudes or interests.  Many of these curriculum purport to be “teacher proof,” meaning they take the individual teachers out of the education “equation.”  Without teachers there can be no teacher-student relation, there is only content and student.  But if Noddings’ assertion that “every human life starts in relation, and it is through relations that a human individual emerges,” then one must wonder what will emerge from this focus on results and accountability.  And if it’s true that individuals emerge through their relations, then it must follow that this is how communities and whole cultures develop, But, what happens to communities when relationships are severed in the name of test scores?  A feeling of isolation and separation from fellow humans results.  Eventually, a feeling of separation from one’s self will occur because importance has continuously been placed on test results rather than on the development of one’s inner world, the inner world that a person needs in order to cultivate the perseverance it takes to do anything worthwhile.


Tuesday, July 7, 2015

But, What about....

                                              Photo Credit: earthporm.com
Questions from parents about gaps in education, socialization, and learning how to do things one doesn’t want to do come at me all the time, and it’s difficult in the moment to remember that unschooling isn’t about those things, because those things happen when people are in school too.  So many of us don’t have a firm grasp on world geography and political boundaries and world history.  So many of us have known some “weird” or “unsocial” kids in school and have tried desperately to cover any weirdness in ourselves so we would “fit in.”  Many of us know people who, despite all their public school training, still cannot seem to just do as they are told or obey the laws of the land.  The point is that public school didn’t save them from themselves.  If anything, it distracted them from being themselves, so that they had to spend years finding themselves after school. 
While unschooling, for our family, is a healthy way to raise our children and enjoy our lives together, sometimes I have to remind myself of what it’s not.  It’s not a guaranteed way for our kids to “get ahead” in a world where the corporate version of success rules.  It’s not a backdoor ticket into college or a good paying job, or even of any form of satisfaction later on in life.  It also isn’t a cure for abusive parenting or poverty.
But school isn’t any of these things either.  Some might argue that schools provide free food for children and can help them get out of an abusive home life, but the child who needs the food at school still goes home to poverty and the child who is taken away from abusive parents is put into a system that may or may not be much better. 
Some teachers have addressed the social inequality issue with unschooling by telling me I should keep my kids in school for the benefit of those kids who have no choice but to stay.  I had to tell them that my kid was bad at doing school; he wasn’t helping the other kids, except for being on the bottom of the bell curve.  I never believed that putting my kids through school would solve these problems, but I’ve been troubled by the fact that homeschooling, and especially unschooling, doesn’t seem to make room for those already marginalized by the existing systems in place.  

In addressing implications for educators, I would say that educators need to pay attention to the children in their care and do what they believe to be the best for those children.  They need to be a voice to and for parents - communicating the consequences of federal mandates on the classroom culture and standing up against unjust laws for parents who don’t have the time or resources otherwise.  Teachers can be a pivot point, a gate keeper, protecting children from federal mandates that are detrimental to their development and only serve the institution.  We’ve all been led to believe that we need to fit into the system as it exists to do well, but if all we do is work to fit into the system, there’s no one who can think about changing it.  So we work and work and work, many work full time and still need food stamps, many work second jobs to “stay afloat”  – fitting into the system isn’t working anymore, the system needs to change.  And it seems like school is just another way to feed people into this system.  Of course, it was designed for that, but democracy requires that we question the system, and make it work for the people.  Sometimes I  think of our unschooling as a weed tree sprouting in the concrete.  It’s not much to look at now, but in time it will grow big enough to provide shade and hope to other families looking for a different way.  

Friday, July 3, 2015

Do It Yourself!

I just found diy.org through Penelope Trunk's Education Blog. This site looks like so much fun and A great resource.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Workin' for the weekend


Sometimes homeschooling is scary.  Like when we spend a week with no social interaction besides grandparents and librarians.  I'm scared to publish that last sentence because of the stereotype that homeschoolers aren't properly "socialized."  Or when my kids act weird in public.  Sometimes I think, "Maybe they're right!  Maybe my kids would be better off in school."
But then I think about what their lives would be like if they were in school.
Sure, they would be around more kids, but when my older son was in kindergarten he only had one friend in his class, and this friend was also a bit of a bully.
And then I think about schedule, and how much work out side of school the family is expected to put in, but the school itself isn't really working for any child's best interests, because it has to simply contain all those children and try to make them know some of the same things by a certain date so they can pass a test.
I'd rather have two happy weird kids excited about their lives than two worried normal kids waiting for the weekend.
When our oldest was in kindergarten we would wake him up to get ready for school, and he would ask us, "Is it Saturday yet?"