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Sunday, October 14, 2012

Deschooling Yourself – How to Recover from Traditional Schooling



For those who have been to traditional school and need help deschooling. Also, some great links for any unschoolers. Written by Jamie over at Self Made Scholar, a blog all about self-education.
Shred your textbooks! Burn your report cards! Before you embark on an independent learning journey, you’re going to need to take some time to un-learn the negative lessons you picked up in traditional schools. Chances are you’ve spent a good thirteen years of your life sitting behind a desk. Maybe more if you attended college.
Perhaps your school years taught you how to read, how to solve mathematical equations, and how to come up with good excuses when you forget an assignment. You probably don’t remember many of the facts you learned – I know I don’t. In one upper-division course, I spent three tortured weeks memorizing twenty minutes of Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales” in Old English. Today, I remember three words of it. Don’t get me started on logarithms and quadratic equations.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Should We Connect School Life to Real Life?



Excerpted from Will Richardson’s new TED Book Why SchoolHow Education Must Change When Learning and Information Are Everywhere. Richardson offers provocative alternatives to the existing education system, questioning everything from standardized assessments to the role of the teacher. In this chapter, “Real Work for Real Audiences,” Richardson envisions students creating work that is relevant and useful in the world outside school. The original article can be found here.
So what if we were to say that, starting this year, even with our children in K– 5, at least half of the time they spend on schoolwork must be on stuff that can’t end up in a folder we put away? That the reason they’re doing their schoolwork isn’t just for a grade or for it to be pinned up in the hallway? It should be because their work is something they create on their own, or with others, that has real value in the real world.
I’m not even necessarily talking about doing something with technology. (Let’s face it, though: Paper is a 20th-century staple that has severely limited potential, compared to digital spaces.) There’s lots of creating our kids can do with traditional tools that can serve a real audience. Publishing books, putting on plays, and doing community service are just a few examples.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

NO to subjects and NO to requirements



Roger Schank is an American artificial intelligence theorist, cognitive psychologist, learning scientist, educational reformer, and entrepreneur. He has worked at faculty positions at Stanford University and Yale University. He is the author of, Coloring Outside the Lines, and his website is here.
I have been spending a great deal of time in Europe lately, where the talk is about what to do about the awful governments that countries like Italy, Greece and Spain seem to be saddled with. (I am not saying the U.S. Is any better, maybe it is even worse -- I am simply reporting what I am hearing.)

In the course of one of these conversations, the talk turned to education, as it tends to do when I am around. The suggestion was made that schools should require students to learn about how government works, or maybe how it should work, in order to help citizens make better choices about who governs them and to be better at it when they are actually part of the government.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Unschooling Doesn’t Look Like School At All



The author, Pam Laricchia, is "living joyfully and unschooling (since 2002) alongside my wonderful family. Hubby and I have three terrific kids and home is a five acre plot of protected wetland and cedar forest in Ontario, Canada that we have dubbed Alternate Universe. You can contact me at pam@livingjoyfully.ca." Read the original article at Pam's website, Living Joyfully.
Unschooling looks like life.
Like an endlessly unfolding summer vacation, minus the warm weather (unless you live a lot closer to the equator than I do!), but with one big difference: the kids don’t spend it decompressing, burning off steam from months of strict schedules and the stress to perform. And they don’t end up complaining they are bored because someone isn’t telling them what to do. Instead, they are busily pursuing the things that interest them.
In contrast, what does learning look like at school? The vast majority of us parents went to school, so we understand that process quite well: there’s a curriculum that dictates what we learn; a teacher that tries to help us understand it; and a test that determines if we remember it. Repeat that loop over different subjects and many years. It is an exacting process designed to meet its goal: teaching large numbers of students a defined collection of information and skills, within a set number of years.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Why Long Lectures Are Ineffective



If students can only focus for 15-minute intervals, shouldn't we devote precious class time to something more engaging? Khan is the founder of the Khan Academy, a nonprofit with the mission of providing free, high-quality education for “anyone anywhere” in the world, and the author of The One World Schoolhouse: Education Reimagined.
Each school day, millions of students move in unison from classroom to classroom where they listen to 50- to 90-minute lectures. Despite there being anywhere from 20 to 300 humans in the room, there is little actual interaction. This model of education is so commonplace that we have accepted it as a given. For centuries, it has been the most economical way to “educate” a large number of students. Today, however, we know about the limitations of the class lecture, so why does it remain the most common format?

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Dayna Martin interviewed by Stefan Molyneux



"Dayna Martin shoots a grappling hook over the wall of your prison school, and revs the engine of the getaway car! For more: http://www.daynamartin.com http://www.liferocks.com

Freedomain Radio is the largest and most popular philosophy show on the web - http://www.freedomainradio.com"

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Our Unschooling Journey: Seeing Value in What Children Want to Learn



The author of this piece, Rashmie, unschools her daughter Pari. Rashmie says, "my greatest passion in life is to make ‘learning’ fun, passionate, playful and creative for her – and – for me. For ‘me’, I say, because if the mother or the teacher stops learning, she will never be able to nurture learning in its true spirit." Rashmie's website is here.
I know I have taken some time to write about this most significant aspect of our life – homeschooling Pari. Well, to be honest – it’s not just an ‘aspect’ of our lives but life itself.
For homeschooling (actually ‘unschooling’ and I’ll explain that in a bit) for us is not limited to Pari’s learning, but involves living life in a way that involves making choices every day, every minute.
From learning to chores to food, bed time, interactions, conversations – unschooling begins with examining our parental and other attitudes even in the seemingly mundane aspects of everyday life. It begins with reflecting on our behavior that seeks to control, discipline and train.
Unschooling is letting go of our tendency to control our children (even spouses and other relations). It begins by trusting our children’s natural ability to learn and giving them the freedom to pursue their own ideas and passions. It lays utmost importance on building a loving, trusting bond with our children.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Do Right-Brained Learners Gravitate to Unschooling?



Cindy Gaddis is a stay-at-home mother of seven children (son/25, daughter/22/married, son/21, son/19, son/17, son/13, son/11), five by birth and two by adoption. They've been a home educating family since 1992, so all her children have learned at home from the beginning. She has a book out, The Right Side of Normal, and her website is here.
I’ve had a theory for a while now that I believe most people who end up unschooling do so because the parent choosing to unschool is a right-brained learner, or the child in question is a right-brained learner. In my case, my first-born son is a strong right-brained learner, and he would end up teaching me how he best learned, which led straight to unschooling.
Basically, the reason I see this to be true is that right-brained learners tend to be mirror/opposites of left-brained learners. Their developmental learning process has a completely different order. Since school, and thus, most school-at-home approaches teaches in a left-brained manner, a right-brained child has to carve out a different path in order to achieve their optimal learning path. This causes a gravitational pull toward unschooling or eclectic homeschooling that allows, or even encourages, these differences to exist.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Why Are Students Willing to go into Debt in Order to Pay Large Amounts of Tuition in Order to Attend College?



Roger Schank is an American artificial intelligence theorist, cognitive psychologist, learning scientist, educational reformer, and entrepreneur. He has worked at faculty positions at Stanford University and Yale University. He is the author of, Coloring Outside the Lines, and his website is here.
Why are students willing to go into debt in order to pay large amounts of tuition in order to attend college? 
There are two questions here really.
Why does college cost so much?
Why do students want to attend college?
Let’s start with the first. Here are some important facts to get an idea about the costs:
Stanford University, as an example owns 8000 acres of very highly valued real estate. They didn’t purchase it and they don’t pay taxes on it but there are hundreds of buildings and playing fields and parking lots and laboratories and streets all or which require massive expenses to maintain. Full professors make an average of $188,000 per year at Stanford.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Lazy Learning



Wendy Priesnitz is the editor of Life Learning and Natural Life magazines, a journalist, the author of ten books, and a contributor to many others. She is also the mother of two adult daughters who learned without school and has been an advocate of home-based education since the 1970s. Her website is www.WendyPriesnitz.com.
Few things seem to trouble parents more than the possibility our kids might be lazy. I guess it’s the legacy of that old Puritan Work Ethic – and you don’t have subscribe to any particular religion to suffer from it! Like our current style of public education, which is based on it, the belief that hard work makes you a better human being dates back to the Industrial Revolution. It might have been a useful tool for factory owners trying to make their employees productive, but it can actually be counterproductive today, when working smarter and more creatively are keys to success and happiness.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Educators Need to Stop Telling Students What They Should Learn & Should Start Asking Them What They Want to Learn. How Crazy an Idea is That?



Roger Schank is an American artificial intelligence theorist, cognitive psychologist, learning scientist, educational reformer, and entrepreneur. He is the author of, Coloring Outside the Lines, and his website is here.
I am in London as I write this. I have been riding the trains to get to places like Brighton and Sunbury for business meetings. I love riding trains.

Now, ordinarily the fact that I love trains would be of little interest to anyone, but there is more to the story.
Some years ago, when I was trying to get my father, who was over 80 and visiting me at the time, to do something he didn’t want to do, I told him we could ride the Chicago subway to get there and he immediately agreed.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Be the Learner



We need to remember to be the example for our children when it comes learning. Written by Brave Writer. Check out their website here.
Be the learner you want to see in your children.
Take personal inventory over a cup of coffee this morning:
What do you wish you had time to learn/do/be?
Join a Zumba class? Apply to grad school? Read an art history book? Learn to quilt? Read a novel that is for adults? Garden? Read more about a historical moment? Watch Downton Abbey Season 1 or A&E Pride and Prejudice? Figure out how to calculate the amount of feed you need for your chickens you will hatch next spring?

Friday, September 21, 2012

‘Learning’ – A New Paradigm of Education



Lainie Liberti and her son Miro are living a location independent lifestyle, slow traveling around the globe, living in the present, staying inspired, participating as a global citizen, volunteering and choosing to experience in the world without fear. Miro and Lainie are worldschoolers. "Worldschooler" is a term coined by Eli Gerzon. Gerzon defines it by saying, "It's when the whole world is your school, instead school being your whole world." Check out Lainie and Miro's website Raising Miro on the Road of Life. You can find this original article here.
My son is guiding his own education led by his interests. Radical idea, right?
This paradigm of learning is known as ‘unschooling‘. Unschooling is considered by most, a radical departure from ‘education’, and many criticize it’s merits and validity. In reply, my question is:
Are ‘education’ and ‘learning’ the same things?
Within the current schooling paradigm, unschooling simply doesn’t match the criteria of ‘education’, because there are no tests, no set curriculums, no standardized forms of measuring accomplishments. But do those elements define learning?

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

As Children’s Freedom Has Declined, So Has Their Creativity



New research suggests that American schoolchildren are becoming less creative. A new post by Peter Gray on his wonderful blog, Freedom to Learn. This original post can be seen here.
If anything makes Americans stand tall internationally it is creativity.  “American ingenuity” is admired everywhere. We are not the richest country (at least not as measured by smallest percentage in poverty), nor the healthiest (far from it), nor the country whose kids score highest on standardized tests (despite our politicians’ misguided intentions to get us there), but we are the most inventive country.  We are the great innovators, specialists in figuring out new ways of doing things and new things to do. Perhaps this derives from our frontier beginnings, or from our unique form of democracy with its emphasis on individual freedom and respect for nonconformity.  In the business world as well as in academia and the arts and elsewhere, creativity is our number one asset.  In a recent IBM poll, 1,500 CEOs acknowledged this when they identified creativity as the best predictor of future success. 

Monday, September 17, 2012

Americans Rate Public Schools the Worst Place to Educate Children



Terence P. Jeffrey started as editor in chief of CNSNews.com in September 2007. Prior to that, he served for more than a decade as editor of Human Events, where he is now an editor at large.
A new Gallup poll released [August 29th, 2012] indicates that Americans rate public schools the worst place to educate children. 
In the national survey conducted Aug. 9-12, private independent schools, parochial and church-related schools, charter schools and home-schooling all rated higher than public schools.
Gallup interviewers asked respondents: "I’m going to read a list of ways in which children are educated in the U.S. today. As I read each one, please indicate--based on what you know or have read and heard--how good an education each provides children--excellent, good, only fair, or poor. How about: public schools, parochial or church-related schools, independent private schools, charter schools, or home-schooling?"