BethanyGrace
Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2011
- Messages
- 68
Thanks Louise!
Blog address is in my signature
Blog address is in my signature

There is a whole chapter in "Guerilla Learning" about freedom.When you unschool, are there still rules, like telling your kids they can't just play video games?
Wow, this is impressive. +repWe are doing a combination of Homeschool and Unschool. Me thinks everyone unschools automatically to some degree, already. Just answer your child natural curiosity and don't give the cookie-cutter answers to complex questions. I spend at least an hour a day with my son (4 years old) just talking to him and answering his questions about everything! He is very into science and physics right now. He can explain in depth how a star is created and how gravity works (minus the complex math and equations of course). My wife is a stay at home mom and does the homeschooling topics, but with a loose schedule. She just makes sure she covers certain topics by the end of the week/month. If we put him in kindergarten, he would fall asleep or start having behaviour problems.... he can already read and do math at 1st/2nd grade level so kindergarten is OUT. Make your own rules, do what is right for you and your family. There is no 'set' system that's one size fits all.
But if we'z unskool da kiddies dey willz turn out Rtarded!
When you unschool, are there still rules, like telling your kids they can't just play video games?
My wife and I have been in serious discussion about our daughter's education recently. She's 4 years old and is already reading at a second grade level (she's in smaller chapter books now). She also started kindergarten this year and usually ends up getting in trouble because she keeps trying to teach the other children.My daughter has a photographic memory and usually takes her once or twice to understand and memorize something.
She has an insatiable appetite for learning and loves reading 24/7. I'm afraid that there are few educational options being in such a rural area. My wife and I have looked into homeschooling her (I'm a product of homeschooling and absolutely loved my experience). I had always dismissed unschooling as non sense, but a recent essay by John Taylor Gatto (Against School), really made me reconsider.
Is anyone here engaged in unschooling? What's the experience like? How does it work day-to-day?
...compulsory school is unquestionably a need, and unschooling isn't a productive -let alone efficient- means of education.
[...] compulsory school is unquestionably a need [...]
And conscription is unquestionably a need. Everyone should have to serve minimum 2 years in the military. Everyone should be educated to march well together in large groups.
And conscription is unquestionably a need. Everyone should have to serve minimum 2 years in the military. Everyone should be educated to march well together in large groups.
Edit: Oh man, now I'm being compared to Nazis because I support that parents require their children to be educated?
Christ, it's responsibility one day, and totalitarianism the next, right?
Thank you for misrepresenting my position completely.
Edit: Oh man, now I'm being compared to Nazis because I support that parents require their children to be educated? Christ, it's responsibility one day, and totalitarianism the next, right?
Only at a second grade level? pffft.
Anyways, unschooling is a load of hogwash. While games, gaming and such do act as means to learning, they should be supplemental to lessons. Unschooling stomps on your child's potential. While the current systems are poor, compulsory school is unquestionably a need, and unschooling isn't a productive -let alone efficient- means of education. Instead of just focusing on games than actual learning, we should be molding the system to be centred around the child. For instance, school hours ought to be shifted so as to not accommodate work schedules, but the hours when a child can efficiently learn. That is to say, 10:00- 4:30.
And conscription is unquestionably a need. Everyone should have to serve minimum 2 years in the military. Everyone should be educated to march well together in large groups.