Quote From: winterwarmthWhat I don't think has been made clear are some things about what eclectic homeschooling and/or unschooling does
not mean. Unschooling does not mean a child will never "take a class", or read a textbook about a subject. Unschooling does not mean a child just "runs wild". A parent's job is still to be the parent, the facilitator, the guider, the person who enables the child to learn both the good and the bad. Whether homeschooling, unschooling, or whatever the course of education, the bigger picture, the main goal, is to give a person the tools to know how to LEARN, as opposed to being spoon fed facts for short-term satisfaction of a teacher or guardian.
I hear questions all the time about "how will the child learn math?", well, to answer that, one would have to ask the question, "why are these subjects taught in schools in the first place?" I mean, surely there is a reason that math and social studies, science and what not are taught, right? There must be more to it than the idea that they have to satisfy a teacher. They're expected to take that knowledge home and use it! It's supposedly developmentally appropriate. It's supposed to prepare them for the "real world".
The idea that math (or any subject) is only "available" in schools and not teachable in life
is a long-believed myth. There is so much in the real world that encompasses many "subjects". Articles in the newspaper, for example, which capture my children's interest often prompt them to get a book out, or explore via other media (magazines, the internet, etc) on the subject and explore it further, be it history, biology, mathematics, sports, current events, politics, world religions, literature, or whatever ideas come up.
We are eclectic homeschoolers because we believe that knowledge pursued is knowledge retained. We all have subjects which hold our personal interest for which we seek more and more knowledge outside of the classroom. The same is for students.
Calculus and higher math are obtainable for those who have an interest in it and wish to pursue it. If they find it challenging and fascinating, there are many careers for which knowing calculus is a requirement. However, I know many successful people who are whizzes at English lit, yet who need a calculator to balance a check book. But, they are successful in their
chosen field of study.
Adults get to choose what they pursue, and when they choose it, they pursue it because they *love* it or have an aptitude for it. They also learn it when their minds, for whatever reason, are ready to receive and retain the knowledge. Children deserve the same right, to be exposed to all there is out there, yes, but to also be allowed to embrace and focus on their interests. Not everyone is good at the same thing at the same time, regardless of where one is educated, be it home, school, cave, Mars. To expect everyone to uniformly know the same things with the same deadline is unrealistic. That is why there are so many fields of interest out there.
This is in no way intended to knock public school teaching. My hat is off to public school teachers. It is a tremendous job, and I would never knock the hard work of a dedicated teacher. To impart knowledge to 20 or more passing acquaintances is challenging. Many relatives of mine, and even some who homeschool/unschool, are teachers by profession, and it is a different job to raise a classroom full of students than it is to raise
one's own children and loved ones.
Public school is, when you think about it, a relatively young insititution, compared to the vast number of generations who were expected to teach and prepare their own for the world.
Please forgive the length of this post. This doesn't even begin to cover the aspects of homeschooling which would require a whole other mindset to understand. Here is an article which explores it further:
http://naturalchild.com/guest/earl_stevens.html
Well your attitude is different than the "unschoolers" I know. The "unschoolers" I know simply think that everything you need to know you will learn as a side effect of living everyday life.
So far, from what I can see, that method fails miserably.