Saturday, October 15, 2005

Deschooling

It can take over a year to adjust to homeschooling after bringing a child home from school. It’s necessary to rethink the whole idea of education. Classroom learning is geared to educate thirty children with one teacher. It’s not impossible, but it’s difficult and frustrating to simply transfer classroom teaching and learning approaches directly to the home setting.

In addition, there’s a good chance that the child has had her natural desire to learn, as well as her creativity and imagination quashed. She will need time to detox, take a vacation, have some down time – or all three!

The parent needs to deschool as well. For most of us the only educational approach we’ve known is some kind of school – institutionalised learning. We’re used to the idea that education is a passive ‘they teach and we learn’ kind of thing. Educators, even in schools, know this is only a tiny part of what really happens. We need to update our notions about constitutes an education. The easiest way to do this is to talk to other homeschooling families, hang out with them, and see for ourselves how children learn outside of a school setting.

Some of the myths about education we must dispel are:

  • It cannot take place without a university trained and qualified educator
  • It has to take place in a classroom or classroom environment, with desks, texts or workbooks
  • It takes place Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
  • It stops when we graduate from high school
  • Children must learn certain concepts in a predetermined manner
  • Children must learn certain concepts at a specified age
  • Children cannot learn without a qualified educator to hold their hand and guide them through the learning process

Some books I recommend for parents are:

Challenging Assumptions in Education

Dumbing us Down

Self University

Creating Learning Communities

Punished by Rewards

© Beverley Paine

You may reprint the above article provided you include this information:
Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions email group. Visit Homeschool Australia for more original content. No time to visit the site? Subscribe to the FREE bi-monthly Homeschooling Australia Newsletter, or sign up for Daily Homeschooling Tips
Visit www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Aussie_Homeschool_Bloggers