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<link href="https://www.blogger.com/atom/12748925/116356817113134144" rel="service.edit" title="Books versus DVDs - creating a home library for posterity" type="application/atom+xml"/>
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<name>Learning and Living Naturally</name>
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<issued>2006-11-15T15:47:00+10:30</issued>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">If, like me, you're contemplating creating a DVD library of your favourite movies and documentaries, you need to read this article by Sue Lowe (Sydney Morning Herald, 1/2/03): <a href="http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/01/31/1043804519345.html">A bad case of DVD rot eats into movie collections</a>. I think I might go back to my old idea of collecting books and set aside a room for that library I've been promising myself...<br/>
<br/>Books last forever, if stored appropriately. The <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/3696333.stm">Diamond Sutra</a>, which bears the date 868 AD, and thought to be the oldest surviving printed book in the world, was recently displayed at the British Library. Then there is an <a href="http://www.antique-antiques.com/old-books-worlds-oldest-book.shtml">Etruscan book</a>, made of gold and thought to be over 2,500 years old. The <a href="http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/06/060606-greek-scroll.html">Derveni papyrus</a>, the oldest surviving Greek papyrus from the fourth-century B.C. and badly charred in an ancient funeral pyre, has now had the unreadable chapters revealed with the aid of technology. The <a href="www.allabouttruth.org/oldest-known-copy-of-the-bible-faq.htm">oldest known copy of the Bible</a> (complete Bible) is the Codex Sinaiticus, dating from the 3rd or 4th century A.D.<br/>
<br/>One of my young homeschooling friends, aged six at the time, was passionate about the Roman Empire. His mother read accounts of Roman life written by Julius Caesar. The preservation of information in book form has lasted the test of time. I suspect that DVDs will soon go the way of video and audio tapes, or microfiche...<br/>
<br/>Give me a book, full of colour plate pictures and lots of juicy information. It may take scholars a dozen or so years to decode the symbols in a thousand years time, but the images will convey their meaning just as well as they do today. In my collection of <a href="http://www.nationalgeographic.com/">National Geographic</a> magazines I have two copies well over 50 years old. The articles are interesting in more ways than one, but it's the adverts that fascinate me, offering a window on the everyday life of folk at the time.<br/>
<br/>In the meantime I'll continue to borrow DVDs from the local video shop. I could always subscribe to pay TV for those documentaries I always seem to miss on free to air TV, or I could buy them and then pass them on to friends and family - before they succumb to DVD-rot or inconvenient technology upgrades. <br/>
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<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
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<br/>
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<span style="font-size: 85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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<name>Learning and Living Naturally</name>
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<issued>2006-07-22T08:53:00+09:30</issued>
<modified>2006-10-23T06:26:59Z</modified>
<created>2006-07-21T23:23:42Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">My take on the 'registration' discussion is that it should not be forced on families and we ought to do anything we can do to prevent legislation and regulations forcing any particular educational regime on Australian families.<br/>
<br/>Homeschoolers need to realise is that governments don't give a hoot about individuals - they have their own agendas which pander to very strong and vocal lobbies. Historically, mass compulsory education has always been a socialist movement - homeschooling flies in the face of this.<br/>
<br/>No educational authority in Australia will willingly undermine the public school system - it would be then end of the department if they did. That's one compelling reason why government education authorities should not be the regulating body for homeschooling. Unfortunately this is the case in several Australian states. This presents is a clear conflict of interest, especially fiscal interest.<br/>
<br/>Most politicians would be very reluctant to champion the homeschooling cause - things get nasty enough around election time when the old 'public versus private school' debate hots up. Homeschoolers represent a tiny, vulnerable minority. The only thing we have in our favour is that we can argue our cases in court if necessary. They know that and that's why we don't see too many court cases...<br/>
<br/>In Australia state educational authorities each have their own curriculum guidelines. They are keen to force these on homeschooling families if they can and they are implementing this by stealth and by blatantly pushing through legislation, usually ignoring parliamentary debate and discussion and public consultation.<br/>
<br/>The majority of homeschooling families would probably agree that the state curriculum guidelines generally sound reasonable and sensible (once you learn how to read the jargon). But if you find yourself unable to teach various aspects of the curriculum because of your faith or family values - and you need that you are legally bound to 'register' - then everything can quickly turn sour. And it's not just faith and family values.<br/>
<br/>The bigger question that each of us as individuals need to answer is WHO determines how we parent and educate our children - strangers or people who have invested considerable time, energy and love into getting to know the needs of these individual children? What resources should be used in the educational program - something determined by a committee, perhaps even several years ago, or by someone intimately involved in the day to day existence of the child?<br/>
<br/>Instead of regulating homeschooling to the eyeballs and spending a fortune on checking up on us the politicians and their public departments need to study the efficacy of homeschooling in Australia and learn a thing or two about how children really learn best.<br/>
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<span style="font-size: 85%;">
<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
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<br/>
</span>
<span style="font-size: 85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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<link href="https://www.blogger.com/atom/12748925/115208357813540091" rel="service.edit" title="Kick Start a Home Based Business to Supplement Your Income" type="application/atom+xml"/>
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<issued>2006-07-05T16:38:00+09:30</issued>
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<created>2006-07-05T07:12:58Z</created>
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<title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Kick Start a Home Based Business to Supplement Your Income</title>
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<a href="http://hablog.beverleypaine.com/uploaded_images/check_red-723215.gif" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}">
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</a>Do you like to write?<br/>
<br/>
<a href="http://hablog.beverleypaine.com/uploaded_images/check_red-723215.gif" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}">
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</a>Are you a budding author keen to earn money from your writing but don't know where to start?<br/>
<br/>
<a href="http://hablog.beverleypaine.com/uploaded_images/check_red-723215.gif" onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}">
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</a>Do you want to turn those millions of words into cash?<br/>
<br/>Tired of competing against hundreds of thousands of other emergent writers, waiting in cue for that magic moment when a publisher finally says “yes”…<br/>
<br/>Jump-start your writing career! Join the millions of writers whose words are read every day online. Start earning that writer's income now!<br/>
<br/>Hesitant? I was. Like you, I'd read the hype about making money on the 'net and figured it all sounded too good to be true. You're right to be wary. There are a lot of scams out there that promise the world for little or no effort. Believe me, making money by publishing on the internet definitely isn't a ‘get rich quick' scheme. But although you won't take the literary world by storm overnight, it is possible to make making a reasonable income in next-to-no-time at all. You can – and will – succeed!<br/>
<br/>They say practice makes perfect and the perfect place to practice your writing craft is on the internet. Are you interested in a steady income? One that builds while you sleep? It's the kind of income I like… and my bank account is finally looking the way I want it to!<br/>
<br/>Like me, you can let internet business guru Jim Daniels help you get started on your internet writing career, by downloading his free e-book<a href="http://www.webbusinesswizard.com/app/?af=423194"> ‘Work at Home Plan – Internet Based Financial Independence in 10 Simple Steps'</a>. I'm continually astounded by Jim's generosity with his accumulated knowledge and experience. Time and again I revisit his website for yet more timely tips on how to improve my income generating capacity.<br/>
<br/>This e-book will help you to unlock proven strategies for business success, with step-by-step information anyone can start with and build on. The <a href="http://www.webbusinesswizard.com/app/?af=423194">‘Work at Home Plan – Internet Based Financial Independence in 10 Simple Steps'</a> gives you what you need in plain English – what works and what doesn't when considering or starting an Internet business.<br/>
<br/>What I personally like about Jim Daniels's e-book is that it doesn't skimp on the important details, such as how any successful internet business always involves a lot of hard work and commitment. He doesn't avoid the truth: it takes real effort to make real profit. And he knows you're up to the task, which is why his e-book is full of tried and tested tips and short-cuts that can boost your income right now. Even though you may have the best e-book in the world, if you don't target the right audience your e-book will not sell. Jim helps you take the trial and error our of internet marketing, saving you valuable time and resources.<br/>
<br/>As a self-publisher I moved to e-books only recently. I love the way it's simplified my business. The time that used to be taken to print, bind and package my books is now spent writing, the work I'm truly passionate about and love to do.<br/>
<br/>Don't procrastinate any longer. Get the help you need to get started. Let internet business guru Jim Daniels give you the motivation and support you need right now!<br/>
<br/>regards,<br/>Beverley<br/>
<br/>
<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0); font-weight: bold;">PS:</span> You can get your <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0); font-weight: bold;">free</span> copy of <a href="http://www.webbusinesswizard.com/app/?af=423194">‘Work at Home Plan – Internet Based Financial Independence in 10 Simple Steps'</a> by clicking the<span style="color: rgb(204, 153, 51);"> <span style="font-weight: bold;">GOLD KEY</span>
</span> at my new <a href="http://www.webbusinesswizard.com/app/?af=423194">work-at-home</a> site.<br/>
<br/>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="font-family:georgia;">
<span style="font-size:85%;">
<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
<br/>
<br/>
</span>
<span style="font-size:85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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<author>
<name>Learning and Living Naturally</name>
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<issued>2006-05-08T13:33:00+09:30</issued>
<modified>2006-05-08T15:58:59Z</modified>
<created>2006-05-08T04:04:03Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Marina, a South Australian homeschooler, sent me this information which I found interesting...<br/>
<br/>"Sally Robbins [from the SA Ed Dept] said that there are approximately 715 'exempted' HSers in SA. This does not include children studying by distance education or via 'school of the air', etc, as they are viewed as adjuncts to mainstream education."<br/>
<br/>Marina went on to ask the question - "just how much money do we actually save the government" by homeschooling our children? Last year David Dewar, one of the other HS project officers, told Marina that if all the known exempted homeschooled children went back to school next week there wasn't room for them and that " at least three new schools would have to be built: land found and bought, buildings erected, equiped, staffed, administered and maintained, etc!<br/>
<br/>Like many of us Marina has friends who fervently beleive that we are taking money away from public schools because we don't send our children there. The opposite seems to be closer to reality - we are saving millions of tax payer dollars by home educating our children. Perhaps it is time to ask for some financial assistance. If New Zealand homeschoolers can enjoy funding each year then why can't we?<br/>
<br/>Marina pointed out that it is possible to claim some educational expenses, such as 8% of the cost of text books, back from the tax department every year. If you aren't keeping receipts perhaps you should be! Don't forget that excursions and consumable resources are also educational expenses. Talk to your accountant about getting a complete list of expenses for deduction purposes.<br/>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="font-family: georgia;">
<span style="font-size: 85%;">
<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
<br/>
<br/>
</span>
<span style="font-size: 85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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<link href="https://www.blogger.com/atom/12748925/114444963977154650" rel="service.edit" title="Planning and recording - valuable tools for building confidence as home educators" type="application/atom+xml"/>
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<issued>2006-04-08T08:09:00+09:30</issued>
<modified>2006-04-07T22:43:43Z</modified>
<created>2006-04-07T22:40:39Z</created>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">I'm a planner - in fact, I'm addicted to you it. Planning more is a great idea. One of the most effective tools I used as an educator was manipulating the environment so that what I wanted to happen would flow more easily - with less effort on my behalf. How to 'set up' the learning environment is something I've written about in my <a href="http://alwayslearningbooks.com.au/author_pages/beverleypaine05.html">Learning Materials booklet</a> and also <a href="http://alwayslearningbooks.com.au/author_pages/beverleypaine01.html">Getting Started with Homeschooling</a>.<br/>
<br/>It's not just the physical environment either - it's the emotional, and spiritual environment. An orderly environment is a calming environment, and I believe this is necessary to promote active creativity. Orderly doesn't have to mean forever tidy or minimalist. I'm a collector and my house can be very 'busy'. Because we are very busy people I need to keep activities orderly too - if I don't know what's happening when, with whom, and what do they need, beforehand then chaos usually reigns and the creative process starts to disappear. The result is an undermined confidence and an increasing sense of being overwhelmed. My kids despaired of my constant planning - as did other adults, often calling me a control freak. But they all admired just how much I was able to get done and appreciated the organisation!<br/>
<br/>There is a down side to planning and organising so efficiently however: although children learn by example, they, like many adults, can become too comfortable having life laid out for them all the time. This could lead to developing an avoidance of risk-taking and decision making. Control freaks usually suffer from unwarranted anxiety and stress and can feel guilty when things don't pan out as planned, or if a small detail wasn't remembered or considered. Most of my health issues stem from unnecessary stress. Finding a balance meant working out exactly what I was responsible for and what I needed to let others take responsibility for, and learning that delegation meant trusting that others can do the job as well as I could. This was particularly hard when it came to entrusting my children's care and well being to others - even their dad!<br/>
<br/>The other tool I developed for feeling more in control and less stressed about our homeschooling life was to have periodic bouts of recording. Often the act of recording each day would be a self-organising tool. Simply focussing on writing down what our plans were each day - for example, a list compiled at the breakfast table with each person stating their desires, needs, etc - would result in more getting accomplished. It's amazing how we all became more committed to our individual and group projects and activities, simply by verbalising them to each day. We've never been hung up on the need to finish everything we start. The learning process has always been the main focus in our homeschooling life. Because of that I've always been very flexible with my planning, knowing that situations can change in an instant, and plans need to be updated frequently. At times my 'flexibility' drove my family nuts! Being a meticulous planner allowed me great flexibility and gave rise to a high level of efficiency.<br/>
<br/>I found recording our goals, objectives, and outcomes (in other words: what we want to do, the steps involved and how we will know if we've succeeded) on paper, or simply talking about them with each other often, a vital part of planning. Without it I often felt 'lost': the recognition and celebration of successful outcomes would be smothered and hidden by the worry of never doing enough or the 'unfinished' projects.<br/>
<br/>My confidence in home education grew from a haphazard recording regime. The unfinished diaries, multitude of lists, the calendars, the photo albums, the scrapbooks, the learning programs and plans - all these scraps of paper are concrete reminders of our many successes as home educating parents. On days when I feel that I haven't been a good enough mum or homeschooling parent it's my scraps of paper that remind me that I did my best. That's why I keep recording... I've found it valuable tool for keeping me on track with what I want to achieve in my life.<br/>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="font-family:georgia;">
<span style="font-size:85%;">
<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
<br/>
<br/>
</span>
<span style="font-size:85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">I have noticed over the last decade or so many children who have problems coping with school and are labelled as ADHD or similar. When parents take these children out of school and change their diets they see a dramatic improvement in learning and social behaviour. I started modifying my diet over two decades ago, thinking that I was allergic or intolerant, but I now think it's the total stress load on my system, not simply diet or airborne particles, that give rise to the range of symptoms I experience. Adjusting the diet definitely offered relief, but was never the complete answer.<br/>
<br/>Salicylate intolerance is something I've played around with for decades. Some information I read a week or so ago basically said that there is increasing evidence that dietary salicylate is nowhere near the problem it was thought to be in NSAID intolerant people. Sorry I can't remember where as I've been doing heaps of researching on the net regarding health issues recently and this wasn't on topic so I didn't keep the reference. NSAID stands for non steriod anti inflammatory drugs; there's dozens of them, aspirin being the one that most people react to.<br/>
<br/>The main issue that many dieticians and immunologists have with a salicylate free diet (or one which is low in salicylate) is that it cuts out a lot of really good food, especially for children, and it becomes very hard to eat a fully balanced diet. This can produce it's own problems over time. My dietician recommended low allergy vitamin pills while on the low salicylate diet. I personally found that it wasn't the salicylate alone that caused my intolerances, but an inablitiy to adequately handle stress caused by many different factors - eating a diet loaded with salicylate over a couple of days exascerbated my problems and usually triggered asthma and other allergic symtoms. If I wasn't stressed physically or emotionally (eg from being cold, or a sudden change in temperature or barometric pressure, sitting an exam, visit to a new doctor, etc, or even simply hanging out with a group of friends) I could tolerate normal levels of salicylate in my diet.<br/>
<br/>I've been desensitised a couple of times (Royal Adelaide Hospital - the doctors mentioned in a previous post are all familiar with the desensitisations) - and that seemed to help settle the asthma and other obvious allergic symptoms. I think it helped, but lifestyle changes helped a LOT more. Ultimately I've found that I can eat almost anything - even foods high in salicylate - provided I manage my overall stress levels. This means low social activity, getting to bed before 10.30pm, exercise every day (usually only walking), avoiding stressful situations like deadlines, running late for appointments, etc. I watch intake of stimulants like caffeine. Anything that stresses the physical body in any way at all can trigger sensitivities to food and airborne particles...<br/>
<br/>For children with sensitivities to food or airborne particles (pollen, dust, mould, etc) I'd recommend closely monitoring their social activity as well what they eat, perhaps with a log similar to a food diary. My food diary included a space for comments about the weather, my moods, exercise, and social activity as well as what I was eating and which medications I took. This is how I discovered that it was the total stress load that was a better predictor of symtom severity than diet alone.<br/>
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<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
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<span style="font-size: 85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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<name>Learning and Living Naturally</name>
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<issued>2006-03-17T09:13:00+10:30</issued>
<modified>2006-03-16T22:52:52Z</modified>
<created>2006-03-16T22:49:49Z</created>
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<title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Embracing the Natural Learning Philosophy and How to Personalise Homeschooling</title>
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<span style="font-size:100%;">Annabelle wrote:<br/>"Are there any other mums out there in a similar boat to me? ie: have a baby and don't need to 'formally' homeschool (meeting govt. education requirements because the child is of 'school age' ) but wish to embrace the philosophy at this tender age? I would like to have an opportunity to meet such parents and babes as a social outlet for me and my darling son."<br/>
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<span style="font-size:100%;">Are you aware of <a href="http://naturalparentingsa.no-ip.org/">http://naturalparentingsa.no-ip.org/</a>   <strong>"Natural Parenting SA</strong> is a small group of parents who got together because of similar parenting styles, philosphies and interests, which include attachment parenting, cloth nappies, baby wearing, elimination communication (natural infant hygiene), breastfeeding, co-sleeping, home birthing, natural birthing and homeschooling."<!--StartFragment --> Mailing list:  <a href="http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/naturalparentingsa/join">http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/naturalparentingsa/join</a>
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<span style="font-size:100%;">Have you read Jan Hunt's book <em>The  Natural Child Parenting from the Heart</em>, or Alfie Kohn's <em>Unconditional  Parenting</em>? I stock both these books on  my <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a>  website. It took me a couple of thorough readings to fully understand Alfie's  principles in his <em>Punished By Rewards</em> book - in fact, the second time I took notes. I'm totally convinced of his approach to the subject of motivation. Most of us are brainwashed into believing we don't have time to observe, listen, focus, pay attention, and give time to our children (or our own needs) and lose touch with what's real in our lives. Often when I'm reading a book or an article I scan to get the instant solutions I seek - that's another way in which I've been brainwashed, both by school and by the media. I'm learning to slow down (yay to the Slow Food advocates for kickstarting this movement!). It's much more satisfying to seek to understand rather than look for quick and easy solutions.<br/>
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<span style="font-size:100%;">Annabelle's question prompted me to consider a fundamental aspect of natural learning within the homeschool environment. So often on homeschooling forums I see questions about how and what to teach our children, together with requests for lesson plans. Years ago I didn't understand why other homeschooling mums needed so much input from outside of their homes - making up lesson plans and knowing what to teach my children came naturally to me - all too naturally! I fell into the trap of overloading them and me all too often, but that's another story for another time.<br/>
<br/>Friends would ask me to help them come up with activities and I usually resisted, but wasn't sure why I felt reluctant. Most of the time I can dream up a dozen activities off the top of my head, thinking first of what I would do in that situation with my children. After a few years of homeschooling I learned to look at the family that wanted the information instead, and gear my ideas and solutions to their particular needs and lifestyle. But there's no way I could know what those children needed to learn, or where they were at in their development, as thoroughly as I could my own children. Most of my suggestions were based on generalisations. That's what teachers and curriculum writers do in schools.<br/>
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<span style="font-size:100%;">My wise old friend John Peacock kept insisting that we are the experts when it comes to homeschooling our children. I've been to a few conferences where he was a keynote speaker and he always slipped this in somewhere. We're 'at the coal face', he'd say. Our children, our family, our lifestyle, our needs: these are the things that determine how our children are educated, what they learn, when and how. The information and knowledge we seek about how to go about homeschooling is inside us all, just waiting to be voiced and validated. We simply need to ask ourselves the questions we ask others, and patiently wait for the answers to arise, as they always do, in our daily lives. It took me years to recognise some of the answers: they'd arrive in various guises time and again until I paid attention and noticed them for what they were: solutions to questions I'd asked long ago. I have faith in my ability to find solutions and that's why it's easy for me to brainstorm a dozen different activities to help my children learn just about anything. Sometimes it's a matter of working out where to look for more information - that's an activity in itself.<br/>
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<span style="font-size:100%;">When we take time to 'be' with our children completely; when we pay attention to their needs, and cast out our conditioned need to satisfy distant and impersonal societal parenting objectives; when we base our decisions and solutions around the strengths and limitations of the individuals in our own family, taking into consideration the situation and circumstances of our family lifestyle, cocooned within a larger community; then we are empowered to give our children exactly what they, and we as parents, need in our homeschooling lives.<br/>
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<span style="font-family: georgia;font-size:100%;">Most of us don't have the confidence to 'go it alone'. And shouldn't have to. Learning is a social game and it's a lot of fun, especially when we share what we've found out. Often, someone's suggestion, will trigger an avalanche of 'answers' of our own. I truly believe that we all stand on the shoulders of giants: that without the support and encouragement of others we'd get nowhere.</span>
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<span style="">© Beverley Paine 2006</span>
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<span style="font-size:85%;">Have a homeschooling question? Become a member of the friendly <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaFAQ">Homeschool Australia Frequently Asked Questions</a> email group. Visit <a href="http://homeschoolaustralia.beverleypaine.com/">Homeschool Australia</a> for more original content. No time to visit the site? Sign up to receive Beverley's regular <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HomeschoolAustraliaNewsletter/">Homeschool Australia Newsletter.</a>
<br/>Visit <a href="http://www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au/">www.alwayslearningbooks.com.au</a> for a great range of homeschooling, unschooling and books on natural learning!</span>
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