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Unschooling is a word that typically
generates interest with the media.
For people who question whether parents
are even able to educate their own children,
unschooling seems totally unacceptable.
With or without the approval of
the general public, though, unschooling
continues to grow.
To understand unschooling, you really
have to look back at the history of
education and homeschooling. The standard
used to be for children to be taught
in the home. However, by the mid ’70s,
homeschooling was nearly extinct. Over
99 percent of school-aged children in the
United States were attending institutional
classroom schools. By that point, people
seemed to have forgotten that children
had ever been successfully educated
without going to school. Slowly, though,
an increasing number of parents began
to recognize that they were in a battle for
their children’s hearts, minds, and time.
They saw the control that the government
had taken not only in education but
in their families’ lives, and these parents
began again choosing to be in charge of
their children’s education.
A February 7, 2006, article from Focus
on the Family says that approximately
150,000 American children are currently
unschooled. How did they come up
with that number? The actual number of
unschoolers is very hard to assess. Unschooling
itself is hard to define. The general
philosophy of unschooling holds that
children are born with an innate curiosity
and desire to learn that is best served
by allowing the child to select and direct
his own learning. John Holt, considered
the father of unschooling by many, said it
like this: “children are by nature and from
birth very curious about the world around
them … much more eager to learn, and
much better at learning than most of us
adults.” In unschooling, the parent’s role
is that of a facilitator who is available to
provide resources and guidance.
Are They Really Learning?
Many people aren’t sure how productive
education can be when children are
given that type of freedom. They picture
lazy, overindulged children lacking the
basic knowledge to succeed in the “real
world.” Perhaps the reason skeptics can’t
comprehend that children would actually
choose to learn math, grammar, or history,
however, is that their own learning
was forced on them and was very dull.
The fact that so many of us have that attitude
shows just how our own schooling
failed to teach us to love learning. Unschooling
is not “instruction free” learning.
If a child wants to learn to read, an
unschooling parent may offer instruction
by providing help with decoding, reading
to the child, and giving the child ample
opportunity to encounter words. If the
child is uninterested in these supports, the
parent backs off until the child asks for
help. The most important thing about the
unschooling process is that the child is in
charge of the learning, not the adult.
Unschoolers challenge parents and
educators to “trust the children.” Roland
Legiardi-Laura, who established the Odysseus
Group with John Taylor Gatto (author
of Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden
Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling),
says, “Kids are not born lazy. They are
inherently curious, energetic and excited
about the world around them. Unschooling
uses that curiosity to develop somebody
who is self-reliant, a critical thinker and
independent—someone who in essence
creates an education, rather than someone
who is given an education.” This philosophy
doesn’t apply only to homeschoolers.
Challenging How We Think About Education
Many innovative thinkers seek to
transform education across the board by
challenging people to question, “What is
the purpose behind the school system?”
Many of us would be able to identify three
distinct purposes: to make good people,
to make good citizens, and to make good
lives by helping young people strive to
be their best. However, Gatto and Legiardi-
Laura are creating a documentary
to reveal the fourth purpose. The Fourth
Purpose: The Enigma of Public Schools
charges that the hidden purpose of public
schools is to produce dependable consumers
and dependent citizens who will
always look for a teacher to tell them what
to do in later life, even if that teacher is
an ad man or television anchor. Mr. Gatto
was a public school teacher in New York
for 30 years. He was a former New York
State Teacher of the Year and a three-time
New York City Teacher of the Year. He
quit teaching, however, in 1991, claiming
that he was no longer willing to hurt
children. Mr. Gatto says, “I dropped the
idea that I was an expert, whose job it was
to fill the little heads with my expertise,
and began to explore how I could remove
those obstacles that prevented the inherent
genius of children from gathering itself.”
Gatto and Legiardi-Laura aren’t alone
in their thinking. Albert Einstein is also
quoted as saying, “It is a miracle that curiosity
survives formal education.” Even
Anne Sullivan was suspicious of formal
education, saying:
I am beginning to suspect all elaborate
and special systems of education.
They seem to me to be built
upon the supposition that every child
is a kind of idiot who must be taught
to think. Whereas, if the child is left
to himself, he will think more and
better, if less showily. Let him go
and come freely, let him touch real
things and combine his impressions
for himself, instead of sitting indoors
at a little round table, while a sweet-
voiced teacher suggests that he build
a stone wall with his wooden blocks,
or make a rainbow out of strips of coloured
paper, or plant straw trees in
bead flower-pots. Such teaching fills
the mind with artificial associations
that must be got rid of, before the
child can develop independent ideas
out of actual experience.
The History of Unschooling
John Holt was actually the first person
to use the term unschooling in 1977 in his
newsletter, Growing Without Schooling.
However, at that time he used the word
unschooling to refer to people simply taking
their children out of school. Holt had
worked in the school system for many
years and felt that it was so fundamentally
flawed that the best thing parents could
do was to remove their children from the
traditional school setting. Holt didn’t want
to parents to just re-create school at home
with their children, though. He believed
that children did not need to be coerced
into learning; they would learn naturally
if given the freedom to follow their own
interests and a rich assortment of resources.
The application of this line of
thought became known as unschooling.
Styles Within the Spectrum
Unschooling is now known by many
different names and crosses a broad spectrum
of styles. Organic learning, natural
learning, real life learning, delight directed,
relaxed, and child-led learning are
just some of the phrases that you’ll hear in
conjunction with unschooling. At one end
of the spectrum is the pure unschooler—
totally child-led, viewing learning as a
natural part of life without any adult-imposed
“lessons,” schedules, or timelines.
On that end of the spectrum, the child
learns what he wants, when he wants, and
how he wants. While that might sound almost
dangerous, some children thrive and
learn well in that setting. Galileo once
commented, “You cannot teach a person
anything; you can only help him find it
within himself.”
On the other end of the spectrum is the
delight-directed approach, by which the
child’s interests are used to direct the lessons.
Dr. Raymond and (the late) Dorothy
Moore, who are often considered the
grandparents of homeschooling, advocate
the use of delayed academics and a delight-
directed approach. Dr. Moore explains,
“Warm responsiveness and doing
things together with your children are the
best way to ensure that your child will be
cognitively mature at age 12.” They believe
that if parents will relax, pay close
attention to the needs and interests of
their child, allow them to mature at their
own rate, work alongside them, and focus
on non-academic learning opportunities
at least as much as book learning, their
child will succeed. They emphasize that
if a child learns to be diligent at a young
age, that diligence will carry over to their
academic performance as he matures.
Mary Hood has been touted by some
as “the Christian John Holt.” She is better
known as the Relaxed Homeschooler,
though. To her, relaxed homeschooling
isn’t a method or a philosophy. It is simply
a mindset. It’s the idea that you are a family,
not a school. She reminds parents that
they don’t need to set up a school; instead
they need to set up a lifestyle of learning.
She says to pull out the books and
educational materials from the closet and
encourage the children to pursue goals,
enjoy learning, and share their discoveries
with others in the family. Her goals for
her family include supporting everyone’s
natural love of learning rather than beating
facts into their heads.
Can Unschoolers Get Into College?
Skeptics want to know if unschoolers
can get into college and how they perform
once they get there. Alison McKee began
unschooling her two children over 20
years ago, and from their family’s experiences
wrote the book From Homeschool
to College and Work: Turning Your
Homeschooled Experiences into College
and Job Portfolios. In her book she
shares how they documented their learning,
created transcripts, and succeeded
in getting into college. While statistics
for unschoolers in college may be hard to
come by, from coast to coast and border
to border, homeschooled students in the
United States surpass the national averages
on both of the major college entrance
tests, the SAT and the ACT (Washington
Times, 2000a). In fact, Jon Reider, Stanford
University Admissions official, was
quoted in Clowes 2000 as saying, “Home
schoolers bring certain skills—motivation,
curiosity, the capacity to be responsible
for their education, that high schools
don’t induce very well.”
And that curiosity is what unschoolers
have nurtured and allowed to guide
their children’s education from their
earliest ages. Unschooling. It certainly
isn’t for everyone, but it challenges us
to take our thoughts about education out
of the box.
HELPFUL WEBSITES
Unschooling.com
www.unschooling.com
John Holt & Growing Without Schooling
www.holtgws.com
John Taylor Gatto
www.johntaylorgatto.com
The Moore Foundation
www.moorefoundation.com
Family Unschoolers Network
www.unschooling.org
Real Life Learning & Delight Directed Learning
www.homeschooloasis.com/real_life_so_is_real_life_learning_the_same_page.htm
Unschooling High School & College by Allison McKee
www.homeschool.com/advisors/McKee/default.asp
Nancy Carter is happy to call herself
a relaxed homeschooler. After years of
teaching in the public school system, she
cherishes being able to learn together
with her own children. She and her husband,
Tony, have three sons. You can read
more of her family’s Lessons Learned on
the Farm at www.HomeschoolBlogger.com/tn3jcarter.
Copyright 2006. The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, Spring 2006, pages 80-83.
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