click here to visit Beverley Paine's online homeschool bookstore

Save time and simplify your homeschooling life...
Learn from experienced homeschoolers how to write your own curriculum. It really is that easy!

"I have most of your books Beverley... Thankyou for your unending support for homeschoolers ... by sharing your experiences,
we are into our third year of homeschooling and enjoying it thoroughly."
Marina

"Thank you for your generosity in helping me to make a start in my homeschool adventure. The information you supply is real and generous -
fantastic reading. I am so inspired... Your honesty is so rare. Most books do not really explain "how" as well as you do."
Tracy

Unschooling Undefined

© Eric Anderson

Below is an article written by Eric Anderson that is posted on "Jon's Homeschool Resources" website http://www.midnightbeach.com/hs/UnschoolingUndefined.html . It is one of the best definitions of unschooling found that coincides with the philosophy of this group. (Specifically the last paragraph.) Please visit Jon's site for an amazing range of information about home education - http://www.midnightbeach.com/hs.

Unschooling is a word coined by negating the idea of schooling; it starts off with a negative definition. What, specifically, is it about schools that unschoolers want to do without?

The School Organization

  • Breaking up the day into learning time and play time.
  • Starting and stopping learning (or shifting topics) according to an externally-imposed schedule.
  • Telling students what they should care about.
  • Telling students when they should care about it.
  • Telling students what is good enough.
  • The complex hierarchy with the student at the bottom.

The De-humanizing Aspects of Schools

  • Having to ask permission for basic human needs.
  • Having to supply "acceptable" excuses for absence or lateness.
  • Routine abridgment of human (constitutional) rights.
  • Standing in lines, waiting for everything: food, water, attention of the teacher, time on the computer, etc.
  • Group rewards and punishments.
  • Neglect of individual gifts and problems.
  • Moving at the sound of a bell.
  • Students coming to view themselves as products, moving down a 12-year assembly line, with bits of knowledge poured in or bolted on by others as the belt moves along. Seeing the primary responsibility for their education as being in the hands of others.

Isolation from the Real World

  • Segregation by chronological age.
  • Separation from family.
  • Isolation from the working world.
  • Isolation from the effects of age and disease.
  • "Free" education isolates children from economic reality.
  • Subject matter is divorced from context.

Schedule Rigidity

  • Having to be in school at certain times means you can't see the World Cup or a solar eclipse if it happens during the school day, and you can't see the late show or a lunar eclipse if you have to get up in the morning.
  • Having to be in school limits your ability to travel.
  • Having to be in school limits your ability to do any time-consuming worthwhile activity.

Note that these issues do not address the questions of "problem schools." They are unrelated to questions of crime, drugs, threat of violence, time spent in forced commuting, illiterate teachers, etc. The problems unschoolers specifically care about exist (to a greater or lesser extent) even in "good" schools.

Moreover, many educational reform proposals act to make these problems worse. Improved security measures increase the dehumanizing aspects of school "discipline". "Back-to-basics" programs increase the rigidity of the curriculum, and often further divorce it from context. "Mainstreaming" programs exacerbate the effects of a one-size-fits-all curriculum, and often take up huge fractions of teachers' time and energy. Many reformers want to increase the number of hours in a schoolday or schooldays in a year, eliminating the chance for a student to educate himself in the off hours. The solution to the problems inherent in mass-produced education is not more of the same.

Unfortunately, telling what unschooling isn't doesn't tell what it is. In some ways, all homeschooling is unschooling -- we don't isolate our kids from life, or move at the sound of a bell, or require permission slips, or neglect the individuality of our children. Where unschoolers differ from other homeschoolers is the extent to which we let children be responsible for their own education.

Unschoolers believe that the natural curiosity of a healthy child, given access to a rich environment, will lead the child to learn what he or she needs to know. When learning comes about as a result of the child's desires, it is absorbed easily, enthusiastically, openly. The child works harder because he is doing what he thinks is important, rather than what someone else has told him is important. New knowledge starts with a context because it fits in with things the child already cares about. Learning driven by real desire is so much more efficient than passive absorption that unschoolers can tolerate much more exploration, dabbling, dawdling and play than can curriculum- inflictors. The unschooling literature abounds with stories of children who paid no attention to math or reading for their first ten years and then caught up in just a few weeks.

When learning is imposed from without, there are many deleterious effects. The child may not be ready for the material or may be beyond it; the child may resist it, either because he has something better to do or just out of general orneriness. When you force a topic, you short-circuit precisely the volitional parts of the mind that are critical to real learning. You may produce memorization, but cannot effect understanding. You risk the child developing a dislike for the topic, for the teacher, and even for learning itself.
Child-driven learning is fundamentally active. Children are doing things because they have taken responsibility for carrying out the actions needed to fulfill their desires. Unschooling is centered around the idea of learning, with the student as the center of action and the source of activity, rather than on the idea of teaching (with the teacher as the center of action and the source of activity). Not only does this make the learning more effective, but it encourages the child to develop virtues: independence, self-reliance, and a sense of responsibility. The child learns that if he wants something to happen, he has to make it happen.

As Jim Muncy pointed out in his "spectrum of unschooling" post [home-ed mailing list, summer of '94], homeschoolers unschool to varying degrees. Unschooling families do not set up miniature classrooms, with time set aside for studying, a parent playing the role of teacher, formal lesson plans and imposed curricula. Beyond that limit, we differ in how much order we try to lend to the learning process. "Radical" unschoolers impose little or no structure, though books and such are available to act as guides. Others allow children to learn what they wish, but provide strong organizational assistance to help the children reach their goals. (Assistance can take the form of lessons, or workbooks, or even assigned projects.) Some families use curricula for some subjects (often math) but are freer with others. Most try to squeeze learning out of the activities of everyday life. The common bond is acknowledging that the enthusiastic participation of the child is the most important single factor in the child's education.


AlwaysLearning              Easy Reports        Getting Started     Teaching Tips     Reviews
Curriculum                      Easy Maths             Handwriting        Technology     Story Telling
HomeschoolAust           Teaching Tips       Reviews    PreschoolHS   TeenageHS         

Want to Read More? Browse Our Library of Articles

Home
Please note: the information
on this website is of a general
nature only and is not intended as
personal or professional advice.

SEARCH this site:
Buy our BOOKS

Getting Started Manual
Unschooling Books
Educational Games
Natural Learning
Practical HS Booklet Series
Curriculum
Reports/Portfolios
Homeschool Diaries
Conference DVD

More questions?
JOIN the FORUM

Time to spare?
Browse our extensive

ARTICLE LIBRARY

Feedback is always welcome
on our websites!

click here to find out more about the Home Eduation Association of Australia
Join the HEA in 2008
and receive
2 FREE Booklets
by Beverley Paine!


A percentage of sales
goes to the
Trees For Life
to replenish the resources the books take from the Earth during manufacturing.

click here to join the natural learning yahoo support group

Homeschool in Australia Flag

Thank you for your generous
donation to Homeschool Australia.

cute cartoon of kids building with blocks Unschool
Kidz!
FREE
ezine publishing
children's short stories, poems, pictures, projects, recipes,
riddles and more...

Contributions
welcome!

Email

ALWAYS LEARNING BOOKS
ABN 17 503 397 443
Beverley and Robin Paine
PO Box 371 Yankalilla 5203
SOUTH AUSTRALIA

animated smiling face
Thank you for visiting!

Pioneering members of the home education movement in Australia, Beverley and Robin Paine are passionate advocates of true educational choice for families. They began homeschooling in 1986 and three years later started the South Australian Home Based Learners network. Beverley continues to write for homeschooling newsletters and magazines as well as hosting several websites dedicated to promoting and supporting home education in Australia. Her aim is to demystify the education process and make it accessible to all parents. Enjoy Beverley's wealth of practical knowledge, homeschooling and unschooling tips and ideas through articles and books and online at www.homeschoolaustralia.com. Since the late 1990s Robin and Beverley have been building their home education publishing business - Always Learning Books - from home with the help of their son Thomas.

"Education is not a preparation for life. Education is life itself." John Dewey

Please visit the following websites for information on homeschooling in Australia:

Homeschool Australia : SAHEN : Australian HS Curriculum : About the Paine Family

Text & Images on this site Copyright © 1999-2008 Beverley Paine. All rights reserved.
Help | Disclaimer | Copyright | Privacy