4/19/2007

This unschooling moment has been brought to you by Jacqueline

I almost feel like it's my duty, as an unschooling mom to share moments like this because I read so such CRAP online about how you can't trust kids to make their own choices. That if a child chooses their own food, they'll eat gummy bears and chips everyday, ALL DAY LONG. That if a child has computer freedom, they'll either be playing games all day or visiting porno sites.

Bullshit.

I have living, breathing proof in my house that it's not true.

Jacqueline gets up before I do most mornings and she helps herself to a light breakfast and then decides what she wants to do. Mostly she'll watch a movie (she's big into Star Wars right now), work on a story she's writing (it's her third) or play Barbies.

I woke up the other morning and started making my morning tea. Jacqueline yelled good morning from the family room and I asked her what she was doing. She replied that she was playing on the computer. Being she said 'playing', I thought she was on one of our games like Sim City 3000 or Lilo & Stitch which of course would have been perfectly fine.

But there she was, having fun with the scientific calculator that's on the computer. The same scientific calculator that I didn't even know existed until I saw her on it. In her world, playing around with algebra, calculus and the table of elements is fun.

And you'll notice the breakfast she got for herself-a banana and a low fat smoothie.




Let me make something clear....I don't think the table of elements is any more valuable than that Sim City game. In unschooling, everything has value and is important. I bring up these moments to silence the critics who think that unschooled children will never have an interest in learning anything unless they're being told to or that children cannot be trusted to make their own choices.

That's where mindful parenting comes into play. Jacqueline is not left alone to figure out things on her own. I'm there, as her partner, her guide. I take my job as an unschooling parent seriously and I pour a lot of time, attention and respect into her. Frankly, it's not for everyone...I know plenty of parents who never want to spend more time than they have to with their kids.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Very cool. Jacqueline rocks.

Dawn said...

We've been homeschooling from the "Beginning" and it's just this last month that I've come to realize the term unschooling and what it means, and how it is kinda what we already do - your example is a great one, and it gives me hope (I have to unschool myself still, I suppose) that my son, 10-1/2, will make those choices too - at least ones that won't be about the Gamecube all day LOL

Joanne said...

You brought up a good point about parents doing through the deschooling process. There's lots of blog posts on this topic in one of the editions of Unschooling Voices. The link is in the sidebar, up near the top.

Ren Allen said...

I think once you get to the point where Gamecube is just as valuable as anything else....then you've deschooled enough.:)

I love the whole post Joanne! It's true that you won't see the results of trust, until you actually TRUST them.:)

Joanne said...

Hey Ren... :-)

I like to use my kids as examples because when parents read about kids that have ALWAYS been unschooled, it's sometimes easy for them to assume it won't work for their kids unless they start from day one.

Anonymous said...

Just wanted to let you know I linked to this entry (and quoted part), in case you wanted to check it out! Like you, our children haven't always been unschooled, and I like to share in my blog that it's not just genius kids, or even those who are 'typical', but we've taken two disabled children who were smashed by public school, and they are fully recovered and working within trust to be unschooled!

http://blog.360.yahoo.com/blog-hyl4g088bqoucMCa.Bn_Rchv?p=576#comment