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![]() personalized, non-coercive, active, interest-led learning from life |
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from Life Learning magazine,
May/June 2005
Albert Einstein once said that it is a miracle curiosity survives formal
education. Unfortunately, it often doesn’t. When my husband Rolf and I
decided almost 40 years ago that we wouldn’t send our then-unborn
daughters to school, we knew that curiosity was one of the precious
traits we didn’t want to risk them losing. In fact, we knew many things
that we wanted to avoid about a school-based education, but nurturing
the alternative – ensuring they retained their curiosity and other
self-directed learning skills – well, that was another matter. Here are
some of the components that, through trial and error, we discovered were
central to a successful life learning (unschooling) experience. Ownership of the Process When children are born, they want to learn about
their world by exploring their surroundings in ever widening circles.
And that is where learning should remain for a lifetime – in the
learner’s hands. Learning is not something that is done to us, or that
we can produce in others. An education is not something we “get”…it is
something we create for ourselves, on a life-long basis. The best
learning – perhaps the only real learning – is that which results from
personal interest and investigation, from following our own passion. Trust Taking ownership of our own education and allowing
our children to own theirs requires trust and respect in individuals and
in the learning process. In the case of our children, that means having
enough respect for them to expect that they will behave sociably, want
to learn how to function in the world and eventually want to learn
things of a more academic nature. One of the ways in which formal
education often fails is by concentrating on negative expectations, on
teaching people what their incapacities and weaknesses are, rather than
their strengths. This doesn’t mean we shouldn’t provide assistance,
but only when asked (and we will be asked, in direct proportion to the
amount of trust we’ve built up and in inverse relation to the amount of
correcting, quizzing and forcing we do). As unschooling advocate and
author John Holt pointed out, “Most of us are tactful enough with other
adults not to point out their errors, but not many of us are ready to
extend this courtesy (or any other courtesy, for that matter) to
children.” When we interfere with and try to control the
natural learning process, we remove children’s pleasure in discovery and
inhibit their fearless approach to problem-solving, which can impede
self-direction and creativity for a lifetime. We have all seen that sort
of interference in action. Here’s an example. My three-year-old daughter
Heidi wanted to put her own shoes on. She proudly put the left shoe on
the right foot, then determinedly spent ten minutes creating a massive
knot in the laces. Her grandmother, not being able to watch any longer
and elbowing the child out of the way, said, “You’re doing it all wrong.
Here, let Grandma do it for you!” Heidi burst into tears. Fortunately, I
had the courage to intervene because that type of “help” had left me
with a lifelong resistance to trying something new for fear of not being
able to do it perfectly well the first time. Our respect for learners should extend to those who
opt out of school. Rather than labeling these conscientious objectors as
“drop outs,” which indicates failure, why not think of them as people
with the motivation – or at least the potential – to control their own
learning? The author of the Teenage Liberation Handbook Grace Llewellyn
calls leaving school “rising out” to a more individualized form of
education, which is a much more respectful and empowering notion than
“dropping out,” with its connotation of inability to succeed. Time to Muddle Along with ownership, trust and respect, goes time
and space for muddling about and experimenting. Learning thrives (as
does invention) when there is time and opportunity to explore in a safe,
supportive environment, to investigate our theories, ask and answer our
own questions, test out our ideas and methods...again, with assistance
when it is sought. Author and deschooling advocate John Taylor Gatto
says this was the basis for his winning the New York State Teacher of
the Year award in 1991 (right before he quit teaching because he was no
longer willing to hurt children). Here is how he has described his
teaching method: “The successes I’ve achieved in my own teaching
practice involve a large component of trust, not the kind of trust
conditional on performance, but a kind of categorical trust...a faith in
people that believes unless people are allowed to make their own
mistakes, early and often, and then are helped to get up on their feet
and try again, they will never master themselves. What I do right is
simple: I get out of kids’ way. I give them space and time and respect
and a helping hand if I am asked for it.” Solitary, reflective time often seems rare in our
overly programmed society. But what we call “daydreaming” may provide
important time for thinking, analyzing, synthesizing and other seemingly
passive brain activity that is crucial to the learning process. Security The risk- and mistake-making processes are
supported by a secure physical, intellectual and emotional environment.
Learning something new can sometimes feel like a dangerous adventure, at
the same time as it is exciting. You might make mistakes and feel a
whole range of emotions from disappointment and anger through to
jubilation. Anticipating that, in order to get started on a learning
adventure, most people need as much comfort, reassurance and security as
they can find. Take reading, for example. The typical classroom,
with other children ready to correct or laugh at every mistake and the
teacher all too eagerly “helping” and correcting, is the worst possible
place for a child to learn to read. So one of the best ways to support
the learning to read adventure is to avoid demanding regular
demonstrations of what the learner might prefer to keep private. We’ll
still notice that the child is making more and more sense out of printed
language – that she is reading road signs, for example. I remember John Holt once describing to me how he
helped his young niece learn to read. He said all he did was let her
snuggle up on his lap and read to her, later letting her read to him.
She refused to read unless she felt physically secure. He said that
later, she moved from his lap to a corner of the room, shrouded in a
tent made from a blanket. Eventually, she was confident enough to
discard the blanket and read aloud wherever she was. Authenticity In the classroom, knowledge is presented in the
abstract and people are expected to demonstrate their mastery of that
knowledge in abstract ways. But passive, second-hand experiences can
lead to second-hand knowledge. On the other hand, real-life discovery
leads learners to find out about the world in an authentic way, which
leads to concrete knowledge. Self-directed learners develop knowledge
from observing and participating in real-life situations and activities.
Because a life learner knows that all situations are learning
situations, she can adapt and learn swiftly when change occurs. In order to help their kids learn authentically,
parents often become chauffeurs and advocates. Since the world isn’t
really a friendly place for young people, they might need help making it
work for them. Providing access to the real world includes
trusting children with access to the tools of our trades. In our
society, children are kept away from most workplaces, on the grounds
that they would damage either themselves or their surroundings if given
free access to things usually available only to so-called
“professionals.” Or they are banned because they would slow down the
important work of production and consumption. A true learning society would make the
modifications necessary so that a wide variety of learning experiences
could be accessible to people of all ages and abilities in
community-funded spaces (libraries, museums, theaters, even school
buildings)...to be used on people’s own initiative and their own
timetable. And it might even fund the professionals who could facilitate
the learning process – people who would resemble librarians and museum
curators more than conventional teachers. Libraries are good examples of
this principle and librarians are often great examples of learning
facilitators who are able to engage in authentic sharing with learners. Kids, especially, pick up easily on phoniness or
disinterest. And, like adults, they respond to people who are willing to
engage in an authentic encounter on a person-to-person basis, without
judging or evaluating. Institutions should exist to be used, rather than
to produce something. If they’re effective, people will use them
willingly without having to be coerced for to use them for what their
elders or other types of superiors or experts say is for their own good. Companionship While for some people, some of the time, learning
can be a solitary pursuit, many of us gain inspiration from talking with
others. As parents, we will find many opportunities to talk with our
children (as opposed to at them). But it is also important to just allow
kids to listen to adults talk. I remember many times as a child being
discovered sound asleep on the kitchen floor late in the evening after I
had snuck out of my bed to sit in the dark and listen to the adult
conversation. I have since noticed that it is very hard to keep young
children in bed if a group of adults is having a lively conversation not
too far away. The children will find a hundred different reasons for
coming to check out what the grownups are doing. That can get
exasperating, especially when the adults feel they need a break from the
kids. But the kids are not being bad; they just want to learn and to
participate in family life. Spending time with our children creates many
opportunities for sharing and modeling learning, for acting as both
resource people and fellow explorers. My children got me interested in
many things I’d previously had no interest in and we learned about them
together. Often, they’d see me reading or going to the library or
puzzling something out, and they’d want to do the same. Self-directed learners want to have their questions
answered quickly and honestly. Being told to go look it up is terribly
frustrating to a child with an immediate need to know something. And is
that how you’d answer another adult who asked you a question? Tell what
little you know, make an educated guess or say you don’t know. Often, I
found that my daughters only wanted a short answer anyway and would cut
me off with eyes rolling if I launched into a long-winded explanation
that began to sound like a lecture or teaching. They often went off on
their own and found someone else with a better (shorter, clearer)
answer. And sometimes they looked it up. Technology can help connect learners of all ages
and backgrounds who share a passion about a particular topic. I often
hear about young people with a passion to learn about some esoteric
subject (and a parent who knows nothing about the subject) who have
accessed someone knowledgeable on that topic via the Internet. Mentors
can also be found closer to home, in the person of grandparents, other
senior family members or elderly neighbors. Learners of all ages will be empowered to move
forward by stopping to celebrate accomplishments (and I’m not talking
about bribery or gold stars here). And we don’t have to wait until
“graduation” to do that…remember how excited everyone was when your
child took her first step alone? Keeping it Whole Knowledge is an interconnected web of information
and insight and doesn’t easily submit to subject divisions and grade
levels. In my experience, optimum learning occurs when the learner can
ignore such arbitrary constraints and venture where her pursuit takes
her. Keeping the world whole and not dicing it up into “manageable”
pieces extends to boundaries between work and fun, between learning and
other activities. Freedom to Learn A non-coercive learning environment that supports
risk taking, curiosity and exploration, and that encourages the pursuit
of new challenges and knowledge in a supportive community of learners
will develop a flexible, resourceful self-directed learner able to
create a happy, productive life. Wendy Priesnitz is Life Learning's
founder and editor. She has been an unschooling advocate since
deciding to help her two daughters learn without school in the
mid 1970s and launched the Canadian home-based education
movement at that time. She is also the author of 10 books. This essay appears in the book
Life Learning: Lessons from the Educational Frontier.
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