Hopefully I won't get in trouble for posting a few paragraphs of this... to see the whole article go to:
http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2005/10/03/unschool/
click the button at the top to watch the advertisement, and then click another link to go to the article...
Endless summer
Unschooling is a
radical branch of home-schooling where kids control what and when they
learn -- free of teachers, schedules and tests. Unschoolers say it's
intellectually empowering. Critics call it irresponsible.
By Sarah Karnasiewicz
Oct. 3, 2005 |
Celine Joiris has
never failed a test. Never eaten crappy cafeteria food. Never been
picked last during gym. It's not that she's a supernaturally lucky
16-year-old -- she's simply never been to school. "I like the idea of
studying, but school is just like incarceration," she explains. Her
brother Julian, 17, agrees. "My approach is, planning, schedules -- OK.
Tests, OK. College, OK. Whatever. But I don't really want to think much
about it," he shrugs. "I can't tell you where I'll be in two years."
What's that? A smart 17-year-old without a plan? A bright, middle-class teenager who's not stressing out about SATs and admissions essays? In an era when college prep begins in preschool and adolescents need Palm Pilots to manage their after-school activities, such nonchalance has the power to shock. What about all those stories about home-schooled kids dominating national spelling bees and hogging spots at Harvard? Surely "whatever" is not in their vocabulary.
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But Celine and Julian Joiris are not your typical home-schoolers -- they are unschoolers,
followers of a radical approach to education that rejects not just the
routines of traditional school, but the authoritative ideology it
represents. Unschoolers make up approximately 5 to 10 percent of all
home-schoolers. They learn without teachers, curricula or exams;
rather, their whole lives are laboratories in which skills and smarts
are acquired piecemeal, through casual interaction with the world
around them.
article continued online at the above link.
Celine Joiris has never failed a test. Never eaten crappy cafeteria food. Never been picked last during gym. It's not that she's a supernaturally lucky 16-year-old -- she's simply never been to school. "I like the idea of studying, but school is just like incarceration," she explains. Her brother Julian, 17, agrees. "My approach is, planning, schedules -- OK. Tests, OK. College, OK. Whatever. But I don't really want to think much about it," he shrugs. "I can't tell you where I'll be in two years."
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