I have a lot of volatile things in my head I can’t talk about. So I’m going to write about unschooling instead.
I was hanging out on Pinterest trying to distract myself from my current feelings so that I can get some kind of grip on myself for a day of painting. It isn’t happening fast.
I was looking through a lot of unschooling articles and I was pinning them, as you do, and I thought, “Holy crap I hope that none of my traditionally schooling friends see this and think I am saying mean things about their choices.”
I think our education model in this country is broken. I understand that there are a wide variety of reasons to opt-in to it despite it being fundamentally broken. But I think of it like opting-in to a relationship with an abusive parent because you can’t handle the pain of breaking things off. I get it. But I hope I don’t ever do it.
There are a wide variety of reasons I would put my kids in school and then undermine that shit as best I could at night. I don’t think my kids are too good for school. I think I have the luxury and privilege of being able to make a different decision and I really really want to.
I very consciously educated myself with the goal of being able to be… more or less an elite private tutor. I grew up in a place where I could see that people were being taught lessons by their families that I had no access to. I sometimes lived in extremely wealthy areas. Those kids just knew things about life I had no way of learning.
I wanted kids. It isn’t that I want my kids to grow up to be the smartest people ever. It isn’t that I want my kids to grow up and make lots of money. It isn’t that I want my kids to be perfect in any definable way. I have a very loose schema of criteria.
I want my children to believe that the bodily integrity of people matters. Yes, yes yes… many children come out of the public education system with this intact… blah blah blah. Lots don’t. My kids are already in the advantaged sect because they have parents who believe it regardless of the messages they would hear at a school blah blah blah.
I want my children to really grow up with that message being presented as de facto and it is not in most schools–public or private. If you have to raise your hand and ask permission to use the toilet and a teacher can tell you that you have to wait until the bell rings you do not have bodily integrity. Sorry.
I want my children to believe that information about stuff that interests you comes from a million different places. I don’t want them to think you sit down and do your lessons. I don’t want “school” to be something that bores you and wastes your time. I want my children to appreciate the inherent usefulness of mathematics so I talk about it allllllllllll day in a lot of different contexts. My daughters will not hear the message that girls are bad at math until that concept will make them laugh out loud with surprise. They will know they are good at maths. The person saying that is just kind of silly.
I want my kids to believe that boredom is a sign that you need to get up and start cleaning something. If you really don’t want to clean then you will find something better to do and all of a sudden you aren’t bored.
I understand the need for large scale child care. That is more or less how I view the public education system. We are a society based on parents being out-of-the-home. I want to live in my home. I want to do most of my work here.
If I were able to buy a property out in the middle of some rural place my habits would be totally logical. My proximity to cities does not change the basic nature of how I like living. I choose to not feel shame for feeling soothed by living in a way that is more like how my ancestors lived. Ok, they lived in family groups that were larger than mine but people lived in fairly closed communities. They didn’t have to deal with many people. Oh of course this is partially about my anxiety but I don’t see how kowtowing to a system I don’t believe in just so I can’t pretend that I don’t have anxiety will improve anything.
Lately Noah has been talking about trying to figure out how to actually break down what he has experienced in life and explain it so that kids who don’t have role models can have some idea of what people with privilege see. Ok, that wasn’t precisely how he phrased it. That conversation was a few days ago.
We don’t just stay *in the house*. We are outside a lot. We know our neighbors. We talk to people often. We have relationships. The relationships are getting deeper and more influential as the years go by. My children spend a lot of time with elderly people hearing stories about the Old Days. It’s really fun. I supervise but don’t intervene much in them figuring out how to talk to people.
Well, that’s not true. I help them prepare for conversations in advance. “When you meet someone, what do you say?” After conversations I talk about how it went. I talk to them about facial expressions and body language. I help them understand more about what just happened. “Do you understand why he laughed when I said _____?” I fill in the blanks and help the stories make more sense. I break it down. Stories about WWII become large and convoluted follow up conversations with millions of questions. I don’t direct much. I just answer anything. I look up what I don’t know.
I am a guide and a facilitator.
Will this go on forever? I don’t know. I don’t know how our needs will change. I know that at this moment in time I can’t imagine sending Shanna to a place where they would expect her to sit still (even with breaks) for four or five hours a day let alone six or seven. Some kindergardeners are in school for eight hours. They do have play periods but they do a *lot* of table work.
We complain constantly about an obesity epidemic and we chain children to chairs. What in the hell is going on? I will never put my children on a diet. The very idea makes me sick to my stomach. I will, however, ensure that they learn how to be very physically comfortable with walking at least ten miles a week. I’m becoming increasingly sure that Santa will be bringing bicycles. With bicycles we can get to all of our extra-curricular activities in town.
I pick swimming, martial arts, dance, language, gymnastics and rock climbing classes based on the ability to walk to them. I *have* walked my kids to every location they have taken classes at. We don’t always walk because we often have somewhere else to go before or afterwards but I prefer to walk. If we had bicycles I think I would just figure out how to not schedule things close to classes.
I do not want my children to be used to an air conditioned world. I want them to be used to using their own bodies to go places. I expect them to go do manual labor on farms in third world countries in a few years. They can’t be too soft.
I want them to actually see how it works in other parts of the world. I don’t want to show them pictures of the objectified third world. “Oh those poor oppressed people. All They Need Is A Honky.” Err, not so much. I want my children to meet people when they are young and have no belief that they have the key to life. I want them to just meet people who live differently and learn to love them.
Can you imagine Shanna and Calli living with someone for two and a half months without falling in love? If someone is remotely kind to them they will be hook line and sinker. Those kids like people. All people. They aren’t “color-blind”. They think all colors are beautiful. They want to meet everyone and talk to them. Ok, that’s Shanna’s deal. Calli is dubious.
I think Calli and I will hang back and watch. That will be ok too. That will also be a positive experience. Sometimes I feel like I am watching Shanna work a room. She wants to know everyone. I don’t even understand why. I didn’t implant that.
If she went to a school across the street from her house she would get to know the kids in this neighborhood better. The kids in this neighborhood come and go a lot because we have a lot of rentals. There are only a few owners with kids. She wouldn’t see much diversity. She would see a revolving door of poor brown children who come and go because their parents move. That is the neighborhood we live in.
You know… we play with the kids in the afternoons. I think we get enough of the “people don’t stay in your life” phenomena. My kids are improving their Spanish faster than any other language because a lot of the neighbor kids don’t speak English. We have an increasing segment that doesn’t speak English because they speak some variety of Asian language. Those kids aren’t usually allowed to play with us in the yard.
We play with anyone. If you are here, let’s play. It’s really fun.
I don’t want to spend my life driving to see pre-selected and approved people of appropriate IQ and education level and life philosophy of whatever. I also don’t want to spend my money on lots of being entertained for a few hours. I like most of my hobbies to be cheap or free.
I don’t want to opt-in to the system as I understand it. Given that I have attended twenty-five public schools across three states in a variety of socio-economic settings and then I went on to be a credentialed teacher… I think it is kind of idiotic to try and say that I am not understanding the system. I think I have enough experience that on this matter I get to just trust my gut.
It isn’t an evil place. I’m not trying to say that it is evil. But it is a waste of time. That is what it is designed to do. Waste time. I don’t want that. I don’t want my children to be taught that.
I have the privilege and luxury to make a different choice. I recognize that my choices are not open to everyone. I recognize that there are very good reasons for making different choices. I recognize that I would make different choices based on different life circumstances. I am not trying to put people down who put their kids in school.
I am saying I don’t want to and I don’t have to so I am not going to. Not until they are old enough to pick a course of study and go pursue what they want to be doing on their own. I am fully qualified to ensure they get the basics of life.
I think that I am actively choosing the term Unschooling because I don’t think that the Radical Unschoolers should get to hog the term. We do life learning. I don’t see that changing any year soon. I do not do permissive parenting. I think that refusing to set limits is abdicating your responsibilities as a parent. I think it is unfairly expecting a child to know an adult’s role. Children don’t know the limits yet. That’s kind of how childhood works.
Davy Crockett says, “Be sure you are right; then go ahead.”
I feel intense anxiety about most of my behavior in life. I don’t know how to be good or appropriate or worthy for the vast majority of life experiences.
But I god damn know how to be an elite personal tutor. I trained for that shit. The slow paced isolated life is really good for kids I read. Even if it makes grown ups think I should go get a job.
I think I’m under enough stress already. I don’t have to measure up. There isn’t actually a grading curve in life. But I went to public school. I keep expecting my bad report card. I keep expecting to be expelled or suspended. I absolutely expect to be punished for being an unpleasant person. How dare I exist in public space in a way that others find displeasing.
My kids don’t get punished for being children. My children don’t get yelled at for getting the hiccups. My children don’t get yelled at if their attention wanders and they want to switch activities.
I won’t have to deal with a teacher suggesting medication to calm my unruly child. I will instead just have to figure out how to get all of us enough exercise that we can manage inside behavior when we are inside. Or go outside again. It’s all good.
I want this life so much. I want to find out what someone is like when they are actually treated like a person for their whole life. I don’t know very many people who felt valued through school. I know some. It does happen sometimes. It doesn’t seem to happen in the majority of cases.
Shanna would probably get it. Calli would probably not. Shanna is loud and assertive and charming. Calli is loud and prone to feeling provoked so she attacks with great vigor and ends up looking like the aggressor.
I don’t have a crystal ball or anything. But I’ve seen an awful lot of patterns.
I don’t want my children to spend many hours a day with children who have been socialized to fat shame. No thanks.
I don’t want my eight year old believing she should be trying to be sexy.
Yeah, I’ll shelter them. And I’ll take them to dangerous parts of the world. And shelter them there too. They will always have a modified experience of the world. They won’t even understand it.
I will understand it. No one sheltered me. I don’t think that unsupervised long exposure to random men is something that will happen basically at all. Probably not with women either. My children will develop safe, appropriate relationships.
Is it overly protective of me? Fuck you.
I am not a helicopter parent. My children climb trees and talk to strangers and move around in the world doing shit I dislike all day long. But I am aware of what they are doing. I pay attention. I want to know what they are doing as they take up space in the world. I want knowing them to be my job.
It is a luxury and a privilege that I understand is not available to everyone. I also understand that not everyone would have the desire for this kind of relationship. I also understand that not everyone would have the capacity to be running this kind of constant background schema building exercises. I scaffold their life very carefully and appropriately. Silently. They live in a “yes” environment.
But I am not permissive. And I have really strict boundaries. I just acknowledge that things outside my boundaries are not mine to control.
I want the experience of learning healthy boundaries with people. I want the experience of long term relationships.
Maybe I am a selfish piece of shit for not trying harder to form adult relationships and instead having children. I can live with that. I want to have someone who actually cares about seeing me on Christmas. I want someone who wants to call me on their birthday and say, “Thanks for having me, mom.” (I have a friend who has to do that. I envy her mom. So I’m hoping this friend tells this story over and over as my kids grow up. That lesson can’t come from me.)
I wanted children. I know it is selfish. But I wanted them. Even though I am a crazy bitch. Far meaner crazy bitches than me have managed to not completely fuck up their kids.
Maybe with enough privilege and luxury anyone can be a good parent. Maybe.
I have the luxury and privilege of filling all of my time with things I want to do. I want to educate my kids. I do not want to school them.
You hit on a lot of the reasons I originally intended to HS. But the last 2 years have turned that on it’s head. The experience with summer school has me rethinking what we’re going to do, although HS is not on the table ATM.
And your line about being denied bathroom access struck a chord w me. I remember asking to go, being told no because it was like 20 min to recess, and wetting myself because of it. I don’t remember how old I was, but I’m thinking it was 3rd grade.
*nod* Yup. I certainly don’t think you are in a position to just decide to home school.
You are going to need to lawyer up in order to get your kid’s needs met though. It’s going to be a rough road.
Sounds like a good plan to me. 🙂
I’m going back and forth on the “bored” issue myself right now. My kids spend the vast majority of their time just chillin’, often while I’m on the computer or cooking or sewing or otherwise not engaged. I’m not sure whether that’s good or bad. Sometimes I’ll catch a glimpse of DD outside, drawing in chalk on the concrete or singing to herself while she climbs on the logs, and I can go “Ha, continuum concept, awesome” and tell myself that not spoon-feeding her entertainment is good for her creative development, and didn’t CS Lewis grow up making his own fun anyway?
But then other times I feel guilty when I realise we haven’t read any books together for ages (something I feel strongly about doing, in theory!), or when we go on an outing and she’s ridiculously excited about it. She does love doing stuff.
Balance, I suppose. Some of it’s just laziness or overindulgence of my Aspie tendencies, though. This term I’m going to take her to a homeschool group where she can do an art class and a dance class. She’ll love it, but I’m cringing at the thought because it involves a) getting organised and leaving the house, and b) facing other people for hours at a time (and I hear this group is a bit cliquey). Still, it’ll help quiet the guilt, maybe. :p
And I have to say, now we live in the country I miss walking! At our last house in the city we could walk to the fruit and veggie shop, DH’s work, SIL’s house, the fish and chip shop, the toy library, Playcentre… Out here, we can walk round the orchard, if we force ourselves, but we have to drive everywhere else. And it’s surprisingly hard to remember to go for a walk simply for the sake of walking, even in a beautiful environment. (See above re laziness!)
When I was a kid living in the woods it was either be outside or be screamed at. I was outside a lot. 🙂 I have strong memories of rural living. I like to walk. I like to go out and walk for hours.
First: it’s not worth guilt at this stage. None of it is. If your kid is ten and you have never read a book then you feel guilty. The fact that you aren’t doing an hour a day every day… not worth guilt. 🙂
I like the home school group we hang out with. Well, when my anxiety isn’t peaking. Ha. Mostly I feel like the other women are neutral to positive in my direction and they are perfectly willing to let my kids be friends with their kids and that is the part I care about most. I feel like most of our group is serious about “our kids need friends.” I like that.
I wish I was down to only leaving the house two days a week. Ugh. Instead I am lucky if we stay home two days a week and I really need three days a week at home to get all my work done. I’m drowning in over-commitment to kid activities.
I really like the suburbs for walking. We can walk to the farmers market, a bunch of ethnic markets, a major grocery store, a thrift store, a hardware store, and several parks. In addition to all of the kid classes being close. I think the suburbs are my favorite kind of place to live now. 🙂
I understand the desire to have lots of children as a home schooling family. I think that it would probably get easier when you have big kids modeling stuff for little kids so it isn’t all on mom. Stuff to think about. 🙂
And I see how much stuff you get done. Shush on the lazy crap.
I have felt judged when reading your comments about public schooling, because I choose to send my children to public schools. I am deeply involved in their classrooms, know their teachers well, volunteer countless hours at the school both during and after hours, and still feel that I have, in your eyes (and the eyes of many others who homeschool) made an inferior choice to be derided. Not a super fun way to feel.
I assure you, I love my kids just as much as you love yours.
In no way, shape or form do I mean to deride you nor imply that you do not love your children.
If I cannot criticize an institution as long as anyone is involved then it can never be criticized.
There are many good teachers in the system. That doesn’t change how broken it is.
I do not believe that everyone can or should home school.
I know you don’t mean to; you said, “Holy crap I hope that none of my traditionally schooling friends see this and think I am saying mean things about their choices” and I am letting you know that reading this, I do. I’m certainly not suggesting that you can’t criticize the system; I do it all the time (as do our teachers and staff, heh).
I can – and would – homeschool; I am a full time stay at home mom with enough education to be qualified, and I imagined that I would, when my kids were babies. We went to a co-op preschool and when the time came for K, my daughter emphatically wanted to go to public school. OK; I worked my ass off to make it the best experience possible for her. I know that we are privileged.
Hey, you asked.
Well, I’m not going to tell you not to feel how you feel. If you feel I am implying that you don’t love your kids then you get to feel that way. It is not what I was saying, but ok.