This link has been bookmarked by 29 people . It was first bookmarked on 27 Apr 2009, by Lantis Gaius Capistrano.
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23 Mar 10
Matt Henchenenvironment economics politics stories business innovation knowledge management entrepreneurship eco blog
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17 Mar 10
Richard UnknownIf every child was unschooled -- given the chance to explore and discover and learn in the real world what they love to do, what they're uniquely good at doing, and what the world needs that they care about -- then we would have a world of self-confident,
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09 Sep 09
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It is not up to teachers or school administrators to figure out what you should be or do. It’s not up to the State, it’s not up to your guidance counselors. It’s not up to your parents. What you do with your life ought to be up to you. What you learn ought to be up to you. How you navigate the world and create your place in it ought to be your decision. Your life belongs to you. School does its best to disabuse you of this notion. Unschooling celebrates it. Unschooling puts the responsibility for creating a satisfying life squarely where it belongs: in the hands of the one living it.
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PS presents 50 reasons why schooling is, in every imaginable way, bad for us and our society, and then 50 reasons why unschooling, which she defines as "learning without formal curriculum, timelines, grades or coercion; learning in freedom" is the natural way to learn. She argues that we are indoctrinated from the age of five to cede our time, our freedoms, and what we pay attention to, to the will of the State, so that we are 'prepared' for a work world of wage slavery and obedience to authority. We are deliberately not taught anything that would allow us to be self-sufficient in society. And in the factory environment of the school, where teachers need to 'manage' thirty students or more, ethics and the politics of power is left up, from our earliest and most vulnerable years, to the bullies and other young damaged psychopaths among our peers, to teach us in their grotesquely warped way. As PS explains, it is in every way a prison system.
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Many people argue that unschooling will only work for the very brightest and most self-disciplined children. On the contrary, I think we are all perfectly suited to unschooling until the school system begins to beat the love of learning, the ability to self-manage, curiosity, imagination and critical thinking out of us. By the time we have reached the third grade it becomes much more difficult, and my success in unschooling in twelfth grade was, I will agree, due to my above-average intelligence and initiative -- most of my intellectually-crippled peers just couldn't manage by that time without the strictures they'd become accustomed to. They had long ago lost the desire to learn, and to think for themselves.
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08 Jul 09
Bill AndersonD Pollard describes his own experiences with independent study and also critiques the current (Canadian and US) public education system. It's worth reading all the comments. And while I agree that self-directed learning is the only kind that works, moving from the current system to an "un-system" will require effort and persistence. The thought scares me.
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17 May 09
Mario A NúñezPS presents 50 reasons why schooling is, in every imaginable way, bad for us and our society, and then 50 reasons why unschooling, which she defines as "learning without formal curriculum, timelines, grades or coercion; learning in freedom"
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Given the damage we've done to the world -- due in no small part to the "education system" that has molded us -- damage that future generations must reverse, it's the least we can do for them, and, at last, for ourselves.
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05 May 09
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The fact is that my peers had done what no English teacher had been able to do -- inspire me to read and write voraciously, and show me how my writing could be improved.
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Unschooling, by contrast, starts with the realization that you 'own' your time, and have the opportunity and responsibility to use it in ways that are meaningful and stimulating for you. When you have this opportunity, you just naturally learn a great deal, about things you care about, things that will inevitably be useful to you in making a life and a living. Your learning environment is the whole world, and you learn what and when you want, undirected by curricula, textbooks, alarm clocks and school bells. You develop deep peer relationships around areas of common interest, once you're allowed to explore and discover what those areas of interest are. And the Internet and online gaming allow you to make those relationships anywhere in the world, to draw on the brightest experts on the planet, and to communicate powerfully with like-minded, curious people of every age, culture and ideology.
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03 May 09
Konrad GlogowskiAnnotated link http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.salon.com%2F0002007%2F2009%2F04%2F25.html
unschooling Dave_Pollard self-didacticism education school self-driven
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The fact is that my peers had done what no English teacher had been able to do -- inspire me to read and write voraciously, and show me how my writing could be improved. My writing, at best marginal six months earlier, was being published in the school literary journal. On one occasion, a poem of mine I read aloud in class (one of the few occasions I actually attended a class that year) produced a spontaneous ovation from my classmates.
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30 Apr 09
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29 Apr 09
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Tom KrieglsteinOne person's story of the failure of formal schooling and his success with independent studies. Very motivational, but need to read the book to get the full substance
unschooling school education inspiration independentstudy learning
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Tom Daccord"Then in Grade 12, something remarkable happened: My school decided to pilot a program called "independent study", that allowed any student maintaining at least an 80% average on term tests in any subject (that was an achievement in those days, when a C -- 60% -- really was the average grade given) to skip classes in that subject until/unless their grades fell below that threshold. There was a core group of 'brainy' students who enrolled immediately. Half of them were the usual boring group (the 'keeners') who did nothing but study to maintain high grades (usually at their parents' behest); but the other half were creative, curious, independent thinkers with a natural talent for learning. The chance to spend my days with this latter group, unrestricted by school walls and school schedules, was what I dreamed of, so I poured my energies into self-study."
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28 Apr 09
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27 Apr 09
shawn lThis experiment sounds like what should be official policy everywhere. The problem is that teachers do not like to think of their classes as a form of punishment for the best and brightest...
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Tac Andersonto me this just shows that not everyone learns different. education should not be a one size fits all thing.
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26 Apr 09
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