Well.
It's the end of Semester One and the traditional reporting season has arrived. Our homeschooling experience is 6 months old and it would seem appropriate to look back on the last six months and look at how far we've all come.
DESCHOOLING
At school, everything fits neatly into a box. We've only got five hours of classroom time a day, so there has to be a definable purpose in everything that we do. It has to fall under one of the key learning areas, it has to be outcomes based, it has to be assessable, preferably immediately or at least by the end of the week or the end of the unit. Literacy takes first place and absorbs the first two hours of the day. Maths takes up another hour and the remaining two hours are divvied up amongst the other four KLAs, or those two hours are devoted to the lastest thought bubble from the Board of Studies...the COGs unit.
Homeschooling is NOT like that. Homeschooling is more about home than school. It's about learning through life. A large percentage of learning doesn't fit neatly into a box and it's really hard to quantify and record.
The academic part of the day is relatively easy to report on. We spend the morning doing maths, phonics, spelling, grammar, reading, copywork and writing. We watch For the Juniors and write reports. We draw, sing, use the computer, write narrations, cook, garden (or just dig!), and we talk. We talk lots. I answer questions all day long. Easy questions like how do you draw a map of Tasmania freehand, to difficult questions like how does the space shuttle get into space...questions that stretch my (considerable) general knowledge to its fullest extent...questions that require a "I don't know. Lets' find out!" answer. A lot - and a mean a LOT - of learning is incidental and culmulative. It's jolly difficult to record this kind of learning. At school we're constrained by timetables, by delivering curricula to a large number of children with hugely differing abilities.
Where homeschooling is concerned, deschooling has been my biggest difficulty.
(more coming)
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