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The Earnest Redeemer's avatar

Bravo!

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Athena's avatar

Life has pulled me out of this orbit that last year so I’m rediscovering what you’re up to with this post… I’ve got some reading to do to catch up!

Before doing that though, I wonder if it’s helpful to share the musings that immediately come to mind. Namely, that I’m curious where the student’s autonomy (à la unschooling/self-directed learning) fits into your plans. My homeschooler is now 10 and it’s been our toughest year yet as far as engagement and resistance. We’ve tried all sorts of homeschooling approaches and now I’m researching unschooling as resistance abounds and technological interests dominate his interests. The only schooly thing we still consistently do is your science program (and either ADHD, he’s doing a lot of other things during class while still seeming to engage and retain ideas). Still, he’s pushing back against deep dives when he used to love them, he’s pushing back against reading in all forms, when reading to him used to be our most successful and connecting homeschool/life activity. I suspect it’s puberty approaching, a deep desire to forge his own path (paired with the lure of media), but that said, how does your plan tackle the resistance that happens in homeschooling in a way that allows students autonomy (or inspires them to engage without being forced or coerced) and that also makes us educators/parents not authority figures exactly, but co-conspirators? These days, capturing his attention and interest feels like an exercise in futility. And this experience is something I commonly see in the homeschool community.

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