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by Angie Lewis -- Heaven Ministries Press
Copyright©2005
Forget About The Labels
LET THE SUNSHINE IN
Unschooling
I admire Parents today who have chosen not to entertain a child’s
senses by the books of society, no pun intended, and unschool their
children. It takes an incredible person to be able to unleash the
traditions of society and culture and allow the positive freedom of the
creative mind to go to work for itself.
For those of you who do not know what unschooling is, it is my belief it
is allowing the child complete freedom to choose what they will study
and when they will study it. It is used in the regard that "when
the child is ready," they will do it and study it. In other words,
"do not push the child."
Unschooling needs to be challenged, tested and applied for its fresh
unique approach and for its unritual, unpublic, attitude and contention
it is arousing amongst the closed minded. With the right foundational
support this tactic can be an extraordinary method of allowing the
sunshine in, even when it’s raining.
When I was growing up my mind worked in mandatory mode, because the
teacher told me I had to do the work, whether it interested me or not.
My option was to flunk if I did not do the work. What a
choice!
The unschooling approach is just the opposite of how it was for me and
for my own three boys who are home educated. I don't think that I
am any smarter than unschooled children because I had to put my nose to
the grindstone, but I think it taught me discipline and patience.
When we were children, our lives were filled with arduous schedules, a
slow ticking clock on a school wall, and homework we obstinately
completed because it was required. When the sun was shinning, we
diligently sought refuge through the crack of the school blinds,
drearily escaping our studies, fading out the teacher, and dreaming of
places we’d rather be. When we felt the sting on our hand, or the whack
on the head we awoke instantly to jeers and laughter from our
classmates, and honest reprimand from the harsh teacher, at least I
thought she was harsh.
Oh Yes! Good ole school days. Always watching our backs, and always in a
hurry to spend time outside in the sun.
But what about our grandparents? After all, how many seasoned elders
have you talked to that didn’t work hard, study like a dog, and have
some sort of spiritual guidance? They had to walk miles to school, cook
for the rest of the family, chop wood all day, clean the house, milk the
cows, study a dozen books by candle light..... and now look at our
children, they only have to crawl out of bed and eat breakfast.
My grandparents seemed to have a wisdom and common sense that this and
the previous generation has lost sight of. I try to practice my
grandparents philosophy in life, and yet my mind is open to all the
opportunities available for training children in the way they should go
with the foundation of Christ, so they will not depart from it. For to
live with a peaceful heart in this world one must take the blinders off
their eyes, let the sunshine in, and live and let live or else die from,
contempt, hardening of the heart and withering of the soul.
Since moral standards and values of our lives are unique in every
home, and situations and circumstances vary along with these ethical
codes, unschooling may not be for everybody. Every child possesses
different traits and characteristics that makeup his nature through his
home environment and surroundings. Distinct methods of training for
these specific qualifying factors differ tremendously in each
home.
I find my approach works best in my home, considering I have three
rambunctious boys, who are highly creative, inquisitive, self willed,
independent, and playful in a prankish sort of way, yet do relish a
balance of structure and organization throughout the day. If I were to
practice the no-nonsense unschooling approach, I’m afraid I’d be
whipped by my three frisky guys. In other words, manipulated, or
mother-handled.
I have something in common with unschoolers though, I thoroughly
believe children should be allowed to have their own mind and experience
life to its fullest using that mind, on their own level and capacity of
understanding. But above all to respect and be kind to others, for a
child can grow up being all he set out to be, but miss the most
important element, having a heart filled with love and regard to others
and their feelings.
A sincere and loving heart is what makes the difference between
happiness and disease, life and death.
Unschooling, as well as other forms of schooling lack one very important
component. Foundational support to reach its purpose.
When I started a home education routine with my three boys six years
ago, (I don’t use the term homeschool), I never had the option of
unschooling, deschooling, eclectric schooling, no-schooling, formal
schooling, and what is that other one called? Oh yah, classic schooling.
Wow! Actually, I didn’t have any options, except to do the best I
could in the only way I knew how.
My method began on Faith, and on the conviction I was doing the right
thing. For one thing, teaching is a form of telling. Anyone can sit
behind a desk and tell kids what to do. Telling doesn’t help the child
to apply what he has learned, rather by showing the child through
example, you are actually giving him a path to follow. The child must
trust in following your path and want to follow that path for himself,
not just to make you happy. After that initial phase is mastered, than
you’re not just a parent or teacher anymore, but their friend. Once
appreciation is gained, the ball is in your park and you can start
pitching to the willing batter.
A child’s willingness comes from having confidence in your decisions
and full trust that what you say and do is what is best for them.
Because young and inexperienced minds can not fully appreciate the long
term effect of decisions, their decisions might not always be the best
ones. Such as study time, and this is where we come in for guidance,
sometimes guidance might turn into a loving push. Yes! that’s right a
push.
My willingness to have faith in Jesus, stemmed from learning about him
and putting my trust in Him and his decisions for me and my life. That
is, I had to push myself to ask Him for guidance. I had to go to Him.
Once He saw that I was willing and ready to follow the guidance
came.
We are the role models our children will follow! My husband and I
show our children to do what is right for themselves as well as what is
right for all our neighbors. And everyone in the world is our neighbor.
We show them not to stereotype and label people, places and things and
we explain how everyone, no matter what race or color has the same
chance of going to heaven and are equal in the sight of God. We
explain to the children that it is through Jesus that we are guided in
all that we do so that we may enter into His paradise in heaven with
Him.
To give Love to those who thirst is a far better gift, than any
other. We show, it is through Love that the blind will see, for it is
through love that the unseeing will find and seek the truth. And it is
through love, the discontented and weary of heart will find wisdom and
truth. We show we must take the big heavy log out of our own eye before
we take the splinter out of our neighbors eye. We show them that doing
good deeds, described above will keep their spirit alive in the body
while they are living on earth, but will not save them. It is
only steadfast faith in Jesus Christ which allows our spiritual selves
to ascend up into heavenly paradise.
I can say with much elation our three boys are free and alive through
Jesus Christ, the creator of all and the end of all. Those who walk in
His ways with a loving and sincere heart will delight in the everlasting
love and joy manifested in Him and His kingdom.
Regardless how you teach your kids, or unteach your kids, or how
others teach their kids, we are the mirror and what is shown in that
mirror will reflect back on to your children and their behavior toward
how they will live in the world with others and their attitudes toward
themselves. I believe that if their little feet our planted on a solid
and consistent foundation so will be their hearts in the world.
As for me, I don’t think I’m perfect enough to go the unschooling
approach, I would probably be way out in left field when I’m supposed
to be on home plate. I would have an extremely wobbly and rootless
equilibrium which could upset the batters, and cause rebellion, mostly
my own.
Through experience, I have found that first I need to have a solid
foundation to work off of , so I can produce structure, balance, and
organization in my own life, than, only after I have taken care of
myself can I begin to show my children the surprises, twists and turns
that life will bring, and to do it in a way that comes naturally for me
in that given circumstance and occasion.
Such as reading hour. This is an easy one for me since in my spare
time all I do is read or write, so what am I doing? I’m showing how
enjoyable reading is to those around me. My fourteen year-old son is
working on his own book on his own computer he bought with his own hard
earned money, on how to build furniture that he built himself using free
wood. He has seen that I have written an article on his wood building
projects, and in turn has decided to do the same for teenagers. Do you
think I guided him on to this venture, or was he just going to write a
book anyway? I didn’t tell him to write a book, I showed him how much
fun it is to let your own freedom of style and character out on paper,
he liked what he saw and has followed my example. How about my ten year
old who is making his own web page showing others how to make homemade
bows and arrows, or my eight year old who gets up in the morning and
says, “Mom, all I want to do for school today is spelling and reading,
but no math, is that OK?”
I’m proud of my boys. To watch them everyday endeavoring on a new
path of creativity is pure satisfaction and complete comfort for the
senses. I see happiness in their faces, willingness in their studies,
steadfast faith and love in Jesus, and growing boys who have hearts of
gold that appreciate life to its full potential, as they know it. But it
is all balanced out with study time and good old fashioned brain work.
Our brains are a muscle just like any other part of the body, and to think
by working out math problems, or taking a spelling test, or dissecting a
frog, flexes and tightens the brain muscle to prepare it for proper
thought patterns and good study habits. If you pamper this muscle,
laziness and rebellion take forth, and all they want to do is play,
play, play.
Playing, like walking, talking and sleeping is what children do best,
it is not something they learn to do, it is an instinct of life. Play
time is great, but still needs to be balance out with crafts, thought
time, study time, quiet time, or physical work, like chores.
So you get the idea? We all want our children to be givers rather
then takers and peacemakers rather then fighters, achievers rather than
underachievers, and producers rather than nonproducers, we want them to
be better than us. And upright sound principles indoctrinated throughout
the journey of self promotion will undoubtedly be exhibited in our
children no matter what it is they do in life.
Being free and independent is one thing in itself, but the end to
that means is another matter, such as where does this freedom stem from?
Where did it originate? These questions can and will be established
through your child as he expands his energies into a mature adult.
The no-nonsense unschooling attitude and jovial approach may work, no
doubt about it, the concept is a good, but needs with it a sound,
undivided foundational platform to be supported by.
In other words, the whole family must agree upon and nurture the
setting. The setting or environment comes from everyone in the family
working together as a team, but it is ultimately, we as parents who
influence that setting and what your child actually does from what he
sees when he looks in that mirror.
Jesus was made in the image of man, and our example to follow. We as
parents are made to be images for our children. Our children belong to
God, just as you and I belong to God, our job is to bring them up in a
loving environment by using scripture as our guide. God wants all His
children to be with him.
Those of us who stay home with our children do it for the end result,
Right? We want to see our kids be productive, honest, and hardworking
people. But I feel there is more to that end, I would like to know my
child is saved through the blood of Jesus Christ so that he may live
again in heaven. How about you?
This I call, letting the sunshine in!
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