As someone who wrote for & compiled a book called "Trusting Children" this talk really resonated with me. We can trace so many issues in our societies to the lack of trust in schools. It takes something to be a parent willing to trust your child, and the innate curiosity that human beings have!
This was a wonderful talk. We chose the path of trust and unschooling for our daughter. We have watched her grow into a happy, caring and confident young woman with talents and passions that will benefit her throughout her life. Our relationship with her is so much closer than it would have been had we chosen the typical parent/child dynamic.
I didn't find this until today. Sudbury Valley School has been doing this for kids from 4 through high school age for the past 45 years with marked success. No curriculum, no grades, no tests, no age segregation. The school operates as a democracy with about 150 kids and 10 staff meeting, discussing and voting on policy and practices. Graduates move on easily to work and university. There are 30-49 schools modelled on this institution in the US and elsewhere and several more inplanning.
Well done, Jerry! As you were talking about unschooling, something I'd wanted my kids to do instead of school but couldn't because they'd already been too damaged by school, you showed deschooling, which I've never even heard about (sadly!). I unschool pretty much every day and, actually, my kids do, too. Not as a replacement for school, but a supplement. They both love science. My son loves history. My daughter loves art and music. And they learn about other stuff, too. What I'm saying is that unschooling isn't just for students.
Healing my curiosity after finishing school, took me about two years, just(!) two years. I'm really happy with that, and sometimes even happier, when I feel I am still at the foot of the hill...
I support the spirit of unschooling, the only problem is I don't want to spend everyday on the kids, I want my own life too. also I believe interactions with more individuals can help, and I trust the professional teachers; so your idea of having a drop-in school where they can explore (if with teachers as faciliators) would be great!
I really enjoyed this!! But I noticed he said he won’t share the statistics to prove his point. Assuming he withheld this information due to time constraints, speakers must be given the time they need to explain their research/resources; this is what validates their position.
Oh please. He does an absolutely brilliant job of describing the problems in our education system. Then, instead of trying to transform the system into something positive, he created an unrealistic ideal that itself would only work for those privileged enough to already have access to the best schools. Some amount of structure creates a ground work of knowledge that allows us to think critically later on. Let teachers actually teach and their creativity will rub off on their students.
Well it is quite easy for most to see the problems in America's schools. The "ground work" knowledge can be acquired in so many other more involved and individualized ways that would allow for every child to to learn in a real world context that is significant for them. The teachers have been given plenty of time to teach. The system is the problem. Creativity does not need to rub off onto students in our current public school setting, rather students already possess an incomparable creativity within themselves when they begin school. The most difficult part of our public school is how much it damages each child
There's been a number of different studies over time conducted in schools now examining the effect that schools have on the way students think. One of the things that comes out consistently in these is that schools crush curiosity. They teach children to think safely inside the box. But curiosity is where the desire for learning comes from. How badly designed is our educational system if it crushes the very attribute that leads to the outcome it is supposedly intended to achieve?
Parents in Belgium have to sign the daily homework journal. Their signature confirms that they knew what their kids' homework was, and the informal but well worded out deal is that they would sit with their kid to do the homework. The message: I don't trust you to do the work that is externally asked of you to be done. I am such an outsider with my attitude of leaving the responsibility to my kids. Fan of Alfie Kohn. Yes, in super-structured Belgium, trust is a huge issue.
jerry..once again a great talk... seems that the industrial age manufacturing model of bells starting factory times and ending work shifts, and batch (lot) manufacturing is at play (each year).. one product being made.. IQ segmenting without any credit to all of the other forms of intelligence.. i think there are 8 other forms completely ignored...
Volontary drop out center with one of the resources being a huge open ended play area. Unstructured playground. That one I value most in my sons' school.
It is one thing to repair the damage done by vandalism to a website, quite another to restore the Mona Lisa. Allowing people to be responsible is good, but they (and they ALONE) really DO need to suffer the consequences for their poor choices. Misusing antibiotics creates resistant organisms that we ALL have to deal with.
This is awesome Jerry Michalski. We took this premise, "We are a Trust network" and build a company around it. Has some features that will surprise and delight you I think. Would love to connect and share what we're doing. We've learned a few things that might be valuable to you as you continue to explore what is possible. Great presentation, btw. Both my daughters are going to see this next (both involved in teaching).
This is really cool. Reminds me of the mail order diamond business that no-one except Buffet would invest in because they were providing the diamonds on approval. Became a hugely successful family business with exceptionally low fraud write-offs
Sure. Monday 12 - 5pm, Tuesday 1:30 -3pm, and Wednesday 9am - 2pm are all open right now. I'm CST (Chicago time). Feel free to email me susan.scrupski at gmail. Looking forward!
oh no!! ... souldears n sens....!! smilLa. .. (?) .. why, purpose n the to keep u going.. therefor.. hmmm.. unlearn my lińes in that case only ...i able in deficit ;');