[email protected]

Here's something you might share with friends or relatives who think you're
off the deep end. it might be comforting just to keep and read, for people
newer to unschooling too.

I'm going to look up "folk schools" and "Daniel Pink," so though we don't
need to discuss all this stuff here (it's more shool reform than unschooling) I
did think it might be interesting to people here who are trying to clarify
where unschooling falls on the spectrum.

Sandra (from here down is from someone else)



*************************************

RELEASE (EDUCATION)



THE CRITICAL THINKING & THE LIFE-LONG SELF-LEARNING MOVEMENT(S)



There is a "Critical Thinking Movement" in American universities that

closely parallels a recent White Paper, "Life-Long Self-Learning Movement,"

on K-12 innovations. They seem to be saying the same thing,-- abandon the

current school systems and create a radically different universal learning

system.


Universities across the country are recognizing that "Americans can expect

to change jobs as many as half a dozen times in their lives." No amount of

university education, as now given, can provide the skills and knowledge

required for a long fullfiling and productive life. Universities must

transform themselves to produce "critical thinkers." They must cultivate

open minds, able to face any problem, economic, political, scientific, or

social, with balanced, critical, reflective judgement. This does not mean

abandoning the learning of,technical and scientific knowledge, nor the arts

and humanities. It means aproaching all knowledge with a more questioning,

wholistic, exploratory and less dogmatic mind. To recognize that most

decisions are made in a field of uncertainty requiring judgement and wisdom

as much as reason and facts.


The difficulty universities are having in producing critical thinkers is, as

one professor puts it, "that even 4 years of college only brings

traditional-age college students to a very low level of critical thinking

and judgement."


It is hard to see how anyone could expect much better. Young

people in K-12 schools are imbued with exactly the opposite mindset.

Authoritarian, undemocratic, hierarchal schools prepare

students for an authoritarian, undemocratic hierarchal world. Students are

taught to obey orders, work on schedule, and accept authority. Nothing

could be more contrary to critical thinking. It is clearly not only

unreasonable, but also inefficient, to spend 12 years teaching people to

accept order and control, and then 4 years attempting to erase that order

and control mode from their minds.


These facts have been recognized in a White Paper on "The Life-long

Self-learning Movement" drated by an ad hoc group of citizens concerned with

the failure of the K-12 schools. It points out that there are a host of

actions aimed an producing a radically different learning system.

Homeschooling, Charter Schools, Folk Schools, Vouchers, Democratics Schools,

Parent Directed Education, and many other learning innovations are replacing

the schools of the past.


Together these two movements show the need for a radically different

life-long learning system. We need to abolish the barriers between higher

and lower education, as well as the barriers between real life and school

life at all levels. This is the challenge facing all elements of our

current cultures.


> --------------------

> Notes:

> For more on THE CRITICAL THINKING MOVEMENT read "Rethinking Thinking" by
Mark

> Clayton from the Oct. 14 issue of Christian Science Monitor on:

>

> <http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/1014/p18s01-lehl.html>


> For more on THE LIFE-LONG SELF-LEARNING MOVEMENT see the White Paper on:


<http://www.creatinglearningcommunities.org/resources/Life-longLearning.pdf>



********************END RELEASE*********************************



THE WHITE PAPER




THE lIFE-LONG SELF-LEARNING MOVEMENT


       In the past three decades, there has been a growing movement to

reinvent the way citizens learn and how young people are introduced into

society. Homeschooling, charter schools, cyberschools, unschooling,

life-long learning, Waldorf schools, and Sudbury schools are just a few of

the elements of this movement. The movement has been growing exponentially

each decade since 1980. It has become a challenge to the traditional

school/teach/educate system. Life-long learning has been promoted by

management guru Peter Drucker in "Post Capitalist Society" on one end of the

spectrum and, on the other end, by Elise Boulding in "Building Global Civic

Culture," and by many scholars in between.

       The bottom line in this movement is to provide the freedom,

opportunity and resources for self-learners of all ages, with their families

and in community, to choose to learn what they want, when they want and how

they want -- to self-learn.


RECOGNITION


       In spite of the rapid growth of this movement, it has drawn little

positive attention from governments. Professional educators and their unions

have shown concern that the proliferation of homeschooling will draw funds

away from the public school system. A few public school systems have

accepted the challenge and established special programs to provide would-be

homeschoolers and other self-learners more autonomy within the public school

system. Some have established parent-teacher programs that depend on

parental involvement and give parents greater autonomy in the learning

process. But, as parents are increasingly recognizing that personal liberty

and private protection from control by majority rule applies to their

children's learning, none of the existing systems have completely

incorporated that concept. Nor do they fully meet the needs of our

information society which requires a life-long learning system to provide

for each individual's continual learning processes, as detailed in the work

of writers and thinkers from John Holt and Alfie Kohn to Daniel Pink and

Howard Gardner, among so many others.

       Foundations, likewise, have been slow to rise to the challenge and

opportunity that is unfolding. The millions of dollars for public schools,

coming from all levels of government, is followed by millions more coming

from private foundations. But little, if any, of this private funding is

available for the many non-public school experiments being undertaken. A

search of the philanthropy databases with words like "democratic shools,"

"homeschooling," or "deschooling" comes up with no program in any

foundation. Whereas a search under "schools" or "education" comes up with

many thousands. Individual appeals to hundreds of foundations by "homeschool

support groups," "learning co-ops" and other forms of nonschool learning

communities are regularly returned with the words "this proposal does not

fit into our current program of support."


MOTIVATION


       Motivations for moving toward self-learning and abandonment of

traditional public schooling are many. Perhaps the most prevalent is

parental concern about the loss of control of the learning of young

children. Many families want to take direct responsibility for their

curriculum, approach to learning, and the principles and values upon which

these are based. Some parents believe that the public school system instills

values which run contrary to those of their family. Some are explicitly

guided by their religious beliefs to direct the education of their children.

Others have had disturbing experiences with schoolyard bullies, unfeeling

teachers, or misdirected bureaucracies. A few hold that government support

is inherently controlling, and that their tax dollars are binding families

to a failing system.

      Self-learners are also influenced by education critics, philosophers

and religious leaders. Some, like Ivan Illich, believe our current life,

including school, is based on the principle of work now for future rewards.

They urge that schooling, and life, be convivial and vernacular. That is,

that learning and work should be carried out in joyful collaboration with

family, friends and neighbors. And that it should be embedded in the local

culture, ecology, and friendships.

       With Paulo Friere, some see schools as perpetuating the socioeconomic

rich/poor status quo and preventing the natural social evolution that would

occur if future citizens were given more freedom to self-learn in their own

families, communities, and nature.

       Following John Holt and others, many believe that every brain, that

is every student, is unique and no two are prepared to learn the same thing

at the same time in the same way. They believe that schooling is not an

efficient way to learn, nor for future citizens to be introduced into

society.

       Most great philosophical traditions, including those embodied in

Gandhi, Tagore, Aurobindo and Krishnamurti, recognize a spiritual component

to learning, teaching that knowledge is more than a way to get a job or

score well on a standardized test; that it is the purpose for living, it is

being human. Rabindrnath Tagore started his learning community,

Santiniketan, to transform the human mindset from self-interest, competition

and materialism to mutual aid, cooperation, and the love of learning.

       Growing out of a variety of personal, philosophical, educational, or

religious motivations, the life-long self-learning movement continues to

expand.


PROOFS OF EFFECTIVENESS


       It is impossible to measure the success of self-learning with tests,

grades, and scores. Perhaps the most interesting successes are found among

those learners who do not flourish in a traditional setting with standard

measurements of success. These individuals are free to blossom in their own

ways and do -- anecdotal evidence abounds about happy and successful

learners who have traveled a nontraditional path to their own personal

success.

       Self-learners are equally honored among our greatest leaders. Thomas

Edison, George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Abigail Adams, Benjamin

Franklin, the Wright Brothers, Helen Keller, Albert Einstein, and Margaret

Mead are only a few of those who have learned without school. The newspapers

are filled with stories of less well-known successes. Ryan Abradi, of Maine,

showed an interest in numbers at an early age, so his parents let him stay

home and self-learn; by age 10 he was working his way through second-year

college calculus. Caitlin Stern of Haines, Alaska, stayed out of school and

became a recognized expert by studying bald eagles in the wild. Jedediah

Purdy, a self-learner from West Virginia, graduated summa cum laude from

Harvard University; in 1996 he was selected as a Truman Scholar and as West

Virginia's nominee for the Rhodes Scholarship. He then went on to Yale Law

School and, in the meantime, wrote a best selling book.

       The growth rate of self-learning is a partial measure of its success.

From a few scattered homeschoolers in 1980, perhaps 20,000, the number has

grown, according to Newsweek Magazine, to over 200,000 in 1990, and into a

broad integrated network of an estimated 2,000,000 today.

       Considerable research has shown that students learn much more easily

when they self-learn. As long ago as 1930,  the "8 Year Study" of 30 special

schools demonstrated that: "The most effective schools used a different

approach to learning.  Instead of organizing learning by subjects, they

organized it around themes of significance to their students." There seemed

to be an inverse relationship between success in college and formalized

education as opposed to student selected learning.

       A recent Cornell University study confirmed this and showed that

schooled children become "peer dependent" while those who learned with their

parents have more self-confidence, optimism, and courage to explore. A Moore

Foundation study of children of parents who had been arrested for truancy

found that their homeschooled children ranked 30 percent higher on standard

tests than the average classroom child.

       Providing possible insight into the reasons behind these successes, a

UCLA project showed that the average schooled student receives 7 minutes of

personal attention a day but the self-learner receives from 100 to 300

minutes of attention daily. Following this, a Smithsonian Report on genius

concluded that high achievement was a result of time with responsive

parents, little time with peers, and considerable time for free exploration.

       Standardized tests reflect self-learner success as well. Time

Magazine reported that "the average home schooler's SAT score is 1100, 80

points higher than the average score for the general population."

       Dr. Lawrence M. Rudner, conducted a study in 1998 that included

20,760 students in 11,930 families. He found that in every subject and at

every grade level (K-12), homeschool students scored significantly higher

than their public and private school counterparts. Some 25 percent of all

homeschool students at that time were enrolled at a grade level or more

beyond that indicated by their age. According to the study, the average

eighth-grade homeschooler was performing four grade levels above the

national average. The average ACT score was 21 out of a possible 36 for

public schooled children. It averaged 23 for self-learners. This qualifies

the average college-bound self-learner for the most prestigious

universities.


VISION


       This movement is not only addressing the why, how, when and what all

citizens learn, but is also rebuilding the foundation for the society in

which we all live. How we learn determines the kind of society we build.

Authoritarian, hierarchal, undemocratic schools prepare future citizens for

an authoritarian, hierarchal, undemocratic society. A life-long learning

system based in family, community, society and nature could be the

foundation for new democracies of freedom, equity and justice.

       The movement continues to promote the concepts of life-long

self-learning, in all its complexities, to a wider audience, to address

critics on the issues of accountability and credibility, and to promote

support to help those working to bring their ideals to fruition.



*************END OF WHITE PAPER******************


Notes: 


"Resources and Further Reading" at:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LearningCommunities/files/Life-Long%20Learning

and

<http://www.CreatingLearningCommunities.org>


Discuss:  <[email protected]>


Discussion, Comments, or suggestions to:

<LearningCommunities-subscribe @yahoogroups.com> or

Nance Confer <marbleface@...>

Danielle Conger

Daniel Pink was a former White House speech writer, for Al Gore, I believe. He wrote the book _Free Agent Nation_ which argues that self-employed free-agents are the workers of the new economy. He ends his book by looking at homeschooling as free-agent education, the model for educating free agents for the new economy. I don't really recall him addressing unschooling, just homeschooling in general.

He's speaking at this years Maryland Home Education Assoc. (MHEA) conference in April. It should be interesting. I'd like to ask him if he's ever looked into unschooling and if it isn't closer to what he's getting at than school at home.

--danielle


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