...or somewhere thereabouts.
I've been noticing somebody from your area repeatedly on this site, and have read news articles about unschooling in Ma. Check in (comment, below!) and tell us how things are, out there!
Emily van Lidth de Jeude writes about her experiences as an unschooling parent, wilderness educator, and explorative learning consultant.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Sunday, March 13, 2011
THANK YOU!!!
One day while downloading photos from the camera, I happened to see a contest promotion on the Urban Mommies newsletter... I sent in a photo of Tal and Annie at circus school... and WE WON!!
To our enormous surprise, we received an email and phone call, announcing that we'd won 4 tickets to see Cirque du Soleil's Quidam, on March 13th.
Well, that being just after Tal's birthday, and one of the things he'd requested and been denied, it was possibly the best gift he could have received. Of course, the show was today. We went. We LOVED it! Cirque du Soleil is so completely wholly enthralling, and this time the story was also heart-wrenchingly poignant. We all thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, and we have Urban Mommies to thank. Very very much. :-)
To our enormous surprise, we received an email and phone call, announcing that we'd won 4 tickets to see Cirque du Soleil's Quidam, on March 13th.
Well, that being just after Tal's birthday, and one of the things he'd requested and been denied, it was possibly the best gift he could have received. Of course, the show was today. We went. We LOVED it! Cirque du Soleil is so completely wholly enthralling, and this time the story was also heart-wrenchingly poignant. We all thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, and we have Urban Mommies to thank. Very very much. :-)
Of course we couldn't take photos in the arena, so we snapped a shot of the excited kids with the tickets, beforehand! |
Parents are Life-Learners, Too!
Just in case you had forgotten, unschooling - or life-learning as we like to call it, too - means learning for life. Really it's what all of us do all of the time. What we do is just recognize and run with that, trusting that with a bit of guidance, we can learn what and how we feel is best for us. So of course that includes parents, too!! Here is Markus' non-time-keeping lego clock, from earlier this year. He finally photographed it just before taking it apart to reuse the pieces.
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Links and Thanks
Time to put up a few links of those who have linked to Rickshaw Unschooling, or have in some way contributed to the site or promoted it.
With thanks for compliments and for linking to this blog.
All of these are good reads, as well:
Green Mangoes by Amy Milstein
Scraps of Starlight by Suzy in the UK
Online College: Best Blogs of the Unschooling Movement
Life Learning Magazine's Blog List
With thanks for their support of (f)Unschool:
BC Playthings
Bowen Nature Club
Our Homelearning Support Community:
Island Discovery Learning Community
With thanks for compliments and for linking to this blog.
All of these are good reads, as well:
Green Mangoes by Amy Milstein
Scraps of Starlight by Suzy in the UK
Online College: Best Blogs of the Unschooling Movement
Life Learning Magazine's Blog List
With thanks for their support of (f)Unschool:
BC Playthings
Bowen Nature Club
Our Homelearning Support Community:
Island Discovery Learning Community
Friday, March 11, 2011
(f)Unschool Four
Some of the (f)Unschool regulars, here...
Discovering some strange pink moss growing on a submerged log in the lake. |
Part of the fort they built with sticks, 2 weeks ago. |
We are Parents of a Nine-Year-Old
In preparation for his birthday dinner, Tali and I went food shopping. The result? His choice of delicious baked sockeye, roasted potatoes, and a greek salad. |
Tal requested a fruit-vlaai with raspberries and peaches. No candles allowed! |
Friends came for cake, too! |
Ryan made for Tali a very special card and a launchable paper airplane... and then accompanied the opening thereof with music! |
Opa and Nana gave Tal a chemistry kit, and he and Ethan tried it out with great enthusiasm and care. |
We have a little tradition of recording heights on birthdays... It's always a proud moment. |
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Westcoast Girl in Dance
Rhiannon dances to track 18 from our friend Adam (Vudu)'s CD:
Front & Center Vol. 1: Westcoast Women in Rhyme
(This is an extra track not on the actual CD; just on our copy, apparently! It's called "Love is my Middle Name and we think it's performed by Lady Precise; one half of the group Stinkmitt. Maybe.)
Front & Center Vol. 1: Westcoast Women in Rhyme
(This is an extra track not on the actual CD; just on our copy, apparently! It's called "Love is my Middle Name and we think it's performed by Lady Precise; one half of the group Stinkmitt. Maybe.)
Monday, February 28, 2011
Beautiful Community
Just linking to Lois' most beautiful post about Gerald's art class. Sometimes we get additions to our community who just dive in with open-hearted enthusiasm... in this case one of the newcomers is celebrating one of the not-so-newcomers -- both the author and the subject being, in their adventurousness and authenticity, bright lights of inspiration on our little island.
Have a read:
http://countrymice.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/touch-of-magic/
Have a read:
http://countrymice.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/touch-of-magic/
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Routinized Learning in Unschooling; Music and Math
Taliesin and his cousin Aiden |
Routine is natural. We need routine to feel secure, and to develop skills that require repetition. We need repetition to learn. The times repetition can become detrimental to learning is when it is enforced without inspiration or a personal drive to do it. Then it can turn a perfectly interesting lesson into something very boring. When repetition is a part of the process of discovery, it's fun, and this is where it becomes part of unschooling.
I am writing this post wholly as a response to my son's piano adventures, at the moment. He doesn't take piano lessons. I've tried to teach him a few things, and he wasn't very receptive, so I just let it go. Right now he is playing scales.
CEG-CEG-FEDC, DFA-DFA-GFED, EGB-EGB-AGFE, etc. (135-135-4321)
This began with violin. Tal first asked us for a violin, with deep earnestness, when he was two. And so, for his 3rd birthday, he was given one by my mother. He played for a few months like it was his voice. The passion and music that came out of that 1/4-size violin in the hands (and feet) of a boy who really needed a 1/32-size at the time, was amazing. Then my dear mother tried to teach him about his instrument. She began by showing him how to play Twinkle Twinkle, Little Star, which went very well, until she made the mistake of putting tape on the violin, to show him where to put his fingers, and he became so enraged that from that moment on, for years, he would no longer play. None of us had quite realized the seriousness of his aversion to instruction, at that point.
Playing guitar-style in Brian's yurt. |
Brian knows that Tal resists direction. A couple of months ago they played something that Tal instantly recognized. He looked up suddenly, and almost accusingly. "I know that."
Brian calmly said, "Oh. You do?"
"It's Twinkle Twinkle, Little Star."
Brian handled the situation expertly: "Oh, well I guess it could be. But it doesn't have to be."
"Oh." And they progressed onto something else. I had the definite feeling that that had been a very close call, and wondered wordlessly if Brian knew.
One of Tal's creative playing methods... |
A few days later he proudly played Twinkle Twinkle, Little Star for his beloved Nana, on his taped violin.
Eventually he begun picking the song out on the piano, and then, because it was December, he figured out Jingle Bells. Then Silent Night. Then he tried some of the same on our Melodica, then on the recorder, then on his violin. He continued playing the piano and violin expressively, without intent, as well, but his scientific experimenting with the various instruments grew to the point where now, about two months later, he figures out about one new song (though often only the first part) every few days. Some of his favourites are Greensleeves, To Drive the Cold Winter Away, Bingham Bailey (Wild Boar), and the Swan's Theme (Swan Lake).
Why scales? Well, because yesterday he was experimenting with different intervals on the piano, and I explained about intervals on the piano, telling also about 3rds and 5ths, since that's mostly what he was doing... And guess what Brian happened to show him, today? How to play two notes at once on the violin! What happenstance! So when we got home after violin, ballet, a good long adventure in the meadow and wetland, some games, and dinner, Tal ended up back at the piano, experimenting with intervals. Nobody said anything about it; nobody really paid him much attention, quite frankly. Not even when I realized he was playing scales, one note higher at a time, up to the very very highest note he could.
Why is routinized learning important? Because we need it to cement the things we're learning. Even when the things we learn are of our own device and inspiration, we repeat them again and again, allowing us to settle them into those nooks and crannies of our brains where later, perhaps in unexpected ways, they'll come in handy. This choice to routinize their own learning, within self-directed explorative activities, is just one of the many ways our free-range children have of processing and growing within their world.
I sometimes feel worried that my relatively free-range children will stagnate in their learning as they often seem to reach everywhere, but nowhere in particular; as they never have to drill something into their brains because somebody said so. To see Taliesin choosing to implant, methodically, every combination of 1-3-5-4321 into his brain is to see him embrace the math and science of music, which is one of the great passions of his life.
Meadow Math
Taliesin setting up his telescope. |
"Well, actually, if they're all the same, each one magnifies the last by the same amount, right? So if you had one that doubled the size something appeared to be, then if you put another one that also doubled, you'd see something twice as big again. Right?"
"Right. Four times."
"Yes. So what if you had three of those same lenses in a row?"
"Six times?"
"Nope. Think again. The third lens doubles what it sees."
"Eight times."
"Right. So what about four lenses?"
"Mama! I don't know eight times two!" (He counted.) "Sixteen."
"Right. That's actually an exponential equation. You show it by putting a little tiny number up to the right of the number it's talking about. So this one with four lenses would be a 2 with a little four up beside it. So two-times-two-times-two-times-two. Can you figure out what the equation would be for the three lenses magnification?"
He thought about it. "A two with a three?"
"Yep."
"Mama, you know this is math." Pause. "But it's also a kind of science."
We continued our walk. I'm not going to get into exactly how this conversation had anything to do with Taliesin's piano scales, a few hours later, but I know it did.
Interesting reading:
How We Learn, by Alison Gopnik (NY Times, January 2005)
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/16/education/edlife/EDSCIENCE.html
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Good Night!
I will probably never stop touting the importance of a good preschool -- and my Mum is the reason why. She has demonstrated for more years than I've been alive how to nurture and help children to thrive, not only as a preschool teacher, but also as a daycare provider, music therapist and infant development consultant. She has helped thousands of parents to understand their children and to be deeply involved in their children's lives and futures. This year she will retire, and many people are already expressing deep sorrow that their children and grandchildren won't have the opportunity to attend her classes... but if we keep on listening, we can learn from her wisdom and extensive knowledge, and carry her wonderful gift into the future.
Here's the article my mother, Lyn van Lidth de Jeude, wrote for her preschool's newsletter, this month (download the newsletter, here).
Here's the article my mother, Lyn van Lidth de Jeude, wrote for her preschool's newsletter, this month (download the newsletter, here).
Good Night!
Preschool children typically sleep 11 to 13 hours in every 24 hour period. After 5 years of age most children have given up napping, but the amount of sleep they require remains the same. The preschool years are a peak period for Night Terrors, Nightmares and Sleep Walking. Sleep is vital to your child’s good health, yet many children resist going to bed.
Children who get adequate sleep are:
- more alert
- better able to learn
- less prone to obesity
- less accident prone
- more cheerful
- wake spontaneously feeling refreshed
Children who get inadequate sleep may:
- be more susceptible to infection
- have rapid mood swings
- have impulsive behaviour
- appear “wired”
- be hard to wake up
- be too sleepy to eat breakfast
Normal sleep patterns alternate between two states:Deep (or delta-wave) sleep: is characterized by a drop in body temperature and physical stillness. Children in deep sleep are usually difficult to arouse. During deep sleep blood supply to the muscles is increased, energy is restored, tissue growth and repair occur and important hormones are released for growth and development.
REM (rapid eye movement) sleep: is the period in which we dream. These periods occur three to six times a night and range from five to twenty minutes in length. Children in REM sleep may have irregular breathing and heart rates. They often move around, twitching their arms and legs, smiling, sucking and generally appear restless. Virtually all dreaming occurs during REM sleep.
Why do Children Resist Going to Sleep?In Canadian Living magazine, Christine Langlois, suggests one reason may be that when children are alone in the dark they confront their fears. To prevent this confrontation, a child may choose bedtime to pick a battle with a sibling or stall by requesting a glass of water. They may ask you to check the closet for monsters when it’s their inner fears that they really want you to keep in check.
A child may mention an important issue that is troubling her at bedtime just because that is when she remembers it. Although bedtime may seem like the right time to sit by your child and discuss her concerns, she is probably too tired to participate in a productive conversation. Be sure to make time with her during the day when she is better able to fully share the experience and discuss what may be troubling her.
Bedtime RoutinesRoutines serve an important purpose in slowing down the pace and allowing the child to mentally prepare for sleep. For a preschool child, limiting the routine to a bath, a story and a good night snuggle is perfect. The whole routine should last no longer than half an hour.
Children may have difficulty falling asleep for a number of reasons, but the most common cause is being overtired. You might expect that a child who has missed a nap may sleep like a log, but an exhausted child is more likely to have difficulty falling asleep and, if prone to it, may experience night terrors or walk in his sleep. You can usually anticipate sleep problems at times of change (e.g. Just before a family trip, after the birth of a new sibling or when a parent is ill).
Night TerrorsNight terrors are a common symptom of too little sleep. They usually occur one to four hours after the child has fallen asleep, when the child partially awakens from a period of deep sleep. She may scream, sit up, grind her teeth, open her eyes and look through you rather than at you.
After a few minutes, she’ll lay back down and go back to sleep. Usually you can’t wake the child and, that’s a good thing, as it will only aggravate her further. If you can gently guide your child back under the covers, she’ll go back to sleep and, in the morning, she won’t remember a thing.
NightmaresNightmares are very different fromnight terrors. They are usually an indication of emotional conflict and occur during REM sleep. A child who is crying and calling out after a bad dream is awake. She will need your full assurance and support because she is genuinely frightened. You can help her best by showing that you are in control and that she is safe.
Sleep WalkingLike night terrors, sleep walking usually occurs during deep sleep, one to four hours after falling asleep. If you try to talk to your child, he usually won’t answer or if he does his speech may be garbled. When children sleep walk they may try to do familiar tasks such as eating, brushing teeth or urinating, but because they are confused, they may not do these things in an appropriate place. The most important thing you can do for a sleepwalking child is to keep him safe. Keep outside doors and windows closed and locked and consider a gate across a stairway. The Canadian Sleep Society recommends attaching a bell to the child’s door to alert you to any nocturnal wandering.
Nighttime RoutinesChildren respond best to regular routines.Keeping your child’s bedtime consistent is the best assurance of a good nights sleep.If your child has difficulty waking up in the morning or is too sleepy to eat breakfast consider moving bedtime earlier in 15 minute increments until you accommodate her needs.
The May 2010 issue of National Geographic published a very interesting article by D.T. Max titled The Secrets of Sleep. One shocking statistic stated that only 1 in 5 teenagers get the optimal hours of sleep on school nights. A good night’s sleep results in better grades, better attitude and better overall health. We can support these goals by cultivating good sleep habits in the early years.
Friday, February 4, 2011
(f)Unschool Evolving
Today we had 18 children with us, ranging from 3 months to 12 years! We just hung around in the forest, and let the kids play. It was so idyllic. Not much else to say, but WE ARE BLESSED!!! Thank goodness for good people, good spirit, and good earth.
climbing along the dinosaur spine |
a smattering of children across the forest |
branch-clinging -- an essential forest skill! |
we also happened upon our equine neighbour, Shadow, and had a brief visit |
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Local Language
For as long as I can remember, I have wanted to learn Sḵwx̱wú7mesh snichim. Probably since my parents took me to my first pow wow on the Capilano Reserve. I made up "native songs" to sing while I hoped nobody was listening. They probably consisted of a lot of "hey-ah-ho", repeated.
Sḵwx̱wú7mesh language and culture is not something we've been privileged enough to learn, in our culture. We just live beside them, feeling our surroundings and growing to know and love the lands in this Salish Sea, without the adequate words to describe them. In the current global economy, languages like French, Mandarin, and Spanish are probably more useful, but although we may be global citizens needing to navigate this shrinking world, we are also citizens of Sḵwx̱wú7mesh territory, harvesters of stink currant and sugar kelp, watchers of the snow-line on the mountain we call Sleeping Bear, and humans with feet rooted in the many unique earth-types we walk upon. We need a language that expresses our home. I would like to find methods and opportunities for us to learn this language that speaks to our hearts.
Sḵwx̱wú7mesh language and culture is not something we've been privileged enough to learn, in our culture. We just live beside them, feeling our surroundings and growing to know and love the lands in this Salish Sea, without the adequate words to describe them. In the current global economy, languages like French, Mandarin, and Spanish are probably more useful, but although we may be global citizens needing to navigate this shrinking world, we are also citizens of Sḵwx̱wú7mesh territory, harvesters of stink currant and sugar kelp, watchers of the snow-line on the mountain we call Sleeping Bear, and humans with feet rooted in the many unique earth-types we walk upon. We need a language that expresses our home. I would like to find methods and opportunities for us to learn this language that speaks to our hearts.
Practically speaking, there is a 12-week language course that I'd LOVE to take with our whole family, but something is holding me back. I feel a bit like I would walking down Main St. in a saree. Beautiful, and totally out of place! I suffer from that same white guilt/shame that most of us seem to, and I'm so afraid of stepping out of line, being too present, etc. Being unwelcome. Once, at a closing ceremony for a family member of our friend, we stood around the fire outside the sweat on the Capilano reserve, and we were asked if we wanted to go into the sweat. I was surprised to be asked, and was cautioned by someone else that although it was his duty to ask me, it was also my duty to decline. OK. No problem. But what will I do without my friends around to give me that advice!? Hence my hesitation. Well... I have enough hesitation that I haven't even called to ask if we're allowed. Maybe it's only for Squamish people. Hm. I guess they can always say no. I hope so.
Here are some of my favourite links:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)