In his Educating Children at Home, Alan Thomas found that many home educating families chose or gravitated towards an informal style of education, radically different from that found in schools. Such learning, also described as unschooling, natural or autonomous, takes place without most of the features considered essential for learning in school. At home there is no curriculum or sequential teaching, nor are there any lessons, textbooks, requirements for written work, practice exercises, marking or testing. But how can children who learn in this way actually achieve an education on a par with what schools offer? In this new research, Alan Thomas and Harriet Pattison seek to explain the efficacy of this alternative pedagogy through the experiences of families who have chosen to educate their children informally. Based on interviews and extended examples of learning at home the authors explore: - the scope for informal learning within children's everyday lives - the informal acquisition of literacy and numeracy - the role of parents and others in informal learning - how children proactively develop their own learning agendas. Their investigation provides not only an insight into the powerful and effective nature of informal learning but also presents some fundamental challenges to many of the assumptions underpinning educational theory. This book will be of interest to education practitioners, researchers and all parents, whether their children are in or out of school, offering as it does fascinating insights into the nature of children's learning.
In the short run, these strategies seem to work. They make it possible for many children to get through their schooling even though they learn very little. But in the long run, these strategies are self-limiting and self-defeating, ...
Doriane Lambelet Coleman, a professor at Duke Law School, notes The nation's child suicide rate increased 400 percent from 1950 to 1990. And even this extraordinary number was most recently reported to have doubled since 1990 .
"Exceptional...delivers on the goal of connecting assessment with intervention."---Alan S. Kaufman, Ph.D., Clinical Professor of Psychology, Yale Child Study Center, School of Medicine --
You will find this book invaluable in giving you a clearer picture of how ideas about children's learning have developed over the past four centuries.
"From the education experts at The Princeton Review"--Cover.
How Children Learn Language provides readers with a highly readable overview not only of the language acquisition process itself, but also of the ingenious experiments and techniques that researchers use to investigate his mysterious ...
In many places there are meetings for homeschoolers where homeschooling issues are discussed. ... allows all the mothers at these meetings to put their personal experience in a context and see their lives as part of a bigger picture.
Covering eight key principles for how to approach learning in way that maximises fun, and minimises stress, this short accessible book emphasises the need for flexibility, conversation and openness.
A Guide to Doing Projects at Home Judy Harris Helm, Stacy M. Berg, Pamela Scranton. smaller children . Chapter 2 discusses ways to provide materials in an organized manner . The most important aspect of project work is that you create ...
Focusing on informal learning, this text examines in depth how children can acquire an education simply through everyday experiences. The text sets out to challenge fundamental assumptions about the nature of teaching and learning.