Kelly,
Great article. I've also enjoyed our talks on the subject. I've learned a lot from you and David regarding unschooling.
Laure,
I don’t think Kelly said that formal education kills the spirit of independent learning. Kelly went to public school, her husband David went to public school, I went to public school and we are still voracious learners in spite of that bad experience.
I say bad because I compare it to what could have been and what Livy, their daughter, will fortunately be able experience.
I’d like to take a stab at addressing some of your objections.
You said: How many children are there who have grown up without any formal education, and how did they turn out?
I don’t think this is a fair comparison to what Kelly and David are doing, nor in of itself is it a valid objection to their approach. Maybe if you said something like, How many children are there who have been raised by a set of parents who have dedicated themselves to being rational in all aspects of their life and who know that one of the most important precursors to this is cleaning out their psycho-epistemology?
There might just be a few. But you would also have to be judging by a certain criteria to determine whether or not these children turned out ok (with these type of parents it would be hard for me to believe that they wouldn’t but children do have volition so I guess it is theoretically possible). What standard would you be using to determine that? It seems like you might be giving us some hint of that when you said:
We will see if she becomes a Nobel prize-winner, or if she's living in your basement when she's 35.
The implication seems to be that unless your child becomes a Nobel prize-winner or some equivalent she will not be happy (or is it that you would not be happy).
You said: A small child simply isn't capable of deciding what is "important" to learn.
By what standard are you determining what is important for your child to learn?
You said: Most people start out in jobs that are not our chosen profession. It is important that the child recognize that there will be jobs she has to do during her life that she isn't crazy about. Even in her chosen field, there will be aspects of her job that she doesn't care for. But these things have to be done. Learning stuff you don't care about will promote responsibility and discipline.
Could you explain how Kelly’s approach makes it so that the child will not see that sometimes she might have to do things that don’t provide her with immediate satisfaction if she wants to obtain some more “difficult” goal? Remember this will have been a child that for the majority of and in most aspects of her life she has been responsible for achieving her goals.
It seems to me the way it will play out is that when she is very young her immediate goals will be “easier” to achieve but as she gains the confidence through these early achievements she will feel capable to go after more challenging ones. As she becomes more and more conceptual she will be able to see through her own efforts and others around her (her very productive and virtuous parents) the benefit of explicitly identifying her values and taking the necessary steps (even if they are very demanding) to achieve them.
To be continued….. Aquinas
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