Thursday, November 14, 2019

Not all classrooms have 4 wallls


Over the past century we have become accustomed  to learning and education as something that only happens during the 6-7 hours a day when you attend school. School - a institute where children are segregated by age and taught what is deemed appropriate and relevant for there age.

Learning however is something that is innate. As babies we learn to talk and walk, learn from the environment and from the people around us. We have however become accustomed to the idea that our abilities to teach our children end at the end of 4/5 years and that they must got into a educational setting.

 I have seen the quote many times ‘If we sent babies and toddlers to school and they learnt to walk and talk in the school setting, over a period of time we would come to believe that parents and children themselves are incapable of walking and talking without schools'.  You may laugh at this because it seems extreme but what I hear from many home educators is similar. They are nervous about taking on the task of educating their child and fear without a school and a teacher,  their children will not learn to read and write or gain a 'worthy' education. Is this the case? No?

 Children and indeed us adults are constantly learning throughout out lives on a daily basis. Learning is happening all around us. We are being taught by many different people, the environment, by our natural curiosity and by life. Travel and experiences, new people and cultures all shape our learning.

I see everything as an opportunity for learning. Even when you don't call it learning and make the intention to seek knowledge, it is still happening. This is why I personally see the classroom as a very limiting experience of learning. When you have reached what is deemed relevant for your age, you are held back; four walls defiantly do not inspire natural curiosity.

I often come up against resistance when trying to get one of my children to do maths. Even when I try to make it fun. One day, I took some marker pens and headed to a pebble beach. I wrote  algebraic equations on pebbles and the way he reacted was incredible. He was asking for more work and I actually saw him enjoying it. Was it the extra oxygen in his lungs? the freedom of the outdoors? I am sure they played a role in how he viewed the work.

I believe that school environments need updating and well as the idea that learning only happens there. Colourful displays and some toys are not enough but rather zones that are for different purposes. Classrooms that encourage collaboration and self learning, more didactic resources and opportunities for children to take hold of their own learning, use their passions and develop creatively into adults that think outside the box.

The world is our classroom.




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