Think! Evidence

Unschooling, Then and Now

Show simple item record

dc.creator Kellie ROLSTAD
dc.creator Kathleen KESSON
dc.date 2013-03-01T00:00:00Z
dc.date.accessioned 2015-07-20T22:05:24Z
dc.date.available 2015-07-20T22:05:24Z
dc.identifier 1916-8128
dc.identifier https://doaj.org/article/fe294fb9dc9b4582a2390048d909dfc0
dc.identifier.uri http://evidence.thinkportal.org/handle/123456789/9734
dc.description While the accountability and standardization movement continues to narrow curriculum in the US, unschooling families are redefining learning and recreating community in an atmosphere of love and trust. As professors of education and unschooling mothers, Rolstad and Kesson compare their unschooling experiences in two different eras, one in the early days of unschooling (1980s), and the other in the first decade of the 21st century. Kathleen Kesson was an unschooling pioneer when her children were unschooled in the early 1980s, and her children are now adults. She describes what it was like to unschool then, to do what she terms ‘old school unschooling.’ Only a generation later, Kellie Rolstad began unschooling her three children, in a world transformed by the Internet and ease of access to both information and social networking, key components of unschooling today. Rolstad describes how her unschooling children connected play in real and virtual worlds, exploring ideas differently in many aspects from how Kesson’s children played and explored, and yet fundamentally and remarkably the same. In this article, Rolstad and Kesson share their experiences of trusting children, of giving them the space and the resources to learn and grow in the ways that are best for them, comparing along the way what it was like to unschool then and what it is like to unschool now, in this era when our society has come to distrust children more than ever.
dc.language English
dc.publisher Nipissing University
dc.relation http://jual.nipissingu.ca/NewIssue/v7142.pdf
dc.relation https://doaj.org/toc/1916-8128
dc.source Journal of Unschooling and Alternative Learning, Vol 7, Iss 14, Pp 28-71 (2013)
dc.subject unschooling
dc.subject home education
dc.subject democratic education
dc.subject digital media
dc.subject critique of schooling
dc.subject curriculum theory
dc.subject Special aspects of education
dc.subject LC8-6691
dc.subject Education
dc.subject L
dc.subject DOAJ:Education
dc.subject DOAJ:Social Sciences
dc.subject Special aspects of education
dc.subject LC8-6691
dc.subject Education
dc.subject L
dc.subject DOAJ:Education
dc.subject DOAJ:Social Sciences
dc.subject Special aspects of education
dc.subject LC8-6691
dc.subject Education
dc.subject L
dc.subject Special aspects of education
dc.subject LC8-6691
dc.subject Education
dc.subject L
dc.subject Special aspects of education
dc.subject LC8-6691
dc.subject Education
dc.subject L
dc.title Unschooling, Then and Now
dc.type article


Files in this item

Files Size Format View

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search Think! Evidence


Browse

My Account