When strangers meet my daughter they always ask her if she started school this year, to which she promptly answers: no.
That's it! That's all she says. The person shifts uncomfortably, suddenly thrust out of the comfort zone of kindergarten talk and into this no-man's-land of "not going to school". I shift uncomfortably too, torn between not saying anything, since what does it matter anyway, and tempering the awkwardness by explaining we are homeschooling instead. Then, after a few beats, when I start to worry that they think I am a negligent mother the homeschooling words burst from my lips like a jack-in-the-box.
Ah, public opinion, the eternal menacing shadow.
I am human so I have anxiety. When it comes to homeschooling I have multiple levels of anxiety.
1. Other people. I worry about what other people think. Some think homeschooling is the bees knees and that Echo is a lucky duck. Other's think it's not really educational and that we're doing our child a diservice. Others don't know what it is at all and have corresponding feelings to that. And even others feel judged, judged for not being "supermom" enough to do that sort of thing. The point is that everyone has an opinion and I can feel that opinion coming off them in waves. Sometimes I'm good at staying centered and feeling fine, other times I stumble a little.
2. It's new to me. Well, not exactly. We homeschooled Xi until she was seven when she started at the Montessori school but somehow I've forgotten all about that.
3. I want to do it well! After all a child's education is involved here. Some days that can feel like a very big job.
When our little friends were packing lunches and taking "first day of school" photos last week we were speeding past hay pastures on our way to the Colorado wedding, not a school reference in sight. This felt free-ing, yeah for homeschool where you can go to Colorado instead of a classroom!, but I also felt terribly aware of the start of school phenomena happening all over the country. To help myself feel more official I set the monday of our return as "first day" of "school" at our house.
I am so silly.
I'm silly because the whole point is that school is happening constantly. Echo is a whole person, and as such she is continuously looking to better understand her world, to follow her interests, and gather the information that her brain craves. I'm silly because her brain has in no way been on summer vacation and it wasn't going to suddenly act differently or need different things when monday came around.
I realized this when, on sunday, the day before school officially began Echo started collecting and talking about seeds. We gathered some from the riverside, some from our garden, and some from our food. Soon we had tape and a chart. A chart!
There was a part of me that felt bummed we did something so official the day before school started! That's what's silly: We already are learning. We already are teaching. All I have to do is keep it up. Easy!
The other thing I realized is that this homeschooling (also called unschooling when you follow the child's interest more than a curriculum) gig really is simply a matter of saying "yes" more often. When Echo wanted to make a seed chart I said yes because I have this whole chunk of my mind now reserved for "school". I have made mental room to help her more. When I was typing away at the computer and she wanted to use the feather she found as a quill I stopped typing and rumaged around until I found bottles of ink. I'm willing to be interrupted in the name of brain development!
So, needless to say I have less anxiety now. Phew.
And then on the official first day of kindergarten Echo made not a single chart.
- She defended 35 stuffed animal dogs from an imaginary bear, yelling "Resurrection! Resurection!" to scare the beast away. I have no idea where she picked up that particular vocab word.
- She rode her bike back and forth for an hour.
- She set up an elaborate mud and water scene on the front steps.
- She sold bathwater tea to her father for most of the evening.
Okay, we also read several stories, including many chapters of Harry Potter 3. She counted a gazillion things. She pondered big life questions. The point is is that her brain was working overtime.
I like how you said this:
the whole point is that school is happening constantly. Echo is a whole person, and as such she is continuously looking to better understand her world, to follow her interests, and gather the information that her brain craves.
and I couldn't agree more.
Welcome to the wonderful world of...well...school happening constantly!
Posted by: Rachel | 09/11/2012 at 11:15 AM
ps: sometimes "charts" and visible "work" makes you feel better as a Mama in charge of her kids' education. That's okay too!
Posted by: Rachel | 09/11/2012 at 11:18 AM
Yes! It's in my nature to want to turn everything into something visual so I think we'll see a lot of visible "work" around these parts.
At other times Echo excuses herself to play some "mind games" with herself - sitting very still, eyes glazed over, imagining a scene/scenario and creating characters. Definitely not going to get a lot of physical evidence of that sort of thing but it sure counts too!
Posted by: Natalie | 09/11/2012 at 01:25 PM
just got a little sad that i wouldn't be running into echo at bfly while everyone else was in school. love you guys lots. tell echo we are loving keeping up with her.
Posted by: Amy | 09/11/2012 at 11:55 PM
Aw. I know what you mean. It's strange/bad knowing we won't be running into you guys too. All our love.
Posted by: Natalie | 09/12/2012 at 08:04 AM
So glad you are doing this! We're just one year behind you... fun to watch you forge ahead of us! It's definitely hard telling people "nope, no plan to send her to school, this year, or next!" Hmmm. I also wonder if I might need to send her to kindergarten for a few days/weeks next year though, just so she can see what it is like and decide for herself what she wants to do. Being a kid, she seems to want to do whatever the other kids are doing, which is school of course. Sigh. :(
Posted by: Kristin | 09/14/2012 at 10:18 PM
Some towns, like Durango Colorado, have a program where all homeschool kids go to public school 2 days a week with the other homeschool kids. I think that's pretty cool.
Posted by: Natalie | 09/15/2012 at 10:03 AM