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Our Research and Home Education |
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Written by admin
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Tuesday, 03 February 2009 10:31 |
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For the two of us, the interest in home education has arisen from very different sources. But for us both home education offers the chance to further this interest in unique ways. Nearly all of our understanding of how children learn emanates from school practices and is tailored to improving these within the framework that school offers. Home education opens up a whole new landscape on learning where individuals and families find their own ways to learn. Our aim is not to criticise schools or to advocate home education. Our interest lies purely in how children learn; what things they are interested in and why, and how they then go about exploring them. Thinking about these questions is obviously interesting to parents whether they practice home education or not, as they watch their children growing up and learning. For those families who are involved in home education it can be enlightening and reassuring to hear about the experiences of others. Theorectically as well, research into home education is important. Home education is a very under researched area yet it can provide a startling contrast to school based pedagogy. Considering how children learn at home can act as a control to some of the conventional wisdom of schooling by making us critical of the assumptions that underpin the now taken for granted models of learning on which most theory is based. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 27 April 2009 15:14 )
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Home Education - Children and Learning |
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Written by Harriet Pattison
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Saturday, 22 November 2008 07:53 |
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The children whose learning we are interested in come from families that practice home education and who pursue this home education not by teaching their children in the conventional sense but by relying on the informal learning that emanates naturally from day to day living. It is important to note that even structured home education is not the same as school and the kind of learning we are talking about goes on anyway in all families, not just those involved in home education. Sometimes this kind of informal home education is called autonoumous learning, unschooling or natural learning. Some families have a philosphical or pedagogical commitment to this type of home education, for others it has evolved as they and their children discover over time, the home education style that suits them best. For yet other families the time to change from informal to formal learning, as children do when they start school, has simply not arrived yet. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 27 April 2009 15:13 )
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