Thursday, August 04, 2011

Inadvertent Homeschooling

Inadvertent Homeschooling 

Inadvertent. Not resulting from deliberate planning. 

There are times when our Homeschooling looks almost unintentional. Inadvertent even. 

Where learning and activities and themes just seem to happen, to arise from the dust and, like a Phoenix, to  arise in glory. 

I call this inadvertent Homeschooling. Where themes and connections appear to happen almost inadvertently...without deliberate planning. Just by being and doing.

The old maxim fail to plan, plan to fail does not consistently apply in Homeschooling. There are times, many times, many seasons, where deliberately choosing not to plan but to mosey along is the right path. Leads to learning.

And to our inadvertent themes.

Not themes of work planned and implemented and tweaked as we go.

But themes that must happen...so that one day, filling out our journal or log, talking, thinking about an outing or a book, we realize that there has been a theme and connection in our life and learning. Looks good on paper. Our thematic learning. Post and not pre-programmed. Recognized and written in our log after the fact.

Like our Australian unit this year.

Who knew we were going to get into Australian history?

Yet, looking back on the months so far of 2011, I see a theme, placed inadvertently amongst a visit to the King Tut museum, to trips to Melbourne, amidst some Maths and Physics and Latin and debates on liturgy. 

We moved house. In the unpacking, Anthony rediscovered the My Story books, novels set in differing periods of Australian history. I began to find these left on a chair or a sofa, as he reread .

Looking for a post Easter activity, I remembered a reasonably local museum. So off we traipsed and learned about local Australian history and geography.

Awhile later, we were discussing church architecture and Anthony mentioned that he had wanted to visit the crypt of St Mary's Cathedral. Another outing, this time just we two, And a visit to the crypt told the story of colonial Sydney. Which made me drag out our copies of The Pictorial History of the Catholic Church in Australia.

Then, I found a leaflet about the Rocks Discovery Museum...the early settlement of Sydney Town. With wandering around the Rocks and Sydney Harbour and pancakes for lunch to follow.

Now if someone asks what-we-are-doing-for-school, we can say Australian history. Inadvertently.

Who knew that 2011 would involve Homeschooling with Australian history?

We deliberately failed to plan but no, we haven't failed. We have learned. We have had fun. 

Again. 

The learning inadvertent to life and fun. 

5 comments:

sarah said...

Brilliant, so true. It was the constant failure of my learning plans that finally woke me to the fact learning plans are not necessarily helpful (which is me being polite) rather than that I am a failure as a teacher. It was always when those plans were discarded, changed, or extended out of all existence that real learning got done. Since giving up planning at all, so much learning has happened.

Leonie said...

Yes we have a real advantage in homeschooling... Although as Marva Collins says, any good teacher will adapt and follow the children's lead.

Leanne said...

Hi leonie, its in the Inadvertently that we learn..definitely.. My post yesterday..was somewhat like this. it looked quite ordered but each thing lead from another. just like you explained..we just could jump on over to Italy to see the places we had rabbit trailed too...or could we!!! google earth..
God Bless
Leanne

Leonie said...

Leanne, I love that seeming randomness...and google earth!

Leonie said...

Leanne, I love that seeming randomness...and google earth!