Monday, January 7, 2008

Instead of Scheduling

This is the time of the year when calendars, schedules, and plans take on increased importance.

Today all of the secular holidays are behind us, and today is the official beginning of the new semester for the neighborhood kids who are schooled.


Even among the homeschooling crowd, attention has moved from celebration to new energy and purpose for the coming months of home education. In the homeschooling blogosphere, I have read many detailed accounts about shopping for new calendars, drawing up new plans, and reconsidering schedules set in the fall. Some of this discussion has sounded so enjoyable that I was momentarily tempted to go buy beautiful paper and make my own calendar. Why not? I am creative, if not artistically talented, and I could come up with a great and wonderful schedule that would knock your socks off.


But I didn't do it. If want to go out and purchase beautiful paper, it will need to be for something other than planning a schedule. You see, we don't make schedules. Or rather, to be accurate, I don't make a homeschooling schedule, post it on the refrigerator and then all goes according to plan. No. We negotiate scheduling my time commitments based on the goals of various family mumbers and then we adjust them as life happens.


It didn't start out this way for us.
In the summer of 2006, when we decided that N. would be a homeschooled kid, I spent hours on the computer developing a scope and sequence for the core subjects, unit plans and lesson plans. I developed a homeschool daily schedule that accounted for six and a half hours a day, five days a week, holidays, and Holy Days. I even developed a special unit plan for the six weeks leading up to N.'s Bar Mitzvah. I put all of this stuff into a three ring binder, designed a lovely cover insert for it, and put it on the homeschooling shelf.

It was a beautiful thing.

And that's good, because all of that time was not totally wasted. At least it looked good sitting on the shelf. Because within the first week of homeschooling, I began to see that I had left out one important element.


N.




You see, as a trained teacher (MA in Special Education), I was used to setting goals and making plans for a dedicated period of time in which students had no choice but to sit in my classroom and do what I told them to do. We were required by the state to post the standards and learning objectives for a lesson in classroom, but we certainly never considered asking the students what their goals were. Well, that's not entirely true. When I taught gifted, as I wrote each student's IEP I would meet with him or her to discuss IEP goals. But generally, I was the master of the curriculum and methods and it was incumbent upon me to select the goals and make sure I was meeting standards.



Homeschooling is an entirely different ball game!




Immediately, N. began to have opinions about what we should do and when, and he didn't think that homeschooling should include scheduled recess and snack and lunch times.





And I had to admit, he was right. Much of the rigidity in school scheduling has to do with the fact that large groups of people must be kept occupied over a given period of time. But at home, with one person being taught, this was not only unnecessary, but downright ridiculous. As I think about it, I suppose one could say that the schedule was the first casualty of our evolution from school-at-home to unschooling. However, it was only the first. The scope and sequences, the unit plans, and the daily lesson plans fell like dominoes, as N. demanded more and more autonomy in his education. (You can read more about how we moved gradually from school-at-home to unschooling here and here).




As it stands, we don't do scheduling in a traditional sense. But that doesn't mean that we have no daily routine and weekly set of commitments to think about. For us, that would not be unschooling, that would be chaos. All of us are busy people, all of us study, and all of us have involvements outside the home. In other words, we have lives. And since we live those lives together, planning and routine are critical to having Shalom Bayit--peace in the house.



Our daily, weekly and monthly routine must take into account the fact that I am a graduate student and my commitments at the university change on a semester basis. Bruce not only works as an engineer and has an avocation as an amateur astronomer, but is also educating himself in green building practices in order to gradually move into a post-retirement consulting business. N. is not only home educated, but also has commitments to religious training, Taekwondo, and Boy Scouts. And we have all the usual family and religious obligations.

So how do we develop daily, weekly and monthly routines for N.'s education at home?





At this point, we have developed a plan. Yep. A PLAN. We just can't get away from it. This plan started in August. N. and I held a meeting to discuss his learning goals for the fall. He wanted to increase his math skills so that he could study algebra, finish one packet of Kamana I, and begin studying martial arts. Starting with these goals, we drew up a reasonable weekly plan--one that included Holy Days, holidays, and N.'s other activities. N. asked me to develop a sensible scope and sequence for the math, (that was easy because he had chosen a video course from The Teaching Company) and to take a very active role in guiding him through it.
Since he wanted me to be present during his math learning, we did have to plan routine times when I would be able to give it my undivided attention. He works much more independently with Kamana, although we do some family reading for it, and we meet periodically to see what he needs from us to be successful. As for the martial arts, we decided together on Taekwondo because we knew of a very good school for that. It works on a membership basis, and together we choose 2-3 session per week (out of seven possible) for his adult beginning classes.





Right now, our routines are in flux, interrupted by the secular holidays just past, and due to change according to new commitments in the upcoming university semester. But we are careful to keep this in perspective. It is the routine that has been haphazard, but learning has not been interrupted. Both formal and informal learning continued, although the emphasis has been on the informal.






And that is the beauty of unschooling. We know that learning does not require a separation from "regular life." It is a part of regular life--holidays, commitments, obligations, recreation and everything! The difference between us and those people who educate their children in schools is only that we are more conscious of it.

Learning is 'life, the universe and everything!'


The pictures are different calendars: The first is an old Roman Fasti, the second is the Jewish Zodiac, the third is a Chinese calendar, and the last one is a Mayan calendar.




6 comments:

Melora said...

Neat calendars! The flexibility to go with what works for you and your family is one of the things I love about homeschooling! We had our first day with my lovely new schedule today, and it went quite well. There will have to be a little tweaking, of course, but basically it seems pretty good. Travis Loves knowing What Comes Next and when his next break will be and what he needs to accomplish before he is Done. I Hope the time will come when he will, like N., have academic goals for himself and an interest in planning his studies to get where he wants to go, but that isn't where he is now. Sounds like you and N. are doing a great job planning his studies!

Swylv said...

Your last quote sounds like CM saying, Education is an atmosphere, a discipline, a life.

you've reminded me to research more on the Jewish 12 tribes/12 astronomy patterns

jugglingpaynes said...

Wonderful post!
I remember my own early days of homeschooling when I thought I needed to devote an hour to this, 45 minutes to that. And I was working with one kindergartener! I've loosened up a lot in the past ten years! I am so glad I homeschool. My kids have really taught me to loosen up!

mathmom said...

I think you would enjoy these circular calendars. It would give you an excuse to buy some beautiful paper and create something lovely, with no expectation of scheduling. :) These calendars are for recording/observing the passage of time, and for appreciating the cycles of the year.

Happy Elf Mom (Christine) said...

And bet you when he's determining more of what he wants to know, that he's actually retaining more of that information than he would otherwise!!

Debby said...

I wanted to be the homeschooler who had the spiffy organized folder and son that would sit at his desk and recite Latin verbs.

But...I'm not that organized and DS is not that interested in Latin verbs.

Learning to let go of what I think things should be and finding the joy in the way things are is the greatest growth I've experienced as an adult and I owe it all to homeschooling.