The Case for Home Schooling

HAWTHORN PRESSISBN: 9781912480289

free range education handbook

Price:
Sale price$8.99
Stock:
In stock, 14 units

By Anna Dusseau
Imprint: HAWTHORN PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
224

Description

Anna Dusseau home educates her three children. Her gritty, wisdom-filled approach shows how home schooling can work brilliantly for families in post-Lockdown times. She draws on extensive teaching experience. She witnessed how mainstream schooling limited, and even damaged, her children’s well-being, curiosity and learning. The success of Anna’s popular Homeschool Guru Blog has led to giving public talks, writing articles in leading journals like the Times Educational Supplement and giving interviews such as on Radio 4’s ‘Woman’s Hour’ on home schooling during Lockdown.


1. The Purpose of Education



Love of Learning - Emotional Education - Life Skills - Finding your Strengths - Engaging with the World - Creating Space for Childhood - Embracing Autonomy - Becoming Trustworthy



 



2. How Children Learn



Learning Through Wonder - Observation - Experience and Apprenticeship - Free Play - Conversational Learning - Natural Curiosity - Kinaesthetic Learning - Recognition - Mixed Age Play - Time to Digest



 



3. The Benefits of Home Education



Tried and Tested - Living Better - Finding Your Comfort Zone - Avoiding Tribalism - Freedom from Bullying - Finding Focus - Whole Family Benefit - Learning Without Boundaries



 Stories of home educating from 14 families



 



4. Key Questions



The Law - Local Authority Involvement - Socialisation - English and Maths - Special Educational Needs - Addressing Distraction - Finances - Teaching Toolkit - Homeschooling Terminology - Parent Self-Care



 



5. 101 Ideas for Homeschooling



Concrete Activities to Explore - The Highly Sensitive Child - School vs. Homeschool Schedule Comparison - Common Arguments for Sending Children to School


Reviews

“This tour de force is laced throughout with pedagogical wisdom derived from a rich combination of common sense, emotional intelligence, acute perception and professional insight. It could only have been written by a thoughtful, playful, critically minded teacher who has struggled with the mainstream system, and then compared it with her own experience of home schooling. A landmark text in the evolving history of the home education movement, it is essential reading for all progressively minded educators.” - Dr Richard House, editor of Too Much, Too Soon?


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