|
At
some point, one of the hardest decisions that a homeschooling
family must make is whether to do "Home Education" or to do "School"
at home. Many times this choice is made by default when a family
jumps into homeschooling by purchasing a complete "curriculum-in-a-box"
(or on a disk), in an attempt to find something that will "cover
all the bases." On the other hand, some families who choose to
break free from a "complete" grade-level based pile of textbooks
and workbooks feel like they are engaging in something radically
different, which they may call "unit study," or "unschooling,"
or "classical," or any one of several different labeled philosophies
or approaches.
Certainly these pioneering families are choosing paths less traveled,
but they are doing so in greater and greater numbers. Some do
it from the get-go; some begin the journey after years of slogging
through worksheets and school books, wondering if there isn't
another, better way. Providing fuel for a change in direction,
authors like John Taylor Gatto, Doug Wilson, Marva Collins, Glen
Doman, and many others show a glimpse of how things could be different,
even providing treasure maps, guidebooks, model classrooms and
periodic pep talks. Most parents pursue these possibilities because
they have three basic qualities that push them to it: love for
their kids, a modicum of confidence, and common sense.
And yet for many other parents, who also possess love and common
sense, it can be hard to depart from the broad, safe road of "school-at-home."
The pre-designed lesson plans, the carefully programmed "teacher
edition" textbooks, the daily and weekly suggested schedules,
the tests with answer keys?in other words, the security of knowing
that your fifth grader is doing what other fifth graders are (or
should be) doing?these are the things which, for some, make homeschooling
a practical possibility, and they hang on to it tenaciously. .
. at least until they encounter the task of teaching writing.
When parents come face to face with the shortcomings of the workbook
approach in this area, they get concerned. They see the child's
frustration. Writing is thinking and workbooks just can't teach
thinking. Understanding the importance of composition as an important
life skill, these parents search here and there for yet another
workbook or computer program that will do the job, but they seldom
find anything that actually works. Why? Textbooks, workbooks,
and "canned" curriculums cannot teach thinking; they can only
seek a predictable, "correct" response. Their very existence is
based on a multiple-choice, fill-in-the-blank, right/wrong system
of pushing information into a child's head. There is no room for
different answers, unique responses or independent views. The
emphasis is always on what the child doesn't know, not on helping
him clarify and express what he does know. Epitomizing the type
of instruction specifically designed to condition the child, multiple-choice
tests and right/wrong workbooks can program correct responses,
but they cannot teach a child to think.
I and most everyone I know grew up in this educational culture.
We don't know (and can't easily imagine) anything different. For
the most part, conditioning is what school was (excepting the
one or two truly remarkable teachers who may have taken the radical
approach of encouraging actual thinking). For us, grades were
based on homework and tests, most of which were designed not to
test what we did know but specifically to test what we did not
know. "Uh, oh... I didn't know seven things on that test, I'm
stupid!" "Johnny got a 100% ...he's so smart, he knows everything!
But I'm just dumb. I hate this." No, Johnny didn't know everything,
and he wasn't necessarily any smarter than you or I. He was just
good at learning the specific few things the system thought he
should learn. You may well have learned countless other things--things
that were more interesting or useful to you--but the system didn't
test you on what you did know, only on what you didn't know. For
us, school was an eleven or twelve year conditioning process,
slapping us back into line, giving us a common and narrow set
of information carefully chosen to make us think predictably and
behave controllably, limited in originality and easy to influence
economically and politically.
You see, the multiple-choice test mentality is not just stupid,
it's evil. By placing a continuous emphasis on what you don't
know, multiple-choice tests trivialize what you do know. To a
multiple-choice test answer key, who you are, what you know, or
how you think is irrelevant. But the painful irony of it all is,
in truth: it's what you don't know that is actually what's irrelevant.
You're not going to know everything there is to know about everything
anyway, so who cares what you don't know? What you don't know
isn't important at all! What is important is what you do know,
and that you know that you know, and that you can communicate
it effectively. And, by the way, that's how tests have been done
for centuries (the centuries before computers had maliciously
promoted multiple choice). The mentor or teacher would say to
the student, "Tell me everything you have learned about what we've
studied." The test was to see that you had learned something,
not that you had learned the narrow and specific facts prioritized
by a particular worldview or sociological system. Real learning
and thinking is about what you do know, and knowing that you know
it.
That's actually the common sense approach to education. It's what
the word means. Educare -- "to draw out." Instruction, on the
other hand, means "to pile upon." Parents and teachers hit the
wall of "instruction" when they begin to teach writing. You can
"pile on" and test history facts, math facts, science facts, even
religion and spelling facts, but you can't "pile on" writing instruction.
Writing is thinking, and once the tools have been taught, the
shift is now to educate, or to "draw out" from the child that
which he knows. As I travel and teach writing all over the country,
I often meet children who don't like to write. Now, if you ask
a child why they don't like to write, their most common answer
is, of course: "I don't know what to say." One of the activities
I do with children (after some practice in basic note taking)
is an exercise I call "brain inventory," or just making a list
of "things that you know something about." After listing their
dog or cat and their one or two favorite sports, many children
can't think of much else that they "know something about." They
just don't they feel like they know a whole lot. The fact is,
of course, that they do know much more, and with just a little
coaching, they can find all sorts of "stuff" in their brain, but
they are not used to that type of thinking. They're used to having
a workbook to tell them what they know. When it's not there, they're
lost. What I do is very new to many kids. It's a common sense
approach, but not a common one in today's multiple-choice culture.
Originating as part of a clandestine effort by the inner sanctum
of social scientists in their university halls and corporate board
rooms, the madness of the multiple-choice mentality now unabashedly
emanates from the most obvious sources of political and economic
power - governments and media. Following the states and their
legislators in striving for an elusive educational "standard,"
our president and congress have hopped on the driverless wagon
of national testing, as if requiring teachers to do more of what
hasn't worked will suddenly improve things. And the media, they
love multiple choice. Take, for example, the recent tragedy of
terrorism and the "interactive" nature of the television and internet.
One major news network gave three choices as possible responses
to the question: "How does this terrorist attack make you feel?"
Only three options were available: Surprised, Sad, or Angry. Any
more complete expression of feeling or detailed response wouldn't
work in their bar chart, so everyone responding to their "interactive
experience" was forced into one of three narrow but equally as
vague little boxes. I personally couldn't trim my complex feelings
and thoughts to fit into one of those three options, and it seems
to me that any thinking person would be equally as offended by
the overly simplistic nature of that multiple choice question.
But this is the way children have been, for decades, trained to
respond by their textbooks and worksheets.
Now we, as home schoolers, have some options that other parents
don't have. We can, of course, do "school" at home, obediently
following our worksheets and nicely administering our end-of-chapter
multiple-choice tests. Or, if we can see outside the box of our
own conditioning, choose to do something radically different.
We can, right now, make the decision to care more about what our
children do know, rather that being worried about what they don't
know. We can determine to draw out real thinking, rather than
programming our students with the "correct" textbook responses.
We can, if we have the courage, "just say no" to multiple choice
tests, and the whole mentality that goes with it. No, you won't
"cover all the bases." Your children won't know everything they're
"supposed to." They will learn different things than what the
other fifth graders are learning, but they may very well learn
better how to think, and to know that they know what they know.
And if they do the same for their children and grandchildren,
we may find in a few generations a large number of people have
become more thoughtful, more responsive, more diverse - in other
words less controllable and less conditioned - and perhaps a bit
more like our founding fathers. And that might be a very good
thing for our country and our world.
Andrew
Pudewa is a teacher and homeschooling father of seven. Lecturing
and conducting workshops on the topic of writing, early childhood
and music education throughout North America, he is a strong proponent
of the Classical model with an emphasis on excellence in teaching.
He may be contacted at: Institute for Excellent in Writing, www.writing-edu.com
, or info@writing-edu.com .
|