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The Teenage Liberation Handbook: How to Quit School and Get a Real Life and Education por Grace Llewellyn
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The Teenage Liberation Handbook: How to Quit School and Get a Real Life…

por Grace Llewellyn

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315317,127 (4.34)1
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Lowry House Pub (1998), Edition: Rev Exp, Paperback, 435 pages

Membro:JimFolk
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There are plenty of reasons to homeschool, but this "teacher" (sorry, but subbing and working in some ritzy private school doesn't count you as a master of the profession) doesn't give any of them. Worse yet, she imagines that every single student fits this basic profile: white (I specify that because of the privaledges she assumes these students have), middle class, intelligent, and motivated. For the few students who do, homeschooling is a great option, however you're assuming a lot. For far too many kids, home is a comparatively dangerous place- it might be abusive, surrounded by violence, etc. (I will admit that, especially as children age, there is a flip side, but that's something schools have been working very hard to combat through things like anti-bullying policies.) Almost as bad are the students homeschooled so that their parents can teach them ignorance or so there parents can use them as a babysitting service for younger children. One of the reasons we made school mandatory was to protect children from being forced into the labor force. This woman, with her private school background and transitory subbing, obviously has never worked with special education students. Some special education students can be homeschooled- but usually only if mom's stuck home, too. I've worked one on one with kindergarteners and first graders struggling with basics that their peers mastered long ago. It is the amazing support our system provides that gets these children not only reading, but learning how to say hello to peers (putting these kids in with other kids isn't enough, they need training on what to say and do). Does Llewellyn think that every parent with a child like this can give up her or his life to teach them how to open a milk carton independently? There ARE kids who can not learn it on their own, but I've seen them learn when taught. Not every child or even teenager can go out and hand themselves "a real life and education," and Llewellyn is obviously living in a dream world when she says they can. Even students of "normal" intelligence aren't all self-motived. A video called "The School to Prison Pipeline" produced in inner city CT talked with a student who explained what he and most students on suspension do- play video games. Maybe Llewellyn would argue that they need a break, but are most drop-outs doing anything better? She's suggesting that these drop-outs should have quit school with everyone. There are plenty of things you might want to change about school, but the way to fix them isn't to abandon schools- it's to actually work at it. ( )
1 vote t1bnotown | Dec 30, 2006 |
don't be thrown off by the title - this book is for everyone. i *do* wish i'd run across it years earlier, but right after college is a pretty confusing time as it is. this book helped. it's inspiring, scary, and just makes you feel excited for the possibilities around every corner again. a great book. ( )
2 vote mellowtrouble | Sep 28, 2006 |
experiental learning is the best learning -- this will help you get out of the classroom and put your brain to use ( )
  tiggergrrl | Jul 24, 2006 |
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Autodidacticism

Grace Llewellyn

The Teenage Liberation Handbook

Descrição do livro

Amazon.com (ISBN 0962959103, Paperback)

You won't find this book on a school library shelf--it's pure teenage anarchy. While many homeschooling authors hem and haw that learning at home isn't for everyone, this manifesto practically tells kids they're losers if they do otherwise. With the exception of a forwarding note to parents, this book is written entirely for teenagers, and the first 75 pages explain why school is a waste of time. Grace Llewellyn insists that people learn better when they are self-motivated and not confined by school walls. Instead of homeschooling, which connotes setting up a school at home, Llewellyn prefers "unschooling," a learning method with no structure or formal curriculum. There are tips here you won't hear from a school guidance counselor. Llewellyn urges kids to take a vacation--at least for a week--after quitting school to purge its influence. "Throw darts at a picture of your school" or "Make a bonfire of old worksheets," she advises. She spends an entire chapter on the gentle art of persuading parents that this is a good idea. Then she gets serious. Llewellyn urges teens to turn off the TV, get outside, and turn to their local libraries, museums, the Internet, and other resources for information. She devotes many chapters to books and suggestions for teaching yourself science, math, social sciences, English, foreign languages, and the arts. She also includes advice on jobs and getting into college, assuring teens that, contrary to what they've been told in school, they won't be flipping burgers for the rest of their days if they drop out.

Llewellyn is a former middle-school English teacher, and she knows her audience well. Her formula for making the transition from traditional school to unschooling is accompanied by quotes on freedom and free thought from radical thinkers such as Steve Biko and Ralph Waldo Emerson. And Llewellyn is not above using slang. She capitalizes words to add emphasis, as in the "Mainstream American Suburbia-Think" she blames most schools for perpetuating. Some of her attempts to appeal to young minds ring a bit corny. She weaves through several chapters an allegory about a baby whose enthusiasm is squashed by a sterile, unnatural environment, and tells readers to "learn to be a human bean and not a mashed potato." But her underlying theme--think for yourself--should appeal to many teenagers. --Jodi Mailander Farrell

(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:13 -0400)

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