Now, the question of freedom does not end with the freedoms I have already mentioned: freedom of being bilingual and freedom of choice of a learning arena. There are quite a few freedoms I will take up in the next several posts.
Today we will look at the questions of interests and of time.
Freedom for the children to pursue their interests.
Our son, he is 12, is a very musical kid. When he attended
school though he never had time to practice and to use time on perfecting his
skills. This Fall, after he devoted enough time to clarinet, he won the Super-final's audience
prize in Norwegian National Music competition for
Youth. The first prize was won by a 21-year old flutist, so we ARE very proud J.
Our youngest is keen on biology. Her interest in
experiments, in work with microscope, in learning about cells, plants, animals
is really big. She is reading the high school textbook in Biology, and she is
only 9.
Our kids’ interest for history led us to petroglyphs in
Norway and Kazakhstan for learning about stone age, Egypt's pyramids and Israel for Ancient history, Bergen and Trondheim, Lithuania and
Germany for Middle Ages... We are learning a lot
through travelling, which brings us to the next freedom, freedom of time.
Freedom of time
In Oslo, there is a very strict rule which does not allow
school children to take much free from school. Only the death (God forbid) of a
relative, can be a reason for children to take free. This same relative’s
75-year old day celebration is out of question. We have always traveled a bit
and tried to make kids learn on site. But with the latest development it became
impossible to take children to Delfi in Greece to see the first Greek stadium,
the “hub of the universe” there, to learn about oracles where they actually
were performing their predictions. As one example. (We did take our oldest out of school for this trip when she was in the 5th grade, but did not manage to repeat it with the next child, he was trying school then).
But when we returned to homeschooling in May we managed to travel to Baikonur launching site in Kazakhstan and see the manned spacecraft being
launched into the darkness of night sky!
May 28th 2013, launching of Soyuz TMA-09 spacecraft, expedition "Volare", with Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano, American Karen Nyberg (sounds like she had Norwegian ancestors :)). She is woman no. 50 in space!) and Russian Fyodor Yurchikhin (he has 4 missions and 537 days in space in his life!). Their mission was to last 6 months on the International Space Station.
It is hard to believe, but we SAW THIS LIVE! And no video can describe the feeling in your stomach, when this thunder sound fills every cell of your body! And the stars!! There is no camera which can catch the beauty of the dark night sky and the spaceship thrusting it and slowly turning into just another star up there, only a moving star... This is just such an indescribable beauty! What a blessing that we got to see this once in our lives!
We also visited the Baiconur museum and children climbed into a real landing capsule!
Of course, freedom of time does not necessarily include
travelling, not at all. In some
stressful or tiresome moments we can just take free from “school”, sleep in and
spend our days... learning differently. For example by reading, watching a
documentary, taking a walk in the woods or just sitting on a sofa with a cup of
hot chocolate and talking about life. Or visiting an old lady in a nursing home
and listen to her stories about the time when she was little... It actually is
so that home school is never ending. You almost never can say: now, the school
is over, thank you. The kids suddenly realize that learning is something which
goes on 24/7! You cannot turn on your brain at 8:30 and turn it off at 3. You
learn all the time.
Another time issue is being able to finish what you have
started. How many projects lay unfinished at school. How many books are read
only partly. How many ideas never come to life. Well, we do have time to finish
our projects. Maria for her brother’s birthday has made a hand-written magazine
with songs, poems, illustrations, and tales in it. She made an elaborated
hand-made dragon game for the whole family. The fact that they are allowed to
spend as much time as they need in order to finish their work motivate them a lot.
Another time issue is of course the activities. Our kids were to attend a sport activity and an art one during each semester. That was our plan.
The problem is that these activities tend to accumulate and the old activities
are not easy to drop. Nevertheless through the years our three kids learnt to swim,
to fence, they tried basketball, football, gymnastics, athletics, they go skiing and skating, but not organized.
They also were into painting, ceramics, dance, ballet, drama, choir, music of
different kinds. (Please keep in mind that this list does not mean that each child tried each activity. No, for example, football and basketball were our oldest daughter's sports, while choir is something only Maria does). Now they stick to fencing (Daniel), science course (Maria), music lessons (both), choir (Maria) and orchestra (both) as their main activities.
I hope you are not tired of reading because I am going to talk about the big S, socialization, next time.
Keep posted :)))
Keep on postin´ Im trying to convince my Russian wife to start homeschooling. Our daughter is only 4 so we have two more years to decide.
SvarSlettJust let her read this blog ;)
SlettShe can also take a contact with me on mamma.oslo (at) gmail . com
:))) Good luck :)
Brilliant post, Can't wait for the "Big S" in Part 5 :) Just one question, do you feel that in Oslo kommune that it is more accepted that you are homeschooling because you yourself are a teacher by education? Just curious! Thanks, Julie
SvarSlettThank you, Julie!
SlettNo, I actually have not told them that :))) I just wrote a short note to the monitoring school that we were to homeschool our kids and we started the day after :). My education is my secret weapon ;-)