external validation and educational ponderings.

external validation of home ed is always a difficult idea for me. i am uncertain under which conditions it would actually have any validity, which is why we don’t seek it! i think that the only current people who have a valid opinion on how well we are doing to provide an education suitable for age, ability and aptitude are me and chris. what about SB? well, she obviously has a v great say in the educational process, what she wants to do, as we are child led [a bit autonomous with some formal maths!] I think – defining our hE practice with regards to other peoples is a slippery fish! its easy to say you school at home, sonlight etc, and its easy to be completely autonomous, but we aren’t either. much more on the autonomous side, with lots of educational strewing going on! Anyway, if she likes something,w e do it [even timetabling, which has now stopped!] if she doesn’t like something, we don’t. So, if we assume that we educate in a way that suits SB and she enjoys, it will usually meet the 3 a’s for her. But is it any good?

well, for that we need some goals perhaps to see if we are on a path to achieve? hmm, goal setting then seems much more cagey.

  1. i would like her to be in a place to choose what and how and when for exams and further ed, and that I shouldn’t have limited her options. but of course i will have done. school limited mine – what did or didn’t clash etc. so i hope that i can keep a broad base of options until it is clear where she wishes to direct her path. I think that is my present goal. [can't answer for chris]. both of us went to uni, and although i ‘m not saying now she has to go, i want that option to be most definitely there. and its this that muddies my autonomous approach! [maths - and handwriting, though SB has specifically requested that = autonomous perhaps!] . so they are my deepest darkest goals!
  2. my more apparent ones are that i want her to see learning and acquiring knowledge fun and interesting, to not lose the thirst and spark about it. At the moment she wants to rampage through the magic school bus books [so i had better buy some then!] and this is what i love, seeing her head in a book, and then proudly telling me facts, and making me guess -testing me! and this goal at present complements the other. what i’ll do if they ever don’t run in tandem waits to be seen!
  3. and i want her to enjoy her childhood, that this education and learning stuff isn’t pressurised. that she plays and grows up at her own pace rather than in response to peer pressure

so, i guess by my goal setting we are OK too. but i always think we could do it ‘a bit better’ , that a bit more organisation on our part, of the day, of the resources, of tidyness would waste less precious time and present more options.

Of course, if i did have to submit to external validation, i could talk and present stuff and gloss and spin, and i imagine they would walk away perfectly satisfied even if i’m not. [they might surprise me! we have no written proof of anything except maths] it would be totally irrelevant to me/us though as a validation [or not] of our methods. It could never be more than a tick box exercise. i would ignore criticisms as well as commendations.

BTW, this is not a criticism of those that do have meetings, provide evidence etc. but in a round about way, a criticism of those bodies that think they can measure home ed at all. the only people that can with a true heart say whether the education provided is suitable are those intimately involved. and it is us, the parents responsibility that no complacency or external tick box allows us to not follow up on our niggles and try and iron them out, to be true facilitators of the learning process, however it suits our own family.

4 responses to “external validation and educational ponderings.

  1. Agreed. Thank you.

  2. I wrestle with this, especially the more tidy more organised bit, but i come down heavily on the side of autonomy. My he daughter and my schooled but lots of autonomous leaning at home son are right now playing together on the ds light on brain training and doing maths and I am surprised how much my daughter knows, she is dyscalculiac and has had no formal maths since leaving school 15 months ago but has learnt and consolidated a lot in that time.

    And no one is coming to visit and assess me again either.

  3. I don’t think that most LAs can offer anyone who can give anything other than the most superficial of reports on home ed. The report we got from our only visit was just a list really. It reminded me of the ‘reports’ we got home from infant school on Pearlie. They told us precisely nothing about her ‘ability’ that we didn’t already know. And they were from someone who saw her every day – never mind once a year. They tended not to tell us much about what actually went on day to day.

    I sometimes think I have aims for the kids but when I get them out of the fog of my head, dust them down and have a good look at them, they don’t really stand up to scrutiny. In the end I can’t honestly say I have any aim other than that they feel as happy and fulfilled as possible at even given time in their lives. And, even then, I know that this is impossible because we have to have rubbish bits in our lives too! I guess I just want to love them and give them a home (as long as they want it) that enables them to be themselves – whoever that may be! Gosh, it’s slippery, this stuff…

  4. I’ll admit to allowing visits mainly as a means of having a glowing report to wave under the noses of family members!

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