InsteadOfEducation
John Holt - Instead of Education
Recently while watching and listening to some of the works of Alan Kay I ran across a reading list that he put together. I really wish that Mr. Kay would write a book, but I'm also a fan of reading lists.
I actually had some of the books that were on the list, and I was familiar with others. I went to the library and grabbed a stack of the books. This is the first one that I read - I only spent a limited amount of time on the book, less than 24 hours from picking it up at the library to blog post.
Overview
The basic point of Holt's book is that people in general learn better when they are working on something that they want to do. Traditional schools squelch the natural learning that happens with children and that we should move away from compulsory education. He advocates a completely free approach to education as exemplified by the Ny Lilleskole in Denmark. This type of education has come to be called 'unschooling'
Ny Lilleskole - Denmark video
Mr. Holt presents two competing views of education. The first is a 'school' with basically no rules. Children are allowed to do what they want, when they want, and with whom they want. This is allowed to go on day after day after day. No suggestions about 'you should do math', and really no requirement that they attend. If the kids want to spend all day playing soccer, no problem.
He spends only a chapter talking about this school (Ch. 11), but goes to pains to point out that the students, upon leaving, usually go on to some form of 'traditional' higher education, and do better than their peers who were schooled in the traditional fashion.
Traditional School
On the flip side, he presents traditional school as a place that is oppressive and exists only to teach kids to respect authority, and be ranked in a pecking order. He says it all more eloquently than I am here but this is his basic understanding of the function of traditional schools. This constant compulsion, ranking and pigeonholing conditions kids to think of themselves in a certain way, and he spends a whole chapter (15 - Obedient Torturers) showing that people respond in a conditioned way to a figure of authority who 'knows better than I do.' - If I recall, John Gatto's book Dumbing us Down makes the same points as he does in chapter 14.
My Thoughts
My thoughts at first are "Hey! you can't do that!!" I wonder how on earth you get a kid to learn math if you don't force them to do anything, and I wonder why a smart guy would put a book like this on his reading list. Alan Kay, however, learned to read before the age of three1. Because he started learning from a young age, he learned quite a bit on his own, because he wanted to. Because of this early start as a self-educator, he had problems 'adjusting' to a traditional school format.
Here recently, I've been struggling to get my son to do his math. He complains that he doesn't like it and that it is boring. I tell him that he'd better get used to it because it's life.
I notice at my own work that I am so much more efficient and learn so much more when I am doing something that I want to do and I find interesting. I also know what it feels like when I am doing things that feel useless and boring, but someone else wants me to do, and I feel compelled to do them.
Is school primarily to prepare us for the latter? Would we be better served to have the former as our primary way of being in the world? Are we really preparing students for 'the world' to 'make' them learn things they don't want to?
Why is it that Ny Lilleskole worked when logic would say that it would not? Here is my guess. Kids are conditioned to think about themselves in a certain way. At a regular school, you are ranked at how well you do at rote memorization, how well you do what others want you to do, not how well you perform at doing what you want to do. If someone is telling you all day, every day what you have to do, then when you have free time, you don't really want to do anything.
Contrast the free school. Kids are conditioned to the idea that they are able to do whatever they set their minds to. At first the effect would might be a drop on standards achievement tests (of course they don't use those at the free school). Over the long term though, the underlying notion that I can do whatever I set my mind on doing would be the overriding learning from this environment. When the student gets into a college it is because it is their choice and they have in their mind that they can do it . . . or something to that effect.
Have you had any experience with unschooling? Let me know how it worked, what things we would all find surprising.
1. From the book Out of Their Minds: The Lives and Discoveries of 15 Great Computer Scientists. 1995