My annotated bibliography focuses on how various educational theories work in our particular homeschool setting in order to document, or map out, our educational journey.
Walker, S. (2001). Teaching Meaning in Artmaking. Worcester, MA: Davis Publications. Following my Unschooled post, I asked a couple of educators at church about play in education. I have been, for some time, mulling over the question: How do I (as an educator) help my children transition from early childhood into more independent learning through play?
0 Comments
My annotated bibliography focuses on how various educational theories work in our particular homeschool setting in order to document, or map out, our educational journey.
Follow up: McDonald, Kerry. (2019). Unschooled: Raising Curious, Well-Educated Children Outside the Conventional Classroom. In an effort to document more of what my children are doing in homeschool, and offering a more practical resource for other homeschoolers out there, I am including a series of activities we’ve been doing over the past few weeks since reading Unschooled. Chinese New Year. My annotated bibliography focuses on how various educational theories work in our particular homeschool setting in order to document, or map out, our educational journey.
McDonald, Kerry. (2019). Unschooled: Raising Curious, Well-Educated Children Outside the Conventional Classroom. I have to confess that it took me over a month to read Kerry McDonald’s book, Unschooled. I would pick it up, read a few pages and then have to set it aside for awhile; and not always because of life interrupting. I came away with a love/hate feeling about unschooling. Let me explain. |
Ruth M. SmithCommunity arts educator and researcher. Drinking coffee. Home educating. Making art. Listening intentionally. Categories
All
Archives
February 2022
|