Maryanna Jacobs’ children don’t go to school. Rio, nine, and son Bryden, eight, spend their days playing Minecraft on their laptops, baking or going on errands with their mother instead.
Their mum is “unschooling” them and she insists it’s the best decision she’s ever made for her family. Instead of getting dressed in a uniform and doing lessons in a classroom, Rio and Bryden stay at home and learn “naturally” by playing computer games and going for walks.
“Both the kids have learnt numbers, words and how to type through their computer games, and they’ve learnt a lot about computers too,” Maryanna tells The Daily Mail . ‘They’ve learnt maths through things like shopping and baking. Numbers are always going through Bryden’s head – he’s fascinated with clocks and timetables. Rio is more of a words person – she learnt through games like Scrabble and Monopoly. ‘They’ve learnt about birds, trees and rocks just by being outdoors.”
Maryanna doesn’t believe in routines or schedules either, so her kids don’t have set meal or bedtimes, sometimes only going to sleep at midnight.
“We have a great deal of quality time together and it’s made us closer as a family,” she insists. “It makes me very sad when I hear parents say they can’t wait for their children to go to school so they can have some peace and quiet. Why have children if you don’t want them around?”
Rio and Bryden initially attended preschool five days a week, but when Rio was four, her mother heard about “unschooling”.
The philosophy rejects traditional education in favour of letting children choose what they want to do. There are no accurate figures on how many children are unschooled in Australia, but more than 50,000 kids were home schooled last year.