This woman’s sons did not go to school – they learned ‘organically’ at home. One now has a PHD and works for Google. Others don’t meet basic literacy requirements. Meet the Unschoolers.
From the age of five we never really escape school. We start, finish, go to uni, get a job, get married, have kids, and then we’re back at school. There are drop offs, pick-ups, books, pencils, uniforms, homework. But what if we simply walked away from all of that? What if we didn’t participate in formal education at all?
Meet the families who opted out. They have embraced Unschooling. Which is not homeschooling – it’s no schooling at all.
For unschoolers, there are no classes, no subjects, no sitting down to complete assigned activities and no tests.
These children are expected to pick up skills like reading, writing and maths through normal life, when they are ready, naturally, organically.
Sometimes it turns out great. Other times it’s a spectacular failure.
The Clarks, from Toowoomba in Queensland, decided to remove their children from school when their eldest Jemima began to struggle. She has Aspergers (a disorder on the autism spectrum) and found school extremely difficult. Her parents Rachel and George saw such an positive change in their daughter that they decided to remove her younger sister Milly from school too. Their son William has never been to school and their baby never will.
60 MinutesRachel feels that formal education isn't suited to all children. "I think our education system hasn't changed substantially in a lot of years and it still suits a lot of children. They're happy to do what the teachers ask, happy to learn as they're told in the order they're told - we learn the small bit to get to the bigger bit - some kids like our eldest they want to see the big picture, and then they'll fill in the gaps with the smaller bits when they need it."