Monday, November 1, 2010

what if....

every day.....



you got to stay at the Art Station.....as long as you wanted.

and you got to play computer games...as long as you wanted....



and recess came whenever you felt too big for the house so you pull on your sneakers and run out without your coat. then you tear around the tree and jump in huge piles of leaves until your nose runs and your cheeks are red and you almost wish you'd remembered your coat...almost.

~*~

what if, when we were growing up, there wasn't someone telling us to move to the next station (even though our painting wasn't done yet and we didn't like the play-house)? how would our lives be different now?

what if, The Experts didn't scare us with the evils of computer games and how they're eroding the minds and souls of our children (even though when given free access and steady guidance, our children are capable of making balanced choices)? could we accept that computers and games have a place?

what if, children were free to run and explore and experience the wild world around them without being hovered over and organized and lectured? would we still think it's irresponsible to let our kids out of arm's reach?

can you imagine what they might learn?

like shape and form and colour; like the vast power of imagination and our innate gifts of creativity; how you can learn physics and architecture without even realizing it by figuring out where to put the dynamite to demolish the computer-generated model; like how you discover the first frost and why it's on some leaves and not others and you might hypothesize why this is so. and without being told, you're right.

they might even learn that a paintbrush has equal value to an algorithm and a poem is just math in a different format.



all that, and more, before 11 am.

~*~

there are times when i despair that *i* don't know enough or have enough knowledge in some area or other to be responsible for the education of these children. that maybe lesson plans aren't such a bad idea; that maybe there should be more of this or that.

and then i remember that these children are amazing, and that as long as it's fed, their natural curiosity will take them so much farther than any preconceived ideas we might have over what *stuff* we think they should know. that to suppose we can know what lies ahead in the wonder of their lives is a mild form of arrogance. they are, after all, only on loan to us...and not ours to create in our own, or anyone else's image.

such is the beauty and the miracle of this life we are leading.

2 comments:

  1. My school decided RE was more important than Art or a foreign language. That was not the choice I wanted to make and was soooo wrong for me. Like I needed to learn any more about Christianity. All my life surrounded by it and even then, I showed signs of becoming a pagan.... You are a brave woman *hug*

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  2. i think we'd be more open to all the possibilities. we'd be less afraid to let our own learn this way--be this way.

    it's hard to let go of these restrictive ways. but when i do....i'm always amazed by what just seems to happen, how things just seem to flow!

    so happy that you're finding that and allowing your littles one all the pleasures that follow.

    xo!

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