When first it became apparent to my friends and professional acquaintances that I had no intention of sending my daughter to school when she was four or five, there was a general feeling that the experiment would soon fail. As she grew older and started becoming obnoxious, as schoolchildren so often do, I would surely find that spending so much time with the child would drive me mad. Or just wait until she hit puberty! Then I would find the whole thing intolerable, with my daughter screaming abuse at me and refusing point-blank to do as I asked. Even if I could stick at it, what of the poor child’s future? She would have no GCSEs, no prospect of going into higher education, no friends, no social skills. A pretty bleak prospect, all in all!
Of course, a dozen or so years down the road and none of these gloomy predictions have proved to be anything near the mark. The reaction has now changed to one of sourness and my being told that I have been ‘lucky’. Lucky that I have avoided the adolescent rows that nearly all our friends have endured from their children, lucky that my daughter studied hard and did well in her exams, lucky that she has a place at a good university, lucky that she does not lie to us, steal from us, smoke dope; the list is endless. Of course ’luck’ does not really enter into the matter at all. I thought that a lot of the problems of childhood and adolescence are caused by allowing other children to become the dominant influence, rather than the family. I do not think that most schools are up to the job of teaching effectively and so avoided them. These are not questions of luck, I made a series of what seemed to me to be rational choices. Like most home educating parents, we had to make considerable sacrifices to achieve our object. Both of us could only work part-time, which meant a greatly reduced income. I certainly had less freedom than most of the fathers whom I knew. Still, the rewards were also correspondingly greater as well, so I don’t think that I have got the raw end of the deal. Most of those who predicted disaster for my own daughter, view their own adolescent daughters with despair and there seem to be terrible breaches between them and their children.
All in all, the whole home educating enterprise has been a huge success for our family and I shall in a way be sorry to see it end in the autumn. However, all good things come to an end and I shall have plenty with which to occupy myself in the coming years. Which brings me neatly to another point. I observe that some people seem dismayed at the amount that I am writing on this blog. Why this should be, I really could not say; nobody is, after all, compelled to come here and read what I have to say. Indeed, judging by the apoplexy which my views evidently provoke in others, it would perhaps be best if some of my readers gave this place a wide berth! Others seem concerned that I am spending too much time replying to comments here. One hardly knows how to answer such a criticism. It seems to me only courteous that if somebody has taken the trouble to respond to what I have said, then I should listen to their criticism and reply. The fact is, I write tens of thousands of words each week and a few hundred expended on this blog and the other one which I write is neither here nor there among all the other writing in which I am engage. Like many people, I constantly flick back and forth while writing between google, my blogs, the news, spotify and a dozen other places. I suppose that the only remedy which I am able to suggest for those who either dislike my views or are anxious about how frequently I express those views, is not to come here so often themselves. Reading what I have to say does not seem to be a pleasant experience for some and their continued presence here strikes me as being more than a little perverse. Resist the temptation to read this blog, you guys. You know you will feel all the better for abstaining from this pernicious habit!
Monday, 11 July 2011
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Maybe it's the same as picking at a scab? You know you shouldn't... but it's there and itching and somehow you can't help yourself? I suspect some of your posts come from the same motivation.
ReplyDeleteI read you because I enjoy being encouraged to think about issues. Sometimes I agree, sometimes I don't, but you're never anything less than thought provoking.
"Even if I could stick at it, what of the poor child’s future? She would have no GCSEs, no prospect of going into higher education, no friends, no social skills. A pretty bleak prospect, all in all!"
ReplyDeleteAnd happily for us your similar predictions for autonomously educated children are just as false.
"I observe that some people seem dismayed at the amount that I am writing on this blog."
I think quality rather than quantity sums it up nicely. Your blog has become repetitive and superficial, partly because you seem compelled to write something every day and don't have the time to put much effort into it.
"I suppose that the only remedy which I am able to suggest for those who either dislike my views or are anxious about how frequently I express those views, is not to come here so often themselves."
But then who would contradict some of your stranger ideas and put the other side to your one dimensional views? It seems a shame to leave them unchallenged for others to read.
"Reading what I have to say does not seem to be a pleasant experience for some and their continued presence here strikes me as being more than a little perverse"
But it's so amusing.
Anonymous said...
ReplyDeleteMaybe it's the same as picking at a scab? You know you shouldn't... but it's there and itching and somehow you can't help yourself? I suspect some of your posts come from the same motivation.
I read you because I enjoy being encouraged to think about issues. Sometimes I agree, sometimes I don't, but you're never anything less than thought provoking.
Exactly how I feel about Simon's blog! I like that I can come here and read the sometimes scandalous,often amusing, but always thought-provoking posts. I like that I can disagree without feeling I am about to be censored. This encourages me to to decide how I feel about issues, whether I am on one side or another, and where my bottom-line is.
What is your other blog?
ReplyDelete"I observe that some people seem dismayed at the amount that I am writing on this blog."
ReplyDeleteYou misunderstand me. Dismay is far too strong a description and I just thought you could spend the same the time you have on quality rather than quantity. I'd be perfectly happy to read the same amount if you could afford to give it more time. I also struggle to understand why you feel it necessary to claim to spend less time on your blog than you actually do. It sounds like an excuse. But don't worry, some of the recent commenters have more than made up for any lack within the article.
' and don't have the time to put much effort into it.'
ReplyDeleteSee how fickel and inconsistent are my critics? Only yesterday, somebody was making the opposite complaint; that I spent too much time here. I suppose that one cannot please everybody!
Simon.
'Anonymous said...
ReplyDeleteWhat is your other blog?'
Falls back laughing... It is a fairly thoughtful and calm place, where those commenting make serious and relevant points. I doubt whether some of the more demented characters who hang around here would really feel comfortable there. I originally started this blog, you will recall, as a quiet place which would act as an alternative to some of the more fevered lists and forums on home education. Unfortunately, a number of people from those same lists now visit here regualarly, making foolish and inflammatory comments.
Simon.
You're misunderstanding again. I didn't complain that you spent too much time here, I just suggested that you could spend the available time better; quality rather than quantity. I didn't mention how long you spend on your blog because I thought you spend too long on it. It was because the reason you gave for the superficial nature of your articles is that you only spend 10-20 minutes a day on your blog, when clearly this is not the case. Really, please get it straight.
ReplyDelete"Resist the temptation to read this blog, you guys. You know you will feel all the better for abstaining from this pernicious habit!"
ReplyDeleteThe best advice you've given yet, Simon! I think I'll take it. :)
I love this blog! Very thought provoking most of the time, and the banter in the comments section quite often make me laugh out loud, much to my partner's bemusement. Keep it up Simon!
ReplyDelete