On media misrepresentation

Good thing Law and Order ended when it did for me, or else I wouldn’t have popped back onto twitter, seen this stream and had something to bitch about tonight.

Discovery Health’s Radical Parenting episode.

Disclosure: I didn’t watch the show, and a lot of my point of view has been surmised from posts reviewing the show, like this one.

I’m getting really tired of the constant labelling. What purpose does media serve, other than to create divisions, by using the word radical in reference to allowing a child of any gender to ignore the stereotypical gender roles and their denominating colours of pink and blue? How is global thought furthered by calling early potty trainers or elimination communicators extremists? Natural learners aren’t deviants, at all – they’re people who believe in learning, as most parents do.

These are all practices that are embraced and considered natural for parents to engage in, in most countries of the world. But for some reason, our little sector of the planet feels the need to cast about judgments and throw stones.

I breastfed until my daughter was done. She chose, not me. We started potty training when she showed initiative toward it – not sooner, because we didn’t have the communication (nor I the patience) in place for EC. If the media thinks that holding your baby over a pot to pee is militant, they should examine any other culture wherein wealth isn’t as prevalent or wasted. If ‘allowing’ boys to play with dolls and girls to wear blue while embracing their inner GI Joe is revolutionary, then I have to ask at a decibel-level just under a yell, why?

Why is that something to allow in the first place – it’s creative play. Creative play is shown, studies over, to create compassionate, open-minded and intelligent youth.

What do people who do consider this leftist see as the risk of allowing it? The stereotype, a homosexual child? A gender-confused one? Will little Billy will end up wanting to be Jill at 24 and you’ll be able to look way back in his history and remember how he baked cookies with mom?

It’s bullshit, narrow-minded, and as far as I’m concerned, a few minor rungs short of spreading hatred. It’s the media’s equivalent of us vs. them, normal vs. wrong, sane vs. unbalanced.

This kind of stuff is largely why I stopped following a lot of media – why I don’t have cable TV, read the newspaper or listen to the radio – the fear tactics, the creative labelling, and the need to put a title on every single little thing so that millions upon millions of people can all fit into little boxes that, ultimately, a corporation has created for them.

One of the first philosophical conversations my father and I ever had – and we had a lot, because even with the rest of it, we were able to talk for hours about nearly anything logic-based – was what was right and wrong. How that was determined. How do most know what’s ethically right? Or how to raise children? Or that 2+3=5?

Because it’s been deemed so, by a large group, adopted as a general rule, and taken in as a permanent scripture (whether that means biblically, or in a textbook).

Once upon a time, there was no universe, and that’s what people knew was right. A hundred years later, people could laugh at the naiveté.

Better example: How do you know that cigarettes are bad for you? Well, millions of people will tell you so if you ask (and often, if you don’t ask, too. Thanks, fuckers), and lots of those people are doctors, who’ve read or conducted studies and treated patients with various cigarette-caused disease. But less than a century ago, cigarettes were not only not bad for you, they were good for you for various reasons, not the least of which being that they helped you relieve stress during times of war.

But I digress, sort of. The point was to say that we live in a society wherein every moment seems to be throwing new information at us, and it gets hard to know which is the right fact of the moment. Whether soy will give you cancer or lower your cholesterol; whether you can trust a brand to use ethical trade/investment/sales practices; and whether (this was the real piss off, to me) unschoolers have children running around at all hours of the day, unwashed, without discipline, eating tons of doughnuts and ice cream, drinking soda like it’s all that’s left on Earth, playing video games and getting their educations from the trips to the grocery store.

Unschoolers aren’t anarchists. Unschoolers believe in natural education. Period. Just like any other kind of parent, homeschooler, afterschooler, Montessori-embracer, et al, Unschoolers want their children to learn, and to be successful and happy while doing it. Unschooling, just like any (and more) of the other education types I just listed, has a variety of differing practices.

I refuse to be boxed in with a label this show has created that denotes I might practice (what I consider to be just short of) neglect.

As parents, we’re responsible for the health and welfare of our children – I think we can all agree on that. This means, and here’s where some Unschoolers’ practices don’t jive with mine, that we have to look at a five year old and know he’s not emotionally prepared to decide whether to bathe at all. That the seven year old might not be the best person to make choices all the time about their diet. That some children, regardless of age might be able to express tiredness when they are tired, and therefore are capable of going without a set bedtime, but others will stretch themselves past the point of exhaustion, through to insomnia. And so, as parents, it’s our right to ensure that our kids aren’t dirty, on the path to diabetes and 42 cavities, and over-tired all the time. Even if we’re Unschoolers.

What this show did in (what I’m assuming was) an hour is create for viewers a picture of what Unschooling looks like. What they might have taken in is a dirty child, hopped up on sugar, extremely adverse to logic or self-discipline. Or, they could have seen parents that entrusted their children with their own lives. My gut tells me that those who are already versed in Unschooling might have had less judgment, but that’s an assumption.

But here’s the thing: they’re kids, man. They have to grow up a little bit, before they have the neural pathways to even be able to comprehend long-term results, such as malnutrition, tooth decay, diabetes, obesity, illiteracy, long-term  sleep deprivation, dehydration, or inactivity.

Unschooling, to me, is quite simple. It’s the dismissal of an education system that was originally created to encourage drone-like behaviour for times of industrial growth. In Prussia. It’s believing that learning takes place during other hours, not just from 9 to 3, Monday to Friday. It’s saying, ‘hey, my kid can’t sit in a chair for 35 minutes, never mind a few hours until lunch time, but if he gets to run around, he learns about stuff twice as fast. So we’re going to a field to talk about geography.’ It’s providing extreme amounts of support and independence to your children, letting them pursue their own interests, but guiding them toward the tools to gain more knowledge in them. It’s allowing them opportunity and encouraging them to take it and run with it as far as they want to.

It’s why, for the people who do think so, I’m considered intelligent. My inherent ability to hyper-focus on a subject that I’m interested in and educate myself, using a variety of mediums that I know work for me, has given me a pseudo-graduate level of knowledge in a few areas. It’s not because I’m wicked smart, it’s because the opportunity and interest coincide. That’s natural learning, in a nutshell.

It’s why Microsoft exists.

Okay. Before you start hating on Bill, listen to the point.

MS used to be a really damn respected brand, and it was built from one little dude’s brain. (Incidentally, I think Stevie’s story is similar, but I’m not positive.) Bill was a nerd. Bill like computer stuff – what he had access to – so he bartered for more access, in his own time, and started living and breathing the things. Because he was Unschooling himself. His parents allowed him to stay out all hours, knowing he was safe in a gigantic room with a gigantic computer, because they saw the passion he had and the speciality he was amassing.

Get back in the Delorian, and we have Microsoft. And a once-veritable monopoly.

Had Bill’s parents assumed that what he was taking in school was enough, that a bedtime was to be enforced, or that he wasn’t to be trusted with all of this free time, you might not get to use Windows 7 or Vista. I know how sad you’d be, then.

After all of these words, I’ve convoluted (and proved) the initial message: media, like in tonight’s show, is too focused on classing people, which leads to people judging other people.

Some, after watching the show, are now thinking ew, Unschooling, and I’m sitting here going, ‘No! That’s not Unschooling! That’s Unparenting!’.

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  • al_pal
    Wow, great post. Fascinating stuff.
  • I 100% agree with the fact that media misrepresents things, especially things not mainstream, and creates dissension.

    I know the Parent family personally. While I don't know them extremely well, I have had the pleasure of being around their loving family and the honor of learning from Sarah at the Rethinking Education conference in 2009.

    There are some unschooling families that practice what has become known as Radical Unschooling, and even Radical Unschooling, as I know it and understand it, is NOT unparenting.

    The Parent family for that matter is NOT an unparenting family! I truly believe that the media here focused on what they wanted you to see, and not the beauty that truly is the Parent family! Sarah and Chris Parent thrive and greatly enjoy seeing their children learn in a variety of environments, and they continually encourage and facilitate that learning.

    Why then was the son read to and not encouraged to read himself? WHO KNOWS! There are a thousand of possible reasons; it was staged for the filming and the son was uncomfortable doing so, anxiety of being filmed, preoccupied with something else, but regardless of the reason wanting to still respond understandingly and compassionately to your child without placing disrespectful demands to read it yourself, and so many more possibilities still exist as to why. We cannot and SHOULD NOT judge on one scene or experience.

    Would you want to be judged and criticized because spouted a demand to your child, yelled at your child for no good reason, or spanked your child without even considering what might of been going on to spark the tantrum to begin with?

    It is all about respect, compassion, and love. Unschooling families place show respect, compassion, and love at all times by entrusting things to their children to decide upon themselves that most other parents just habitually decide for them. Where is there any learning of responsibility, decision making, and consequences if the parent just habitually makes the decision. This is what is called life learning, and what unschooling is all about! WHOLE LIFE LEARNING!! Striving to learn in all situations and environments, and promoting and encouraging self-motivation and self-driven-learning.

    I would hope that those that don't understand unschooling, would be self-motivated or self-driven to do some independent self-learning, unschooling, on what the heck unschooling is anyways, and not be close-minded and assume what the media portrays is truth!
  • Found you through Pauline... wow.
    Thanks for the insight on unschooling, I have never heard of it, but am very interested now. I was thinking of homeschooling my kids (5, 3, 2, and 1 y.o.), but unschooling may be a little more my style.

    Can you direct me to some online resources that you feel more accurately represent unschooling?
  • Darlene
    Dayna Martin is one of the leading advocates on the topic. She has an Awesome YouTube Channel.
    http://www.youtube.com/user/Da...
    She also wrote a popular book, 'Radical Unschooling: A Revolution Has Begun"
    http://www.amazon.com/Radical-...
  • for what it's worth... which isn't much, since i'm not a parent...
    i totally agree with much that you said terra regarding the media's views about parenting and judgment of people's lives in general, but i also really agree with texanmama.
    i think traditional school might not be the BEST option at all times for all children, but i think it's important for kids to experience.
    to me, there's tremendous value in kids learning that they're not the centre of the universe. not all formal education and life learning in general will take place one on one. in fact, it pretty much never does.

    i absolutely loathed school... i was bored, smarter than most kids and wavered between A+ grades and failing grades because i either showed up and did the work or skipped and ignored it. formal education most certainly failed me... i spent 3 years in a challenge program with other students in the top percentage of the district from grades 3-6, but that program was cut due to funding issues. it was definitely my most valuable years of school on one level, however, it left holes in my education that exist to this day. because i didn't do regular classes for 3 years, i worked to my intelligence level, doing work meant for kids twice my age, i never learned to multiply for example. my spelling is atrocious. so while i benefited tremendously in some aspects... i suffered in others because i was deviated from "the program" of our education system.
    when i did my math 12 provincial i had columns of numbers everywhere - adding them because i couldn't multiply. it was embarrassing and i'd been called out by more than one teacher for it, but it's something my brain just can't absorb this late in the game because that fundamental building block was skipped.

    the social aspect of school was trying and painful at more junctions than i can count... but that's another story... but those experiences were integral to shaping me as an adult and if i hadn't had them i would be considerably different. in hindsight, i liked that i suffered. it taught me things about friendships, trust, relationships... existing in a crowd is good practice for later life... it taught me that when i worked for a major corporation, i shouldn't expect special treatment.

    at the end of the day, i can understand frustration with the education system... it's not perfect and it doesn't work perfectly for all children. but it's not meant to parent kids, it's meant to play a role in their education. the parent still has a responsibility to carry on the learning process at home. every parent should be home schooling, but that doesn't mean they should remove regular schooling as well...
    from my friends that are teachers, the most frustrating thing ever to them is when parents are angry because their kids aren't benefiting from school, yet when they talk to the parents, they say things like "well, that's YOUR job to teach them that, not mine"
    the education process must be a partnership between parents and teachers. and that's when the kids benefit most IMO.
    the parent knows their child best and the teacher knows education best. together they create the learning environment. and when you add in the trial-by-fire teasing-bully-filled-nightmare of public school... well, now you've really got some life learning happening.

    again... might change my tune if i have kids, but that's my point of view on it now.
  • texanmama
    Hi! First time visitor. You are a great writer!

    I agree and disagree with what you say. I agree that America is completely slanted toward the advertisements/publicity of whoever has the most money to spend, or the loudest voice, or the most controversial viewpoint. That sucks, because it's taking away the choices from parents. It's creating kids who think it is TOTALLY ACCEPTABLE to have a cell phone of their own when they're 6 years old. (That's just my little example.)

    However, I have to respectfully disagree that people who enjoy sending their kids to regular school are of the mindset that learning only happens 9-3, Monday through Friday. Or that it is good for them to learn how to sit still. I don't think regular school is the best solution for everyone, but I also don't think it's bad, as long as it's done the right way with good teachers and a healthy learning environment. Just like unschooling isn't for everyone, but it also is a viable way of learning, assuming it's done the right way with good teachers.

    I like your last comment, about "It's not unschooling, it's unparenting." While my experience with unschooling is very limited, I do know that ANY type of school experience will only be successful if a parent is involved. It's easy for typical schoolers to have uninvolved parents, but some typical schoolers have parents that make their school experience very successful.

    One last point: I think having kids learn to sit still, and take instruction, and follow a set of rules, is a good tool for their future success as an adult. It would be nice if bosses let their employees come and go whenever they want, with no project deadlines, and no guidelines as to how they want a job done. But, unfortunately, until the rest of America changes, then we have to teach children the skills they will need to succeed as adults. I think THAT is the most important thing we can do as parents.

    Those are my thoughts. Please don't hurt me. (*duckiing and covering*)
  • Vegas710
    Hi Texanmama. I wanted to address your last paragraph. I'm not an unschooler but I am going to start homeschooling next year. Part of the reason is all the wasted time my first grader spends in school. I am speaking specifically to her school here but it is a common situation in mid/lower income neighborhoods. She spends an hour sitting at a table quietly doing worksheets. Worksheets that she doesn't actually need for her learning, they are to keep her occupied while the teacher gives attention to another group. They rotate through this. She should learn to sit when it's appropriate but at 6 years old I'm not comfortable with the amount of sitting she's doing! She gets ten minutes outside and that is only because she races through her lunch. This week alone she watched three movies (feature length The Flintstones, The Wizard of Oz and a collection of Bugs Bunny cartoons)
    I will let Tara respond as an unschooler but knowing that unschoolers go on to be successful, contributing citizens says to me that it's working just fine!
  • texanmama
    Hi Vegas710. I understand why you are frustrated with your daughter's school
    situation. that's why I said that a traditional school is good only when it
    is done the right way, with good teachers. No child should be watching
    feature length anything in school. As a matter of fact, I don't think kids
    should be watching ANY tv AT ALL in school, no matter what (except maybe
    Nova or some other educational video). Kids get enought TV at home that they
    don't need it in school.

    And, like I said, unschooling is certainly a valid course of instruction, as
    long as it's done well (which, obviously, this documentary did not show a
    family doing unschooling well). It's a real shame that your daughter's
    school has failed her so much. She deserves better and as a tax payer I
    think you should demand it. Get involved. Go to Board meetings. Let the
    school faculty know that you're on the case and you won't let them slide.
    And, if you don't get satisfactory answers (as it sounds like that's the
    case) then removing your child from that school is the only thing for her
    best interest.

    Sounds like you're a really involved and perceptive parent. I'm sure
    whatever you choose for your daughter, she'll prove successful!
  • justanothermommyblog
    The media strikes again... The freedom that homeschooling gives my kids to BE KIDS and learn at their own paces (for the most part) is worth the looks we might get, I guess. But if we were to judge someone for their religion, it's considered prejudice. Isn't judging a family for their method of raising their children prejudiced, too?
  • I didn't catch the show but I did read all of your links. It's not surprising that the show chose the most extreme example of what they were trying to portray. It's not surprising but it is disappointing. As someone who is currently investigating alternatives to the public school system (unschooling and homeschooling specifically), it would of been more interesting to me to watch how real unschooling actually works instead of an extremist who appears to have procreated without any intention of guiding their children at all.
  • Kind of glad I don't have that channel. Didn't see it. But read about it all and yes..the media will sensationalize EVERYTHING. What parents in the world are exactly the same as their neighbours?

    Stop pittng parents against each other by chucking words like radical around..how about just 'different' from you or I or your neighbour etc.

    I really hope that all parents school or unschool their kids EVEN if their kids are IN school. We need to be the one's directing their educations..We cannot rely on the public school system to do that.

    WE shape how they view things....not a teacher who would rather label a 'different learning' kid just for the schools funding.

    Don't get me started.
  • You know what I think is radical? Defining parenting as a fucking verb, and not a proper noun. It's not a goddamn title, it's a JOB. You do that job. I do that job. Neither of us want or need someone to define it for us.

    *head desk*
  • You, my love, are one smart mama.
  • tmanettas
    SO, funny. I just used the term UNparenting before reading, scouts honor! I quite fancy your line:

    "a few minor rungs short of spreading hatred."

    I like that. A lot.

    Though I've never heard of unschooling before today, I have to say my first reaction is the same as the home schooling brand. You all love your children in a way I don't. Maybe that's severe.

    But I admire that kind of affection.

    Take from that what you will, loving your kids more or different than I love mine isn't really what I was going for....but I am not sure what I was trying to say.
  • Wait! Wait! I'm back! I was so enthralled with your original post that I forgot something:

    Zoe is two, right? How can you be unschooling at 2??? I mean - isn't everyone still unschooling at 2???
  • Wow, I had NEVER heard of unschooling before Pauline's post - and your explanation of it was so interesting to me!
  • I really think there's a middle ground here that is probably more representative of most radical unschoolers and particularly this family. Some RU families are naturally very gentle and so non-coercion is going to look a certain way. In my family, we are crass and blatantly honest and we therefor don't look like children who do whatever they want whenever they want (though sometimes they do). There's a lot of hours in a day to fill and in late winter particularly - when there's five foot snow drifts outside the door and we've no place in particular to be - we may sit around eating chocolate and watching movies all day. If someone filmed us, it might look very bad, depending on the day. If they were doing so with a motive, it might be very, very bad. I'm pretty sure the same could be said of more "normal" families as well.
  • I totally agree. Playing with Lego and computer games as a child didn't turn me gay. Major Kira on Star Trek did.
  • Yes yes yes yes yes.
  • Tiffany
    Wow, I thought I was going to disagree with you but I totally agree. We are cutting off our cable this weekend, way too much crap on tv. I want so much to teach my boys about their world and I definetly don't think all that is needed is learned in regular school, especially since my husband is a public school teacher, he even agrees.
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