Eclectic Homeschooling on the Web
What
is Eclectic Homeschooling?
Beverly S. Krueger
When you pick out a box of
candy, do you prefer the assorted box? Is the furniture in your home a
hodge-podge of different styles made from different woods? Do you find
yourself drawn to buffets where you can pick and choose your own food?
If so, your homeschooling style is probably quite naturally eclectic. What
does it mean to be eclectic? According to the World Book Dictionary eclectic
means "selecting and using what seems best from various sources, systems
or schools of thought." Eclectic homeschoolers might say they unschool
most things, but use curriculum for math. You will also find eclectic homeschoolers
that use a variety of different curriculums that they adjust to fit the
needs of their families. Most eclectic homeschoolers can't take a product
and just use it. Just as a mechanic likes to tweak the engine in his car
to get just a bit better performance, so eclectic homeschoolers tweak the
curriculum they use. Then you find the eclectic homeschoolers that use
no curriculum at all relying on good books and hands on resources to help
their children learn.
The operative word here is "seems". Eclectic homeschoolers use what "seems" best at the time. The
choices eclectic homeschoolers make are not erratic. The methods and resources
they select to use are chosen to further the educational goals they have
for their children. Their children's temperaments, gifts, and learning
styles are all taken into account in determining how they will homeschool
and what they will use. Occasionally what seems best does not actually
work out to be best. It can be frustrating and expensive to buy something
that does not work. On the other hand, it can be frustrating to a child
to continue doing something that they dread.
To avoid making mistakes
most eclectic homeschoolers are resource scavengers. They want to know
what you are using and why. If you stopped using something they are considering
buying, they want to know why you stopped. If someone says they have a
list of resources for a study on the middle ages, they want a copy. If
you are looking for a particular item, they'll know right where to find
it in one of the catalogs they have stacked in a pile. When someone begins
a discussion on a particular way of homeschooling, they are all ears listening
for new ideas or a different angle on an old idea.
Homeschooling can be compared
to building a wall. Some prefer the uniformity of bricks to build their
wall. Others give the wall building over to their children providing them
with an assortment of building materials and assistance when requested.
Eclectic homeschoolers start with a foundation of their own views about
what makes a person well educated. To that foundation they will add stones
that are similar but of different shape and size selecting each stone to
fit in a particular spot, removing a stone that wiggles too much, and shifting
a stone to create a tighter fit. The result is a functional stone wall
of great beauty and strength. Eclectic homeschoolers strive for a functional
education that helps their children become people of great inner beauty
and strength.
Copyright © 1996 Beverly
S. Krueger
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