Forest School
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I think 'middles' or not, most parents who choose home-ed do so for the best of reasons, most of which are to do with the boring, target-driven treadmill of many (not all, I agree) dreary primary schools. Furthermore activities such as Forest School, out-of-school sports clubs and, yes, MUSIC groups are a great way for home-ed kids to socialise with others of their own age.
Quite a few schools are using it as a dump for the disaffected.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI think 'middles' or not, most parents who choose home-ed do so for the best of reasons, most of which are to do with the boring, target-driven treadmill of many (not all, I agree) dreary primary schools. Furthermore activities such as Forest School, out-of-school sports clubs and, yes, MUSIC groups are a great way for home-ed kids to socialise with others of their own age.
I have no knowledge or info about this, but I find it hard to imagine a risk-averse primary head-teacher recommending Forest School!
Now that the history curriculum has to start at the Neolithic, some primary schools are managing their risk aversion in order to access activities which aren't that far away from Forest School in some respects. Where I work school groups are a major part of the site's purpose, and being able to offer 'neolithic' activities in the woods has proved popular, as have holiday activities put on by an organisation which comes to a site to deliver whatever elements of the Forest School are possible or wanted. Many visitor attractions with suitable arboreal assets are picking up on the trend as well.
Sadly the current education system doesn't allow for creative learning such as this, even where the school may want to deliver it; emphasis on testing, targets and a narrow academic curriculum , coupled with inadequate funding, leaves no opportunity for the majority.
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Originally posted by greenilex View PostIt’s just that apparently some 14 year olds are being home educated for lack of funding and support in certain schools. The parents get a heavy hint and no more is said by anyone.
The only solution, but it does take us back to DH Lawrence and the system pre WW1.
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I have great sympathy with those older kids who are not able to fit in with the school environment and great sympathy for the families who have worries looking after them. I would just mention that my OP about Forest Schools was written from a rather different slant; namely an alternative (or maybe an addition to?) the less than creative and sometimes stultifying primary school classroom.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI have great sympathy with those older kids who are not able to fit in with the school environment and great sympathy for the families who have worries looking after them. I would just mention that my OP about Forest Schools was written from a rather different slant; namely an alternative (or maybe an addition to?) the less than creative and sometimes stultifying primary school classroom.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostThe 'Forest School' movement is, IMO, fantastic.
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Originally posted by Mal View PostLarge space, kids left to their own devices - sound's like heaven for bullies. And they get provided with knives and axes! And they slaughter chickens! As a chicken, I'd be doing like the hero in Nabakov's "Luzhin defence"; I'd slog through the forest until I got back home, then I'd hide in the attic.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostBut are they left unsupervised?
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Mal View PostLarge space, kids left to their own devices - sound's like heaven for bullies. And they get provided with knives and axes! And they slaughter chickens! As a chicken, I'd be doing like the hero in Nabakov's "Luzhin defence"; I'd slog through the forest until I got back home, then I'd hide in the attic.
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