Last but not least - The Bonus Guest Speaker: Tiara Shafiq
There's definitely plenty of edublogs out there to keep you busy. A lot of them have to do with traditional schooling: teachers talking about what works in the classroom, debates on current issues with school systems, students using blogs to record their classwork, educators developing ways to keep classes and school entertaining. Alternative education, though, doesn't get as much attention.
Alternative education basically refers to any form of education outside the context of traditional schooling. This encompasses all sorts of things: study abroad, internships, mentorships, volunteering, activism, job shadowing, entrepreneurship, careers, alternative schools, homeschooling, and unschooling. The general idea behind alternative education is that one does not need traditional school systems - classes, grades, exams, etc - to gain an education, and people should be free to explore how they best learn
Now there are certainly plenty of blogs that focus on certain types of alternative education. The homeschooling movement is especially prolific, with their own Carnival of Homeschooling, an About.Com section and plenty of discussion amongst various homeschooling sites, including the tight-knit unschooling community. Many students on study abroad programs keep logs of their travels and share ideas and recommendations, such as on the LiveJournal "F0reignExchange" community and the Cultures Shocked forum, geared mainly towards Rotary exchange students but open to all. Of course, most of the other topics (careers and activism, for example) get their own blog attention, though not a lot of it is through an alternative educational perspective.
Despite all that, though, there are barely any blogs that touch on the idea of alternative education as a whole. The idea of gaining your education and learning through other sources besides school (or a school-like system, such as homeschooling or alternative schools). Of learning through unorthodox means. Not much is discussed about the implication of alternative education on today's society and school systems - creating change, using out-of-the-box thinking, going beyond the notion of "top schools" and "straight As".
Why is this?
Why does BlogHer's Research, Academia, and Education section only talk about traditional academia and teaching, but never alternative education? (I don't recall ever seeing an article on homeschooling, even!) Why do homeschooling blogs get segregated from other edublogs - and what about edublogs that don't quite fit either mold? Why aren't more people talking about methods of learning that don't involve a blackboard and an exam paper? If you're not a teacher, parent, or educator, but just someone interested in these sorts of things, where do you go?
(As an aside: where are the left-leaning/liberal education blogs? Plenty of the homeschooling blogs, as well as some of the biggest general education blogs, tend to have a right-leaning bent. I, a very liberal person, subscribe to Australia's Educatin Choices magazine - and I'm surprised at how right-wing it was. A liberal girl like me can't seem to find any likeminded people! Aren't there any liberals interested in education in general, let alone alternative education?)
Education isn't just about school. As edubloggers, we should all know that. Let's think about other ways that people learn! Let's talk about people that have succeeded in life and have learnt a great deal outside the confines of school! Let's question the conventional and traditional norms and truisms of schooling and education! Let's encourage others to learn however they want to learn, school or no school - and not just homeschooling!
Let's think about alternative education. Let alternative education have some attention once in a while.
What do you think? Do you think alternative education receives enough attention from edubloggers? Is there a space in the education blogosphere for alternative education? How can we encourage this space?
Tiara Shafiq writes about education issues, alternative education, and youth in EducateDeviate. She can't possibly be the only one doing so.
Group Discussion . . .
Tiara can´t be with us today - but she will come back in the next days to answer all questions and till then...let´s talk!