Back

Education and learning cannot be stopped

Cecilie Conrad·Jul 20, 2021· 2 minutes

Education and learning is an intrinsic element of human life, can not be stopped, and institutions are not necessary for children to get good educations. The world would be a better place without compulsory schooling.

And, yes - I do know, education is the way out of poverty for many. Still, compulsory curriculum (often public) institutionalized schooling is an old-fashioned, outdated, and wrong way of approaching education for everyone.

Look at the findings of Sugata Mitra: He has proven several times, school is not necessary to educate children; even homeless orphans can educate themselves end WILL do so if provided the slightest possibility.

In my clinical work as a psychologist, mentor, and coach, I often have to work with the balance between life-flow and systematized organized control. The latter being the problem more often than not. I often see control as a response to fear, inferiority emotion, lack of understanding of the situation, lack of clear goals, lack of choices.

In many ways, compulsory mandatory government-dictated curriculum one size fits all schooling is all the same: A control response to a situation we do not understand.

My appeal is this:

  • Do make your own choices.
  • Educate yourself as to what is essential and what is not.
  • Trust your children to find their passions and goals.
  • Help and guide them to find their ways and methods.

There is no way we can know what they need to learn. Time will tell. But we can talk with our children, guide them, help them, and let them know what others think makes sense and why, and then set them free to make their own choices.

By doing so, we find the balance between responsibility and freedom and lift our job as parents.

Kids don't want to be in school. Yet the adults in this society who, on the one hand, all recognize the fact most kids don’t want to be in the school…Read more
What is it anyway? Worldschooling?

We had signed up to give a talk about our educational style under the headline “Worldschooling.” And it got me th…Read more
Our style of eating does not make it easier to travel full-time. We are vegan and gluten-free. Honestly, I sometimes wish it would just be easier. Bu…Read more
Every day, there is yoga on, discussions and panels, workshops of all sorts, sports and crafts, and dance, and you name it. Evenings of music, live b…Read more
Fairford is a small town in Gloucestershire in the Southwest of England. A pretty and neat little place I would have never visited if it was not beca…Read more
“There is no way I am leaving England without seeing Stonehenge first,” my youngest child said when we did our planning day in Forest of Bowland a we…Read more
This is the key to football as a religion. The loneliness. Or, more precisely: The human craving for belonging. There has been so much lost in modern…Read more
William Turner is epic. And the exhibition was special. I think we spend two or maybe 3 hours staring at how he describes the ocean, the clouds, the …Read more
We walked the streets, passed the club where the Beatles took their first steps into fame, the whole rock and roll area with live music (of varying q…Read more