Back

Worldschooling | Day 230 of my 2023 Journal

Cecilie Conrad·Aug 18, 2023· 3 minutes

What is it anyway? Worldschooling?



We had signed up to give a talk about our educational style under the headline “Worldschooling,” we were to talk for an hour and a half about … well, everything around it.

And it got me thinking.

How do I explain what it is? And is it truly our educational style?

Not really.

No.

It is not.

We travel the world because we like it. We are curious about what might be around the next corner, get restless if we stay in the same place too long, and need many different settings: Sometimes beach time, sometimes metropolitan life, sometimes road trip, sometimes peace-time in rented houses, sometimes coliving.

The funny thing is, the worldschooling, just like traveling, really is about something other than you would think. Worldschooling has a sound around it as if it was all about education, a strategy to make sure the kids learn certain things. In a similar way, traveling the world sounds as if it is all about the adventure.

It is not.

In reality, it is all about the people.

We travel for people. The people we meet, the people we want to meet, the people we want to meet again.

Worldschooling in our style is growing up while traveling the world or doing whatever makes the most sense. 



In a way, the word is in use in our family to make questions go away: Worldshcooling sounds cool and seems more comprehensive for most people, rather than unschooling, which just sounds wired. But in all reality, we do not ask anything of the children education-wise, and they grow up while exploring the planet - well, while meeting people in many countries, coming back to old friends or distant relatives unfolding what is and what will become.

Worldschooling to us is about living, and intuitively, it seems more realistic. The kids will learn a bunch of stuff BECAUSE we travel all the time, but they would anyway. 



To me, it is all about not wasting your time and making sure you live a good life here and now and tomorrow. And to us, the nomadic life without formal education is a great base for a happy life. It is as simple as that.

Love and light

Cecilie-Underskrift-300x133

Cecilie Conrad

Thank you for reading
I would love to hear from you. Listen to your thoughts and reflections - or praise :) It is often emotional to share our life like this, and we get very happy when we get your feedback. So feel free to share a comment below 😋 

 

I believe teenage girls need their mothers much more than our society appreciates and that the way we raise children in institutions, pushing them t…Read more
One advantage of living in a van is the number of things that need fixing/maintenance is much smaller compared to living in a house. Another advantag…Read more
This is a general warning for everyone who loves Shakespeare. For everyone who loves literature. Maybe for everyone in general. Do not visit Juliet's…Read more
It is sometimes emotionally complicated to stop. I remember someone said: “Vacation is doing something you are not usually doing.” Now we do not do v…Read more
Personal freedom is about waking up with loads of options, but more importantly, about having the courage to choose between options and knowing what …Read more
Before we went to Venice, I almost booked a place to stay in Murano, not Venice. It looked almost the same. From Venice, you take the public boat and…Read more
Why do we do what we do? It is obvious that traveling is an adventure and from the outside, it looks like a lot of vacation. The first part is right,…Read more
The feel of Venice is closely connected to walking. The experience of walking between houses, alongside canals, over bridges, over piazzas (and repea…Read more
It is funny how walking from Dorsodura, where we live, to the Saint Mark Basilica is a journey from a good tourist experience to something like hell.…Read more