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08/29/2023

Everything I’m Not Teaching This Year

Be careful what you teach, it might interfere with what they are learning.
Magda Gerber (magdagerber.org)

In a recent blog post reflecting on orienting families to his program, Tom Hobson, aka Teacher Tom, describes telling families everything he wouldn’t be teaching – literacy, math, STEM skills, etc. — instead inviting families to see how the program would support children’s own learning and discoveries in each realm.  He writes:

I told our assembled parent community that their children will be learning these things as they play together, creating their own community, and that it wouldn't always be pretty. Their children will come home covered in water, mud, paint, snot, and even upon occasion, blood. Their children will find themselves embroiled in conflict. They will be learning through joy, yes, but also tears. They will, as they must, mix it up with the other children, sort things out, make agreements, and help one another. They will teach themselves to be self-motivated, to work well with others, and begin to understand the importance of being personable, all of which are, not accidentally, the most important "vocational" skills of all.

I told the assembled adults that our job is not to teach them anything, but rather to love and support them as they perform their inquiries, test their theories, and figure out what works for them and what doesn't. We're not there to push or command or mold, but rather to create a safe space in which the children can play, together, in the context of their community.


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