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Australian Homeschool Stories - Sara - Brisbane, QLD / Turrbal Country
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Sara - Brisbane, QLD / Turrbal Country

03/11/24 • 71 min

Australian Homeschool Stories

I can think of no better spokesperson for unschooling in Australia than Sara, whose four daughters (aged 15, 13, 10 and 8) have never been to school. This inspiring family of six who call sunny Queensland home, have collaboratively and creatively designed their lives. As well as unschooling, she is a passionate advocate for respectful parenting and children's rights.
SUMMARY

  • Growing up on the Sunshine Coast, Sara went from being private schooled herself to zero percent school for her own children. Once she became a mother, admiring her curious, happy, carefree children, all she could think was that school would wreck this.
  • If you had asked her as a child whether she enjoyed school herself she would have said she loved it, but looking back she can only remember the bad things, such as being overwhelmed and stressed by assessments and carrying everyday anxiety that she might get in trouble.
  • The stereotype of teens being lazy is not her experience at all, they are on the go all the time, the have a million ideas and projects. They are not what people say.
  • As a result of starting young and never sending her kids to school, they have grown up being in control of their own interests and learning for so long they are experts now.
  • Sara defines adultism/childism and how this is perpetrated throughout modern day society. There is a way to do things better, where we can all be equal.
  • We all have different responsibilities based on our age and our relationship to children but that doesn’t mean we have different rights.
  • Unschooling is an extension of respectful parenting
  • Deschooling never ends. There is always more that comes ups and every age your kid gets to there is something else.
  • She and her husband got to a point where they had read too much and could not knowingly send their girls to school knowing what they knew. Once you’ve gone down the rabbit hole, there is no turning back.
  • More people need to talk about homeschooling and unschooling, so more people know this in an option, because so many still don’t.
  • The importance of having a community and feeling like you belong
  • How her community has evolved over the years from early years to teens - book club, project fairs, talent show, markets, monthly excursions and lots of hanging out and playing.
  • Why we need to stop using the word sacrifice when it comes to choosing home education.
  • There is no end date to learning. Her own teenage daughter’s perspective is that nothing’s really going to change when she turns 18, they’ll just keep living like they are now and life will carry on as it always has.
  • You have a lot of time. You don’t need to know what you’re doing, you can just start and work it out as you go along. All of us are making it up as we go along.
  • No one is an expert. You can literally do whatever works for your family.

NOTE: This is an abridged version of the show notes.
Follow the link below to find quotes and references to all resources, books and inspiration Sara shares in this episode:
FULL SHOW NOTES HERE

Connect with us:
Instagram - @australianhomeschoolstories
Substack - Australian Homeschool Stories
This podcast is recorded on the lands of the Bunurong people of the Kulin nation. I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging and acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded. This always was, always will be aboriginal land.
Original Music by Daniel Garrood @garroodcomposer
Listen on Spotify here

plus icon
bookmark

I can think of no better spokesperson for unschooling in Australia than Sara, whose four daughters (aged 15, 13, 10 and 8) have never been to school. This inspiring family of six who call sunny Queensland home, have collaboratively and creatively designed their lives. As well as unschooling, she is a passionate advocate for respectful parenting and children's rights.
SUMMARY

  • Growing up on the Sunshine Coast, Sara went from being private schooled herself to zero percent school for her own children. Once she became a mother, admiring her curious, happy, carefree children, all she could think was that school would wreck this.
  • If you had asked her as a child whether she enjoyed school herself she would have said she loved it, but looking back she can only remember the bad things, such as being overwhelmed and stressed by assessments and carrying everyday anxiety that she might get in trouble.
  • The stereotype of teens being lazy is not her experience at all, they are on the go all the time, the have a million ideas and projects. They are not what people say.
  • As a result of starting young and never sending her kids to school, they have grown up being in control of their own interests and learning for so long they are experts now.
  • Sara defines adultism/childism and how this is perpetrated throughout modern day society. There is a way to do things better, where we can all be equal.
  • We all have different responsibilities based on our age and our relationship to children but that doesn’t mean we have different rights.
  • Unschooling is an extension of respectful parenting
  • Deschooling never ends. There is always more that comes ups and every age your kid gets to there is something else.
  • She and her husband got to a point where they had read too much and could not knowingly send their girls to school knowing what they knew. Once you’ve gone down the rabbit hole, there is no turning back.
  • More people need to talk about homeschooling and unschooling, so more people know this in an option, because so many still don’t.
  • The importance of having a community and feeling like you belong
  • How her community has evolved over the years from early years to teens - book club, project fairs, talent show, markets, monthly excursions and lots of hanging out and playing.
  • Why we need to stop using the word sacrifice when it comes to choosing home education.
  • There is no end date to learning. Her own teenage daughter’s perspective is that nothing’s really going to change when she turns 18, they’ll just keep living like they are now and life will carry on as it always has.
  • You have a lot of time. You don’t need to know what you’re doing, you can just start and work it out as you go along. All of us are making it up as we go along.
  • No one is an expert. You can literally do whatever works for your family.

NOTE: This is an abridged version of the show notes.
Follow the link below to find quotes and references to all resources, books and inspiration Sara shares in this episode:
FULL SHOW NOTES HERE

Connect with us:
Instagram - @australianhomeschoolstories
Substack - Australian Homeschool Stories
This podcast is recorded on the lands of the Bunurong people of the Kulin nation. I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging and acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded. This always was, always will be aboriginal land.
Original Music by Daniel Garrood @garroodcomposer
Listen on Spotify here

Previous Episode

undefined - Danika - Bunbury, WA / Wardandi Country

Danika - Bunbury, WA / Wardandi Country

Danika's homeschooling story takes place on opposing sides of the country, beginning on the Gold Coast in Queensland, where she and her children (aged 6 and 3) were born and raised, up to where her family are currently based in Bunbury, Western Australia. Danika is speaking up and sharing her short but intense journey in the hopes that someone listening will hear her story and feel seen.
SUMMARY

  • As a loud, outgoing, social girl, Danika loved school, particularly the social side, and like most parents thought her own kids would follow in her footsteps
  • When her eldest began school, she was looking forward to getting more time to herself, to be able to focus on her career, but a twisting, turning waterslide of a year lay ahead, one she could not have foreseen
  • Her son's anxiety prompted her to undertake placement as a teachers aide and it was this experience which opened her eyes to what actually goes on in the classroom
  • It quickly became clear to her that teachers are under resourced and time poor. They are all not being seen and heard and it’s the same thing, day in, day out.
  • It took a trauma for Danika to come to homeschooling and that trauma had a massive effect on everyone in their family, but she is proof you can come out the other side
  • “I had to strip back what was expected of me from society, what was expected of me from our families, drown out all the noise and just listen to my child.”
  • Deschooling meant recalibrating what she thought her life was going to look like and she believes they are all better versions of themselves having the time and space to be
  • What lifeschooling looks like for their family of four now
  • Neurodiverse kids in school are often brushed to the side and sent elsewhere, but they are going through traumatic feelings, and we as adults rush them along, not giving them the space they need. They get told to be quiet and sit still, but they are trying to regulate their bodies so they can listen.
  • If you are on the fence about homeschooling, ask yourself “What’s important to you?” You’ve really got to sit with that. Are you doing something just because you are expected to?
  • Losing one whole income doesn't mean you can't still travel and adventure, it’s just not on such a grand scale. Microadventures are just as important and homeschoolers have the freedom to go wherever they want, whenever they want.
  • “School works for some, it doesn’t work for others, the beauty of life is that we have a choice. I feel like we made the best choice for our family.”

INSPIRATION
Stark Raving Dad podcast
Her Homeschooling Era podcast

A Different Way to Learn - Dr Naomi Fisher
Changing Our Minds - Dr Naomi Fisher
Mothering Our Boys - Maggie Dent
Raising Boys - Steve Biddulph

AdaptEd - Neurodiversity Handbook

CONNECT

@danikajain

Connect with us:
Instagram - @australianhomeschoolstories
Substack - Australian Homeschool Stories
[email protected]
This podcast is recorded on the lands of the Bunurong people of the Kulin nation. I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging and acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded. This always was, always will be aboriginal land.
Original Music by Daniel Garrood @garroodcomposer
Listen on Spotify here

Next Episode

undefined - Richa - Melbourne, VIC / Bunurong Country

Richa - Melbourne, VIC / Bunurong Country

“Don’t let fear guide you. You’ve chosen this path, lead it with love.”

Richa and her husband, who were both born and educated in India, now live in Melbourne and home educate their two children, aged 7 and 2. We cover a variety of topics in this episode including Montessori, minimalism, community building, sibling dynamics and fostering a love of reading, nature and kindness.
SUMMARY:

  • When Richa and her husband were house hunting in Melbourne they were ironically drawn to Bayside for the schools, but it was the solace and peace of being next to water that solidified their choice to call this area home.
  • Early on people would point out that her child had a lot of anxiety and that she was so attached, but isn’t that how humans are designed to be? We are supposed to be close to our caregivers.
  • They migrated to Melbourne without any support system, all their family live in India. Finding other friends who homeschool has been an incredible help and given their family both mental and physical support.
  • There is chaos in bringing a younger sibling into the mix of homeschooling but it is also enriching for the sibling connections and bonding - if her daughter were in school right now, her son would hardly see her.
  • Open your house up to welcome friends in, share a meal together, do a craft together. It can be hard finding the people with whom you can connect with on a deeper level.
  • Intentionally not over-scheduling their week. Letting them be, giving them free time to tinker around - she values that more.
  • Homeschooling minimally means not having more things and more materials. Not overwhelming yourself with the multitude of curriculum choices out there. It’s very easy to bring overwhelm into your space. It’s about prioritising less.
  • She is looking forward to seeing the beautiful people her children turn out to be and the joy they bring to others
  • Read more, talk to people who have been doing this for a long time. It’s easier and less daunting than it seems.

INSPIRATION

Simplicity Parenting - Kim John Payne (book)

Unconditional Parenting - Alfie Kohn (book)

The Secret of Childhood - Maria Montessori (book)

Good Inside Podcast - Dr Becky Kennedy

@bigmothering (instagram)

@mainly.montesorri.homeschool (instagram)

@wonderled.life (instagram)
RESOURCES

Blossom & Root - Nature based, secular homeschooling curriculum

CONNECT
Instagram - @waliaricha

NOTE: This is an abridged version of the show notes.
Follow the link below to find quotes and read aloud recommendations Richa shares in this episode:
FULL SHOW NOTES HERE

Connect with us:
Instagram - @australianhomeschoolstories
Substack - Australian Homeschool Stories
This podcast is recorded on the lands of the Bunurong people of the Kulin nation. I pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging and acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded. This always was, always will be aboriginal land.
Original Music by Daniel Garrood @garroodcomposer
Listen on Spotify here

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