Updated 2020-02-13

Trusting Children: Lifelong Learning And Autonomy Within The Unschooling Movement

The purpose of this article is to explore the concept of autonomy in the context of education and analyze the complex features of unschooling, a particular movement within the home-based education paradigm.
Lorena Sanchez Tyson author
Sanchez Tyson, L. (2019). Trusting children: Lifelong learning and autonomy within the unschooling movement. Journal of Unschooling and Alternative Learning, 13(25), 23-40. Retrieved from https://jual.nipissingu.ca/wp-content/uploads/sites/25/2019/07/v13253.pdf

Description

The purpose of this article is to explore the concept of autonomy in the context of education and analyze the complex features of unschooling, a particular movement within the home- based education paradigm. This study will aim to link the significance of autonomy and unschooling and place them within the wider discourse of contemporary lifelong learning (LLL) theories. Under the tenets of humanistic education theories that underline self-driven and intrinsic motivations for learning, this article will highlight the unschooling movement as an example of a subaltern pedagogical approach that is deeply rooted in institutional and ideological autonomy. More importantly, this study intends to challenge the way LLL is conceptualised and propel the international discourse surrounding it beyond the boundaries of institutional education.

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