Bath Home Education

School is not compulsory

Schooling Nature Poem by Japan Pathak

Hey! All you butterflies!
You ought to carry schoolbags on your backs!
And you should not fly freely here and there, this way and that!
Hey! You beautiful rivers and streams!
Do not meander, but flow straight!
And do not make a noise either: flow quietly!
Likewise all you fishes!
Do not swim any which way you please.
Swim in straight lines,
As they do in swimming championships!
Hey! All you colourful flowers!
Wear the same colour, uniform and dress,
As they do in school!


Learning

Young Colin was born very clever,
Yes, Colin was born very smart,
But although Colin was really clever,
He just couldn't master the art …
Of writing the alphabet letters,
In other than mirrored reverse,
And his teachers attempted to force him,
By making him drill and rehearse …
But Colin just kept on with writing,
Those letters in form so awry,
That they said he had trouble with learning,
And caused Colin's mother to cry …
She'd known from the time he was little,
So small he could only just crawl,
That her Colin was profoundly gifted,
He had no trouble learning at all.
Then pondering, reading and learning,
From every source she could clutch,
She removed him from school and from teachers,
And under her kind, gentle touch …
Young Colin was not made to practise,
Indeed he did not even scribe,
And she offered him nothing of forcing,
Or coaxing or orders or bribes.
Instead he was given resources,
Like T.V., computers and art,
And small batteries, wires, pens and paper,
And love from a mother's warm heart.
As Colin grew older and bigger,
His skills and his knowledge just grew,
He became a great whiz with computers,
And neatness when writing bloomed too.
But Colin would never love writing,
So profound were the lessons at school,
Taught by 'qualified' teachers of children,
Who'd taught him that he was a fool.

Teachers' Thoughts and a Mother's Actions

Had Edison Lived Today.
"This child's dumb and we're going to place him,
With others who'll always come last,
'Cause his constant, disruptive behaviour,
Is disturbing the rest of the class,
And we know that he needs medication,
For his conduct makes us quite aghast.
After all, we're so busy advancing,
Those children with such low I.Q's,
That they need undivided attention,
And the child's far too big for his shoes,
With his endless demands and his questions,
About subjects we don't care to choose.
And when he's not talking, he's dreaming,
Can't concentrate on what we say,
When we want them all to be learning,
Your mad son keeps on turning away,
So we know that he needs medication,
Get him off to a doctor today.
Just look at his big head, it's awful,
His reading and writing are bad,
Go away, take him off to a doctor,
His behaviour is driving us mad,
And we know that some good medication,
Will work and will make us feel glad."
Then the mother of young Thomas Alva,
Herself a schoolteacher by trade,
With the rare gift of great understanding,
Took her bright Thomas home … where he played,
And she knew as she answered his questions,
It was genius her son displayed …
To those teachers whose minds were determined,
That children should all be the same …
And the stance of those foolish schoolteachers,
And their system would both be to blame,
Had the world been denied his inventions,
Had his mom left them his brain to maim.
And this story is not of just Thomas,
Whose spirit his mother reclaimed,
For the clever, maligned young inventor,
Who went on to achieve such great fame,
It's the story of countless lost children,
Who all, due to the world's greatest drain …
Of young genius thirsting for knowledge,
Were condemned to a lifetime of pain,
By the world's worst invention, a system,
Which tries to make people the same,
A foul system of forcing, not learning …
Of society's loss - and its shame.
shame.

Poems against the School

I dreamed I stood at the gate to hell,
And watched the sculptors there,
The clay they used was children's souls,
And they shaped it without care.
All were teachers, the tools they used,
Were shouting and verbal abuse,
And all of those teachers subjected those souls,
To ignorance and misuse.
Day after day the teachers toiled,
With a brutal and practised touch,
While all of the little souls' parents thought,
Their children were learning so much.
And as the souls were tortured,
In hell's burning, hungry fires,
Some became angry and violent,
And developed perverted desires.
Most became sad and then sadder,
Some shrivelled and died in pain,
While others grew up to be sculptors,
Their spirits to regain.
And I wondered, while I was dreaming,
Why others could not see,
That damage caused by teachers,
Affects society …
And why we have this system,
Of teaching tender souls,
That children have to go to hell,
In order to reach goals …
A system born in days of yore,
Made from philosophies,
Of men - who hated children,
And thought babies couldn't see …
A system from, "Utopia,"
And Mann and Jean Rousseau,
Where children, while still babes in arms,
Off to school must go.
I dreamed that I walked into hell,
And took my children out,
And when I woke found they taught me,
What learning is about.
Think back and you'll remember,
Your children taught you too,
In days before they went to school,
When they were taught by you.

Copyright School Mania - Adele Carrall - 2000

On guard by Satinath Sarangi (Sathyu)

Children listen with a lot of attention
Children see with a lot of attention
They have just come into this world
And they have so many questions to ask
Like
Why should guavas be always drawn round in pictures?
Like
Why isn't the death of a goat an accident?
Why are there firings across borders?
Why are there firings?
Why are there borders?
They are ignorant
They do not know that it is more important
to brush your teeth in the morning than
to give clothes to someone who doesn't have them.
The system is threatened if too many questions are asked.
If the answers are not approved.
So deploy a parent behind every child.
And for further caution,
Open schools.


These poems were found here

I Took His Hand And Followed

My dishes went unwashed today
I didn't make my bed
I took his hand and followed
Where his eager footsteps led.

Oh yes, we went adventuring
My little child and I
Exploring all the great outdoors
Beneath the sun and sky.

We watched a robin feed her young
We climbed a sunlit hill
Saw cloud sheep scamper through the sky
We plucked a daffodil.

That my house was so neglected
That I didn't brush the stairs
In twenty years no one on earth
Will know or even care.

But that I've helped my little child
To noble adulthood grow
In twenty years the whole wide world
May look and see and know.

Author unknown

My Child

poem by Vanessa Shields

My child will know that he is capable of teaching himself and
that I have complete confidence in his self-teaching abilities.
My child will know that he will not be ridiculed for
wanting to learn something deemed too advanced for him.
My child's unique and individual style of learning will be honoured.
My child will know the importance of free time.
My child will know the importance of FUN.
My child will know that learning is fun.
My child will be respected as an individual.
My child will be allowed to explore his own interests.
My child will see and hear the lessons, not just read about them.
My child will know that life is not about what grades he received.
My child will not be forced to wear a uniform.
My child will be allowed to read books, even if they are not for his age group.
My child will not be forced to associate only with children his age.
My child will learn to think, not what to think.
My child will be allowed to express him opinions even if they go against my beliefs.
My child will be allowed to learn how to structure himself when he is ready.
My child will be allowed to form his own interests without having them based out of peer pressure.

The School Day Begins
It's Monday morning at 7:01.
You’re still half asleep; your homework’s half done.
Your shower is cold; your oatmeal’s dry.
Your mother forgets to kiss you good-bye.
You’re walking to school; it’s thirty degrees.
Your fingers won’t work; your toes and ears freeze.
Your zipper is stuck; your left sneaker squeaks.
Your backpack strap snaps; your soup thermos leaks.
You slip on school steps; you trip in the hall.
The toilet floods in the bathroom stall.
The gym door is locked; library’s the same.
The principal greets you by the wrong name.
Your classroom is hot; the coat rack is packed.
Your bean sprout is dead; your clay pot is cracked.
Your pencils are dull; the sharpener jams.
Your fingers get crunched when your desktop slams.
Your math partner’s gone; your neighbor is rude.
Your teacher’s again in a crabby mood.
The morning bell rings; it is 8:01.
Come cozy up to the blackboard,
Another school day’s begun.

Learning

I'm learning to say thank you.
And I'm learning to say please.
And I'm learning to use Kleenex,
Not my sweater, when I sneeze.
And I'm learning not to dribble.
And I'm learning not to slurp.
And I'm learning (though it sometimes really hurts me)
Not to burp.
And I'm learning to chew softer
When I eat corn on the cob.
And I'm learning that it's much
Much easier to be a slob.

by Judith Viorst

Natural learning

Natural learning

water trickles into rivulets
rivulets flow down to the streams
streams rush down the mountainside

streams form rivers
rivers flow to seas
seas disappear into thin air
rain drops from the sky
nature always flows

the natural learner
hops off the treadmill
blocks artifice
accepts what is
breathes in, out
and joins the eternal flow

your cycles match nature’s
you feel right with the world
you no longer fight the current
you join it

as far as the stream is concerned
you’re no longer moving
but those along the shore
see that you’re getting ahead
you float, you learn, it’s natural

this learning comes from deep inside
it makes you feel right with the world
you’re thinking without thinking
your mind has a mind of its own
it knows what to do
you let it

it’s making connections
travelling new paths
matching patterns
putting things together
learning

you can’t force it
you must simply be open to it
there’s no secret formula
it comes when you merge with
everything around you

enlightenment comes
when you’re ready

you’ll know it from your smile
as you return to shore

breathe in, out

nature will always be there
flowing
inviting you to take your natural place
synchronizing to the earth’s beat
mind-dancing in the flow of life

I don’t know who I am
but life is for learning

Posted by Jay Cross

About School - Anonymous

He always wanted to explain things, but no one cared.
So he drew.

Sometimes he would just draw and it wasn't anything.
He wanted to carve it in stone or write it in the sky.
He would lie on the grass and look up in the sky and
it would only be the sky and the things inside him that
needed saying.

And it was after that he drew the picture.
It was a beautiful picture.
He kept it under his pillow and would let no one see it.
And he would look at it every night and think about it.
And when it was dark and his eyes were closed he
could see it still.
And it was all of him and he loved it.

When he started school he brought it with him.
Not to show anyone, but just to have it with him like a friend.

It was funny about school.
He sat in a square brown desk like all the other square
desks, and he thought it would be red.
And his room was a square brown room like all the other rooms.
And it was tight and close.
And stiff.

He hated to hold the pencil and chalk, with his arm
stiff and his feet flat on the floor, stiff, with the teacher watching
and watching.

The teacher came and spoke to him.
She told him to wear a tie like all the other boys.
He said he didn't like them and she said it didn't matter.

After that they drew.
And he drew all yellow and it was the way he felt about the morning.
And it was beautiful.

The teacher came and smiled at him.
"What's this?", she said.
"Why don't you draw something like Ken's drawing?
Isn't it beautiful?"
After that his mother bought him a tie and he always drew
aeroplanes and rocket ships like everyone else.

And he threw the old picture away.

And when he lay out alone looking at the sky, it was big
and blue and all of everything, but he wasn't anymore.

He was square and brown inside and his hands were stiff.
And he was like everyone else.
All the things inside him that needed saying didn't need it anymore.
It had stopped pushing.
It was crushed.
Stiff.

Like everything else.

(This Poem was written by a Grade 12 Student who committed suicide some 2 weeks later.)

Flowers are Red

Listen to this song here

The little boy went first day of school
He got some crayons and started to draw
He put colors all over the paper
For colors was what he saw
And the teacher said.. What you doin' young man
I'm paintin' flowers he said
She said... It's not the time for art young man
And anyway flowers are green and red
There's a time for everything young man
And a way it should be done
You've got to show concern for everyone else
For you're not the only one

And she said...
Flowers are red young man
Green leaves are green
There's no need to see flowers any other way
Than they way they always have been seen

But the little boy said...
There are so many colors in the rainbow
So many colors in the morning sun
So many colors in the flower and I see every one

Well the teacher said.. You're sassy
There's ways that things should be
And you'll paint flowers the way they are
So repeat after me.....

And she said...
Flowers are red young man
Green leaves are green
There's no need to see flowers any other way
Than they way they always have been seen

But the little boy said...
There are so many colors in the rainbow
So many colors in the morning sun
So many colors in the flower and I see every one

The teacher put him in a corner
She said.. It's for your own good..
And you won't come out 'til you get it right
And are responding like you should
Well finally he got lonely
Frightened thoughts filled his head
And he went up to the teacher
And this is what he said.. and he said

Flowers are red, green leaves are green
There's no need to see flowers any other way
Than the way they always have been seen

Time went by like it always does
And they moved to another town
And the little boy went to another school
And this is what he found
The teacher there was smilin'
She said...Painting should be fun
And there are so many colors in a flower
So let's use every one

But that little boy painted flowers
In neat rows of green and red
And when the teacher asked him why
This is what he said.. and he said

Flowers are red, green leaves are green
There's no need to see flowers any other way
Than the way they always have been seen.

There still must be a way, to have our children say
There are so many colors in the rainbow
So many colors in the morning sun
So many colors in the flower and I see every one

© Copyright 1996-2006 HarryChapin.com: The Harry Chapin Archive.

At History I'm Hopeless
At history I'm hopeless.
At spelling I stink.
In music I'm useless.
From science I shrink.
At art I'm atrocious.
In sports I'm a klutz.
At reading I'm rotten.
And math makes me nuts.
At language I'm lousy.
Computers? I'm cursed.
In drama I'm dreadful.
My writing's the worst.
"I don't understand it,"
my teacher exclaims.
I tell her they ought to teach
video games.
by Kenn Nesbitt




The Student's Prayer

Don't impose on me what you know,
I want to explore the unknown
And be the source of my own discoveries.
Let the known be my liberation, not my slavery.

The world of your truth can be my limitation;
Your wisdom my negation.
Don't instruct me; let's walk together.
Let my richness begin where yours ends.

Show me so that I can stand
On your shoulders.
Reveal yourself so that I can be
Something different.

You believe that every human being
Can love and create.
I understand, then, your fear
When I ask you to live according to your wisdom.

You will not come to know who I am
By listening to yourself.
Don’t instruct me; let me be.
Your failure is that I be identical to you.

(An abridged version of the Chilean biologist
Umberto Maturana’s poem.)

I have a spell checker

Eye Halve a Spelling Chequer

Eye halve a spelling chequer
It came with my pea sea
It plainly marques four my revue
Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.

Eye strike a quay and type a word
And weight four it two say
Weather eye am wrong oar write
It shows me strait a weigh.

As soon as a mist ache is maid
It nose bee fore two long
And eye can put the error rite
Its really ever wrong.

Eye have run this poem threw it
I am shore your pleased two no
Its letter perfect in it's weigh
My chequer tolled me sew.

(Sauce unknown)

English Language

We'll begin with a box, and the plural is boxes;
but the plural of ox became oxen not oxes.

One fowl is a goose, but two are called geese,
yet the plural of moose should never be meese.

You may find a lone mouse or a nest full of mice;
yet the plural of house is houses, not hice.

If the plural of man is always called men,
why shouldn't the plural of pan be called pen?

If I spoke of my foot and show you my feet,
and I give you a boot, would a pair be called beet?

If one is a tooth and a whole set are teeth,
why shouldn't the plural of booth be called beeth?

Then one may be that, and three would be those,
yet hat in the plural would never be hose, and the plural of cat
is cats, not cose.

We speak of a brother and also of brethren,
but though we say mother, we never say methren.

Then the masculine pronouns are he, his and him,
but imagine the feminine, she, shis and shim.

Let's face it,
English is a crazy language.

There is no egg in eggplant,
nor ham in hamburger;
neither apple nor pine in pineapple.
English muffins weren't invented in England.

We take English for granted.
But if we explore its paradoxes,
we find that quicksand can work slowly, boxing rings are square
and a guinea pig is neither from Guinea, nor is it a pig.

And why is it that writers write but fingers don't fing,
grocers don't groce and hammers don't ham?

Doesn't it seem crazy that you can make amends,
but not one amend?

If you have a bunch of odds and ends
and get rid of all but one of them,
what do you call it?

If teachers taught,
why didn't preachers praught?

If a vegetarian eats vegetables,
what does a humanitarian eat?

Sometimes, I think all the folks who grew up speaking English
should be committed to an asylum for the verbally insane.

In what other language do people recite at a play
and play at a recital?

Ship by truck and send cargo by ship?

Have noses that run and feet that smell?

How can a slim chance and a fat chance be the same,
while a wise man and a wise guy are opposites?

You have to marvel at the unique lunacy of a language in which
your house can burn up as it burns down;
in which you fill in a form by filling it out
and in which an alarm goes off by going on.

Author Unknown

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