As an autonomous HE household, would the adults guide the child into areas of study they did not automatically find themselves doing?
In OUR AE household, I would offer things that I thought that our children would be interested in. But it didn't matter whether they chose to do something I had suggested or not.
TBH it wasn't needed-every moth we'd have newsletters for the HE group in our county and in Gloucestershire and the West Mids too. We'd look at all of them and decide what we were going to attend. So often things would be put on that neither the children and I would have thought of, and we'd give the ones they had chosen, a go.
Some of the stuff I've read about autonomous, makes it sound as though the adults would not offering any guidance into new areas and I wondered how much influence julienoshoes had in her household.
Aren't all parents an influence in their children's lives-either positively or negatively?
I'd say that we have a brilliant relationship with our children, we discuss anything and everything. I know because they are all grown up and tell us now, that my dh and I are a huge influence on our children. But they have been influenced too by attitudes thoughts and beliefs of other adults that figure in their lives too. Just as I know I have been an influence on some of their AE friends, who have come here to stay. Just yesterday I had a Skype call from an previously AE young person, currently travelling in the Far East, as she wanted my opinion on something, she knew I have experience in.
Autonomous doesn't mean neglect....all of the very many AE families I know are very engaged with their children's education.
For example if they were watching something like Power Rangers, rather than banning it, like some families we know and the school that they attended did, we would discuss with them, what effects all of that fighting had in reality, what damage would be done to the other person etc. That didn't change just because we HE.
Nothing was banned, nothing limited-but everything was discussed.
Plus what level of guidance by an adult would make it just child-centred as opposed to autonomous.
Accepting the children's choices to do something or stop doing something, is what would make it autonomous IMO
julienoshoes- Sorry I didn't ask the right question. Would you look back at the year or half a year and think "I'd really like my child to be more active/mathematical etc" and then think of ways to provide for this in the future, or is it purely down to the child? (I'm not trying to be critical, just to understand what is meant by autonomous)
I don't feel criticised-it's a very valid question.
I don't think so, they got so much maths/geography/English/Science/PE in every day life, that I don't think it's necessary to think in block subjects.
As I said if I thought one/all of them were interested in something, I'd offer it.
The point for me about AE, is that is about what the child wants, not what I want.
They really haven't needed a formal education of any sort, say, to get a Maths GCSE equivalent. They have just signed up for a course when they were ready/needed it, and done it (successfully) in a very short period of time.
Others I know just work through the curriculum -often in a very short period of time, and then enter the exam as an external candidate.