Demand Learning

Demand Learning
Article by Eleanor Sparks

Although the concept of demand  feeding a new born baby might seem a little daunting to some first-time  parents, most of us who chose this form of feeding usually learn quite quickly  to respond to our baby’s cues.  The recognition  of a baby’s signal to breastfeed, whether to counteract hunger or as a source  of comfort usually becomes quite instinctive. This is particularly true as the  child grows older and their needs become more specific.  I remember myself, by the time I was  breastfeeding my fifth child the process was so automatic that the baby rarely  cried and I would often be barely aware of feeding.

There is no need to uses coercive  parenting techniques when it comes to demand feeding young children.  The three main techniques of coercive  parenting, namely “wheeling, bribing and bullying” (as describe by John Holt in Teach Your Own), are completely  unnecessary when mothers look to their children’s innate nature and respond to  their cues as their own instincts lead them to do.

Although they may not realise it at  the time, these same mothers, almost without exception, embark on a regime of  “demand learning” with their infants and toddlers.  All children are born with an innate drive to  learn about themselves and their families and the rest of the world.  This drive is expressed through their  curiosity and interest in things around them, their exploration of their  physical environment, their repeated attempts to practise and perfect new  physical skills and the expression of their desire for social interaction  through speech and body language.   Mothers support their children’s learning, as do fathers, by responding  to their children’s cues, helping them to further explore the things they are  interested in and encouraging their attempts at communication.

The concept that young children must  be bribed and/or bullied into learning to walk or talk is absurd.  Any parent will tell you that their  children’s drive to master these skills, along with the parent’s loving support  and encouragement, was all that was needed.   Children provide plenty of feedback to parents about their learning,  expressing delight, concentration, frustration and disinterest as clear and  distinct messages.  Parents who learn to  respond to these messages quickly realise that children have different needs  when it comes to learning.  For toddlers  and preschoolers it is generally deemed as perfectly acceptable for learning  environments to be tailored in response to these individual cues.  This creates a unique experience for each  child.

As children approach the age of six,  the expectation that they will continue to learn disappears as a lifetime of  indoctrination about the school system takes over.  Parents are taught from the time that they  were children at school themselves that learning does not happen  naturally.  Many parents believe that  children must be coerced into learning.   Not only must they be coerced but many parents believe children must be  subjected to such treatment for 1200 hours per year for up to twelve  years.  Curious, interested, enthusiastic  children go to school at age six and disinterested, unmotivated, often  stressed, depressed or disgruntled young adults emerge twelve years later.  What happened in between is not a natural  process and it is not inevitable.  (continued page 2 - see below)



Author - Eleanor Sparks
Eleanor Sparks is a homeschooling mother of five children, aged 14 to 7, who lives in Brisbane. She is a writer and speaker about homeschooling, particularly natural learning and "unschooling", provides telephone counseling to parents and was the editor of the national homeschooling magazine Education Choices - The Home Based Learning Magazine.
Demand Learning - Page 2

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