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Peter Gray: Transforming education, play, self-directed learning, parenting | Podcast

November 1, 2024 Ben Yeoh

Peter Gray is a psychologist and author of Free to Learn. For many years, he has been studying play. He keeps a substack here. 

Gray discusses his perspective on the ideal education system, which he believes should be a bottom-up movement rather than a top-down imposition. He emphasizes the importance of self-directed education where children have the freedom to follow their curiosity and interests. Gray explains how traditional schooling stifles curiosity and playfulness, and traces the historical roots of the current education system. He also highlights the sociopolitical factors that have contributed to the decline of children's mental health, arguing against the popular notion that social media is the primary cause. Additionally, the conversation touches on the impact of economic inequality on parenting styles and child freedom. Gray shares his current projects, including initiatives aimed at encouraging more free play in schools and educating pediatricians on the importance of play, while offering practical advice for parents to support their children's independence and curiosity.

"If offered the opportunity to redesign the entire educational system as a top-down thing, me being the czar of education and telling everybody else what they should do, I would decline the offer...it really has to emerge from the bottom up."


"Education works best when the people being educated are in charge of it... Children are biologically designed to learn through exploration, through play."

"Our school system suppresses curiosity and playfulness...the two primary biological educative drives in children."


"Ask your child: 'What would you like to do that you haven’t done before that might be a little bit frightening but that you’d really like to try?' It’s how children build courage and how parents build trust."

Watch above or on YouTube, or listen on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to pods.

Transcript and contents below.


Contents

  • 00:19 Redesigning the Education System

  • 01:41 The Role of Curiosity and Play in Learning

  • 05:55 Historical Context of Traditional Schooling

  • 08:26 Children's Rights and Freedom Over Time

  • 12:11 Cultural Shifts and Parental Concerns

  • 15:28 Impact of Economic Inequality on Parenting

  • 18:53 Rise of Stranger Danger and Overprotectiveness

  • 28:14 Common Core and the Mental Health Crisis

  • 38:28 The Evolution of Reading and Technology

  • 41:17 Balancing Screen Time and Real Life

  • 43:12 Reflections on 'Free to Learn'

  • 45:07 Evolutionary Psychology and Its Impact

  • 50:28 Advice for a Fulfilling Retirement

  • 01:00:04 Creative Processes and Inspirations

  • 01:05:45 Current Projects and Parenting Advice

Transcript (This has been AI assisted so mistakes are possible)

Ben: Hey everyone. I'm super excited to be speaking to the psychologist Peter Gray. He is the author of Free to Learn and an inspiration to those interested in self directed education. Peter, welcome. 

Peter: I'm very happy to be here. 

Ben: If you could redesign the entire education system, what would it look like to you?

Peter: First of all, let me say that I would if offered the opportunity to redesign the entire educational system as a top down thing, me being the czar of education and telling everybody else what they should do, I would decline the offer. I think that, I think it has to be a bottom up movement.

No educational system is going to work. unless the families believe in it and want it. So I think that the way that the educational, I'll get to your question, to the intent of your question in a moment, but I think that the educational system, it really has to emerge from the bottom up.

My ideal would not be a single educational system. It would be the many opportunities for learning many different ways of learning, many different and where families would have options of what to do. Some families would homeschool, some families would get together with other families and create little parent co ops.

Some families would would opt for something different. But my own beliefs, of course, are that education works best. When the people being educated are in charge of it, that when the children, if we're talking about children, when children are making their own choices about what it is that they're doing and learning children are really biologically designed to learn through through exploration through play.

They're born highly curious. That curiosity leads them to want to understand the world around them. And they're born with this strong drive to play and play in many different ways and play is how children develop skills so that it's, if instead of the question, how would I design it for everybody?

What I would try to encourage everybody would be to create for their children or for the children that they would like to. draw into it opportunities for self directed education. This is what I've been involved in for a long time, where the children have many learning opportunities. There is all sorts of tools for learning available to them, where there are adults who can help them if they want help and whatever it is they're interested in, but where children are really free to follow to develop and follow their own interests.

That's really the education That I that I believe. I think that the first, that the years of life that we call sort of the school years, especially the early school years, up onto maybe the mid, up as far as maybe the mid teenage years, are really times for exploration, for discovery, figuring out who you are, what you like to do.

And what kind of life you would like to have once you're an adult we're not giving children an opportunity to do that now because we keep them busy all the time. We keep them busy with school work, which is mostly irrelevant to them and with with extracurricular activities outside of school. We don't give them much chance to really, I even asked the question, who am I and what do I like to do?

Though that's what children really need much more opportunity for. 

Ben: And why do you think traditional schooling, let's call it that, stifles curiosity and motivation so much? Is it simply because we've set them this curriculum and we fill it with all You know, our ideas, which might not be their ideas, or is there some particularly strong lines of evidence that you think that why traditional schooling seems to stifle so many children in terms of this curiosity, motivation, and those kind of things?

Peter: Yes both of those are correct. The, first of all, why does it stifle? Of course it does. You can't curiosity. is disruptive in the typical school. You can't have, the child who wants to explore things is disruptive in the classroom. You can't have, you can't have 30 kids in the classroom.

You can't even have 10 in the classroom. And expect them all to be interested in the same thing at the same time. They're all curious about the same thing. Curiosity doesn't work that way. You've got to, if you're going to have a, have an educational system in which you, in which children can explore based on their curiosity, you have to expect everybody to be doing different things.

You can't expect, you can't have order in the classroom, where everybody's sitting in seats and everybody's doing, and you also can't have certain, Expectations that everybody's going to learn the same things at the same time that just can't happen. And of course, curiosity is destroyed. So is playfulness.

Because if you're playful, that's that gets you into trouble in school. That's just so so our school system. So the two primary biological educative drives in children are curiosity and playfulness. This is nature's way of educating children and schools just have to shut them off. You can't run a school in our traditional way.

It has to be an entirely different concept of a school. But a somewhat, more historical answer to this is the original purpose of schools was precisely to shut off curiosity and play. The school, the schools that we have today, the western type schools that we have today, which are now all over the world, really started in the 17th century, even somewhat before in response to the Protestant Reformation, where the belief was that we need to educate children so they can read the Bible and so they will be obedient.

And so the schools were designed primarily in Prussia the German state of Prussia, to educate them. to suppress children's spontaneous ways of learning, deliberately to suppress that, that it was believed at that time that children were born sinful, and that things that they did themselves would be sinful and harmful, and that the primary thing that children needed to learn is to is to be obedient to authority.

And so schools develop deliberately to suppress children's own endeavors and get them to obey to authority, to the school master, as they were called at that time. And so a school system developed that for that purpose and we've still got that same school system. Nobody that I know who goes into teaching says, I'm going into teaching so I can suppress curiosity and so that I can inhibit playfulness and so I can indoctrinate children.

Nobody says that. But. Every teacher who goes into the traditional school system is going into a system that was designed for that purpose. And no matter what the teachers say they're doing or want to do, they are suppressing curiosity and they are indoctrinating. They may not be indoctrinating them in the Bible anymore, but they're indoctrinating them in whatever the curriculum is.

Because it the school system is not designed for questioning, for critical thought, for for people having really different ideas. It's designed for uniformity and it's designed for learning a particular curriculum, whatever that curriculum is. 

Ben: And do you think children have more rights today than or fewer rights, if you trace it back, historically children were allowed to work.

Then they were looking too long hours. We decided, Oh, that might not be such a great thing. But then rather than giving them more time to play we put them in an education system. And then there seems to be over history, talk about 50, a hundred years a kind of. tension between giving children more rights and more say in what they do and less rights or less ability to move around and go out and play or take their own transport and things.

How do you think that's evolved? What do you think we should be doing about it? And do you think children have more or less rights and should we be giving them more understanding of that? 

Peter: That's a really good question. So there's some ways. And there's some ways in which children right now have more rights than they have in at least in Western history, in modern Western history, they have more rights in the home to talk back to their parents to eat what they choose to eat rather than what their parents tell them they have to eat, to dress the way they want to dress.

We're even talking about the rights of children to change their gender if they want to do that, right? These are rights that were not present when I was a child as much as they are today. Certainly not present 150 years ago as much as they are today. On the other hand children in the past certainly when I was a child and before that weren't watched all the time.

We had certain kind of restrictions in the home, but we spent a lot of time outside of the home with other kids, playing, exploring, doing things that kids have always done. And there, children were free. And now we're not allowing that nearly as much as in the past. That's been largely cut off. Children are not free, at least in the United States, to just go out and play on their own and with other children, without adults there guarding them, protecting them, telling what to do, and so on and so forth.

So in that respect, children have far fewer rights. They have, as one author who's looked at the history of this put up, children have more personal rights in the home than they did before, but far less freedom outside of the home than they ever have had before. It's also the case that the school system over time, certainly since the years when I was in school many decades ago, has become far more time consuming.

And far more restrictive of what you can do within the school than it used to be. So school has become less free than it used to be. We used to have much more time for recess. We used to have a long lunch hour. We had shorter school days. And in elementary school, we didn't have homework. So when I was a kid, school was not as oppressive.

It was not as big a deal in children's lives as it is today. So that's the in the long run, in the very long run of human history. We were probably freest, children were probably freest when, back when we were hunter gatherers. The studies that have been done of hunter gatherer cultures that have survived into the 20th century at least, and studied in the 20th century children have amazing amount of freedom compared to children in any modern day society other than the hunter gatherer culture.

Ben: Yeah, I recall when I was 12, I took my first solo plane trip and now I think about it and speak to people are amazed that a 12 year old would take a solo plane trip and it wasn't a big deal. And I think there must be multiple causes of this decline of play or the the freedom or the agency that we give children.

What do you think are the major ones around it? Do you think it's just a cultural shift, the sort of media narrative and these institutions and structures? And if it is that, is it something which is going to be really difficult to reverse? 

Peter: Yeah, I think it is going to be difficult to reverse. First of all, regarding your solo plane trip, I, my son His first solo plane trip.

He, when he was 12 years old, he told his mother and me that he wanted to go to to, to England. He had been playing Dungeons and Dragons and he was really interested in castles and Neither his mother or I at that point had ever been overseas. He knew we were sticking the mud so we weren't going to go.

And so he planned, this was before the internet, this was in 1980 he planned his own trip he, and he announced to us that, and he said that he was going to go and he said, don't worry about the money. I'll earn the money, which he did. He was working, he worked in a restaurant first washing dishes, and then they put him on the line ticket.

At 12 years old and he earned his own money for this trip. He figured the whole trip out by himself at 12 years old. I believe he was 13 by the time he left. He claims he was 12. We've had a discussion about it, but I would have to look up the actual dates. But I think he had, I think he had barely turned 13 at the time.

I think he left after May 25th, which would have been his birthday. So that so that was, now that, at that time even then, that raised some eyebrows. But it wasn't, People wouldn't have regarded his mother and me as negligent. They wouldn't have put us in jail for allowing that to happen, right?

Today, they might. The airline probably wouldn't have allowed him on, unless there were guarantees he was going to be met. And on top of this, he was a child who's, Type 1 diabetes. So he, it needs to monitor his own insulin and all of this kind of stuff. No, I wouldn't do that today. Not because I wouldn't trust the child to do it, but because it would be so against the cultural grain.

So even since 1980, there has been a huge change in the way the culture looks at this kind of thing. So I think that the change in the culture has come from a variety of causes. It is interesting that In the United States, the biggest shift occurred in the 1980s. Some of this was building up gradually before, but the biggest shift in thinking about this occurred in the decade between 1980 and 1990.

And there are several things that happened in the United States that I think all contributed to this. One of them was was the election of Ronald Reagan as president and the and and a legislature that was with Reagan. And what happened beginning in the 1980s is that the economy changed dramatically in the United States.

Such that the gap between the rich and poor increased and has been increasing ever since. There's a lot of research that shows that when the gap between rich and poor is great, when you lose the kind of of safety net that occurs when government provides supports for people who are poor.

When you lose the safety of labor unions, which were more or less destroyed during the Reagan era, and when you begin to greatly decrease the taxes on the wealthy, and therefore have to cut back on safety measures for the poor. Suddenly now, parents become far more concerned about whether their children are going to make it financially or not.

Back when I was a kid, parents weren't that worried about that. I grew up in a working class family, and neither of my parents at that time had gone to college. My uncles, with one exception, were not college educated. They all had. decent jobs. They all could support a family. They could own a home.

They could even own a little cottage out in the country, and without, and it, and the ed, that this educational achievement was far less of a big deal. Then with these changes, people began to worry. And we also began, there were also other changes that occurred that, For a variety of reasons, some of those working class jobs went away.

People began to think that the way that I can make sure. that my child, or at least increase the chances that my child will succeed as an adult, is to make sure that my child is well educated, that they do all the right things in order to prepare themselves in what suddenly now is seen as a very competitive world.

We didn't see it as so competitive, and so there's actually research that shows cross culturally That in countries where the gap between rich and poor is great, parents are far more controlling of their children, far more concerned that they do the quote right thing educationally, far less likely to simply let them have leisure time and explore and all of these kinds of things.

than in countries where the gap between rich and poor is less. So for example, in the Scandinavian countries, Finland, for example, the, there the gap between rich and poor is far less than in the United States. And children are afforded much more individual freedom there than they are in the United States.

There's actually graphs showing that if you plot on one axis, the degree of economic inequality. And on another axis, parents attitudes about parenting and put it on a kind of controlling versus permissive spectrum, as you go out towards more and more economic inequality, you go towards more and more controlling, less and less permissiveness.

So I think that was part of it. In addition to that. In 1979 and then again in 1981, there were very much publicized cases of a young boy being kidnapped, in one case murdered, in the other case lost, never recovered. In both cases, if I remember correctly, there were six year old boys apparently snatched away by a stranger.

And suddenly we now had warnings about stranger danger. People were, you would hear in the United States in the 1980s, public service announcements, do you know where your child is now? And so the concern about watching your child all the time, because they might be snatched away. Now this is, was then an extraordinarily rare crime.

That's why it was so newsworthy. It's still extraordinarily rare. It almost never happens. But people began to become afraid of that. And that became a reason not to let your child out of sight. And that reason has even grown over time even for this irrational reason that, there's this tiny little probability, little chance that your child might be snatched away by a stranger.

It almost never occurs. But people think it occurs frequently because of the way it's publicized. So that, that, that played a role. And then there's one other thing that happened in the 1980s, also at the direction of Ronald Reagan, which was the a book that a federal analysis of our school system, which concluded, in fact, this was a foregone conclusion based on who was chosen to work on this study and write this book, that our school system has become too lax we are not keeping up with other countries, particularly not keeping up with the Southeast Asian countries educationally, and we're going to fall behind.

And so this book was published and that became then that initiated a new way of thinking what then was regarded as a reformation in schools, which was the opposite of the kind of reformation I would be wanting. More and more classes, more and more testing, less and less freedom of teachers to do what they wanted.

And then that ultimately became incorporated into the No Child Left Behind Act and then Common Core. Which greatly restricted what teachers could do in the classroom. So school became ever more rigid, ever more controlled by top down by a curriculum. So all of those kinds of changes, I think, are, have led to the system that is leading children to suffer so much today.


Ben: I hadn't put together the politics of it or the emphasis that Reagan had on, the individual and the ability or opportunity for jobs and that type of thing, as well as say, the stranger danger and articles on school. It's interesting because for instance, in Finland, you don't go to school until five or seven, even it would be, you could easily just go and no one would blink and in some cultures like in japan They make a big deal of the first time you could go to the shops yourself, which you might do at three four Three or four or something like that and have this you know that from the cross cultural and in the uk we had a big splash again with a missing child Maddie, I believe a daughter, which again became very salient, but to your point, the statistics of it are extremely rare, much more likely for all sorts of other incidents than that.

But I guess that brings us to the point today that parents fear that they will be bad parents, or, even there might be some legal act against them if they take their children out of school, if they feel that the school's not working for them and that type of Atmosphere or even within school just to try and give children perhaps more agency Around how they would live their lives even within the school system What would you say to parents who feel that they might be bad parents or what we can do?

Around letting children have a bit more agency in play 

Peter: Yes yeah, you make a good point that, so it has now become a moral imperative that you and in some degree legal imperative, not actually written in law, but treated as if it were written in law, about always minding your child, always watching your child the One of the things that's happened is that social child protective services in most states have a requirement that if somebody calls the police or calls the hotline and says there's a child out there not being watched by an adult, that they have to investigate.

And so a lot of parents who allow their child out in the way that. All parents would have and, decades ago have had this experience of social services showing, social protected, child protective services showing up at their home. If you're white and middle class or above, you will fight it in court and almost die.

essentially always win or win even before it have to go to court. But if you are black and poor, the statistics are there's a pretty good chance that they would take your child away. So people have become vigilant for that reason, even over their children, even if they know that it would be good for their child to go out and do these things on their own.

It would be developmentally appropriate. It would be valuable. The child would enjoy the child would grow from it. So people are afraid for that reason. And then in addition to that, it has really become it has become such a norm and it's been present for so long that people begin to feel that if you're not watching your child all the time, and if you're not there to teach your child and direct your child, that you're not a good parent, you're a bad parent.

And of course nobody wants to be a bad parent and even people who intellectually understand this, it would be perfectly safe for my eight year old, nine year old child to go play in the park by themselves without me. And they're perfectly responsible, they could do that. Even they, And even if they're not so concerned that some neighbor is going to call, but most people are concerned about that.

But even despite that, they might not do it because there's something in their head that says everybody around me says this would make me a bad parent. Maybe it would make me a bad parent. You don't necessarily think it through that way. But we automatically believe if we're not doing what other people do, Is there something wrong with us?

Is there something, we're all creatures of norms. That's part of being a human being. And if we're not behaving like other people are behaving, we begin, not only are we worried that other people are going to question us and criticize us, but we begin to question ourselves and criticize ourselves about that.

So absolutely. What can we do? I try to whenever I speak to parents and when I write articles and books to him towards parents, I really try to talk about all the what are the myths here and what are the things you can do? And given the constraints, what can you do in our society today?

Without that would give your child more freedom, more opportunity to play more control over their own lives, more more possibility that they can grow up with a growing sense of independence and responsibility and therefore become competent, mentally healthy adults. So the and there are things parents can do.

Ben: So you touched on mental health. And there's a lot of concern, in the media about mental health in children, although some of that might be due to more awareness and diagnosis and the like, and some of it might be a trend. I think you've argued for this connection between the decline in free play and the rise in things like anxiety and depression amongst young people.

We've had others more recently, hate who's made a lot of a kind of social media hypothesis, although there's been some pushback from that and some articles in nature. And I think you've been a little bit skeptical about whether the evidence is around that. I guess there's also a complication as maybe if you're if you have too much screen time, you're not out playing in the park, then again screen time might be one of the times when you are able now to get together with your like minded peers and hang out because you're not allowed to hang out elsewhere.

So you might as well hang out digitally. I've seen great adventures in things like Minecraft worlds or chat groups and things like that. So I'd be interested in your view as to whether there is, how strong the phenomena are. of concern about mental health in children is and perhaps the weighting that you would put on a decline in play arguments for it versus say social media hypothesis and the like.

Peter: I think it is primarily the decline in play, the increased toxicity of school, the way we do school and and and the decline generally of opportunities for children to do things independently. It's not just play. Play, I define as an independent activity. If it's controlled by adults, it's not play.

But other independent things, like just traveling around the neighborhood by yourself, getting places by yourself, doing what you did at age 12 and what my son did at age 12 or 13. Those kinds of things. Yeah. We don't even allow kids to go, downtown by themselves at age 12 anymore, in this country.

So that's, so all of that is, of course, that is going to make kids, that's going to stunt children's mental development. Now, in terms of the, in my mind, the best measure of the decline of the, of the decline of mental health is probably suicide rate, even though that's just the tip of the iceberg of suffering.

because it's a solid number that the way that you measure anxiety and depression, you're right, could possibly be changed in terms of people's willingness to report it, to admit it and so on and so forth. But the suicide rate is by 1990 was already about five times what it was in the 1950s for teenagers.

and it peaked in the 1990s. There's actually, let me spend a couple minutes on this because it, this also gets to the difference between what Jonathan Haidt believes and what I believe about this. Between 1950 and 1990, you had an upward slope of suicide rates. To the degree that we can, we have data on Based on assessments of anxiety and depression, those also were upper sloping.

Reached a peak, interestingly, in 1990. That was the peak. That peak was as high as it is today. We're not higher today than we were in 1990 on any measure of mental problems among young people. Fight ignores that totally. So that was all before the internet. That was all before most families had computers in their homes.

We had all, we had already been changing the nature of schooling. We had already been depriving children of free play and a lot of the freedoms that they had before by 1990. Then. What's interesting, and I only began talking about this recently, I tended to ignore it as everybody else did, things got better for a while.

Between 1990 and 2000, suicide rate went down. So did depression and anxiety, to the degree that we have reasonable measures of those things, went down. Not to 1950s levels, but went down by about a third of the way down. Then leveled off between 2000 and 2010. Now, why did they go down? The only answer I can come up with is they went down because of the internet.

It went down because we had by 1990, we had pretty much prevented kids from interacting with one another, playing, exploring, but now they had a new way to do it. They had a new way of doing it. They had they figured out how to use these computers before most adults did. Once that but by the time by the mid 1950s, by the mid 1990s, most families with teenagers had computers with an Internet connection.

They were playing games with one another. They were playing multiplayer video games. They were communicating with one another. They had also some kind of expertise that many adults didn't have. You would go into department stores in the mid 1990s to the computer section, and there would be a teenager there explaining how these machines worked.

So suddenly, kids found a new way to communicate. They gained a new kind of status in a sense, because they had figured this stuff out and I think that's why it went down. It didn't go back because this didn't, this was not as good as what kids had before back in the 1950s, when you could just go out and play and explore and do all these interesting things outdoors as well.

But this was better than what you had in the 1990s. Then So then the question is, why did it start going back up again? Beginning around 2010, it started going back up again, and we're now back at 1990s levels on all of this. We're not above it, but we're back at 1990s levels. We've still got the internet.

We've still got video games. What happened to bring it back up? And it's not that suddenly we're allowing children more freedom. I, my explanation for it, and I've written some blog posts about this. I'm currently writing a book that deals with this. But the, my explanation, Is common core.

This is when this increase, by the way, despite what height says in the book, did not occur worldwide , this increase in it did not occur throughout Europe. It just did not occur. I've looked at the data, it didn't occur there, . The suicide rate has been flat there. It was flat in Canada, it was flat in the whole EU suicide rates.

And as. probably the most reliable measure, did not increase among teens between 2010 And and 2020, which is usually the decade that Haidt is looking at so why did it increase in the United States and not those other places? Those other places, they have the internet, they have social media, they're not deprived of these things.

They're on it as much as our kids are, but they're not suffering in the same rate. Why not? It's because the suffering is not because of being on the internet. It's because the suffering is because we've done too much. What we've done with our schools, their schools changed dramatically with the onset of Common Core in the United States.

There's no question about that. Every study that's been done in which teenagers themselves are asked about what is it is the source of your anxiety and depression. Every study shows that the answer they give you far and away more than any other answer is school. And beginning after 2010, beginning with Common Core, really beginning around 2013 when most states had Common Core, that answer became even more common than it was before.

So just to give you an example of the American Psychological Association did a study in 2013 called Stress in America. They do this study every year with adults, but every once in a while they include teenagers. 2013, they included teenagers. They found that teenagers, by their measure, were the most stressed out people in the country.

And when they asked what the source of stress was, 83 percent cited school. Nothing else came close. You could list more than one thing, but nothing else came close. The same study that was done four years earlier, when they asked teens that question, it was something like 50 percent said it was school. So it jumps from 50 percent to 83 percent saying school is what's stressing me out.

I think that, and that, that was the time, and there were also by, at that time, by 2013, there were many more kids who said they were feeling stressed, they were feeling anxious, and so on, that was true. So Hyatt and some others show this curve, they don't show the fact that things were going down before that, or that we were just as high before, they show this curve and they say what else could it be?

This is when cell phones came into being. And my answer is something else happened at that same time. And that's this dramatic change in school. 

Ben: That's fascinating. I haven't heard that as well articulated and I look forward to reading your book on it. I wonder if there's any data then on depression rates or suicide rates in those who are at self directed places or homeschool, unschooled.

Because there's probably a large enough sample in the U. S. now. Of that, maybe even in the UK, because there's a reasonable home education part, and maybe that would provide some evidence for you. It also leads me to think that means that you're probably less worried than, say, the media would suggest on how children are using screen time.

And would you basically say that, that you could just let them be? And is that from any age, or is maybe nine or ten a little bit too young to have unrestricted screen time? Again, just let children be let them have agency. They can maybe suffer the consequences of a sleepless night. Maybe they'll learn from that.

Are you generally less worried about screen time or is there still an opportunity cost for these other kinds of play, which would be maybe similar to what hunter gatherers or others do have more outdoor play and or does it matter less as long as it's an independent child chosen activity, 

Peter: So I think one thing, if we want kids to be on screens more, we have to let them be outdoors more.

We have to allow them other options. And what that means is not putting them into adult directed sports. That's not play, that's just more like school. That means really allowing them to be kids, allowing them. So in self directed learning centers, kids are allowed to be on screens as much as they want.

And they are on screens a fair amount. Why wouldn't they be? It's the biggest tool we have today. It's a bit, it's a major educational tool but they're also outdoors a lot. They're also playing outdoors. They're doing a lot of things because they can. They've got a big menu and most of them are taking use of it.

Now, there's always been some kids, even when I was a kid in the 1950s, there's some kids, we call them nerds, right? They're indoor people. Back in my day, they spent all their time reading. Why would they read? Why would they want to read instead of go out fishing with me? I couldn't figure that out.

There's still some people given a choice. They want to be on the computer all the time, so that's the but so there's their individual differences. And we've now had this round long enough to know that those who are on the computer all the time, they can learn all. They go on to find lives, they go on to a whole variety of lives.

Many of them become computer technicians or computer specialists of one sort or video game designers, but they don't all do. Some of them go on to become anything they want to be. They develop skills, they build competence. The computer, these computer games are extraordinarily complex and difficult.

They're, they build your intelligence in ways that you can apply in all sorts of ways. So I'm not that worried about it. I do think, here's what I do think, especially for young children. So back when I was a kid in the 1950s, concerning going outdoors, doing things outdoors, parents understood that there are dangers.

And they taught us about the dangers. They taught us safety rules look both ways before you cross the street. If if somebody stops in a car and offers you candy to get into the car, go away. If they try to pull you in, scream at the top of your voice. We were all, Spirits weren't naive, they were, they knew there were some dangers out there.

The risks were pretty small about the stranger thing, but the risk was there and they taught us what to do. There was also general advice, generally speaking, especially if you're going to be out late at night, be with a friend, don't go by yourself, there's safety in numbers. There were these kinds of things taught to us.

I think. We also need to teach young people about safety on the internet. There are dangers on the internet, including the danger of just getting sucked into it and spending too much time, wasting your time more than even you would really want to do. So instructions in time management, how to control your time.

I also think it's appropriate to have certain rules about, I wouldn't take, I think it would be terrible idea to take away the cell phone. It's the most powerful tool we've got, educational tool. It's also a safety tool. If you, if something happens to you, you've got that in your pocket, you can call your parents or you can call 911.

Why take that away? But, There are safety things about it, don't, just like you don't, if somebody offers you candy to get into the car, if somebody meets you on the internet and wants to meet you and you don't know them, don't do it. These are common sensing. Most kids beyond the age of about 13 understand this or about the age of 15 understand more so today than in the past.

They're pretty savvy about this kind of stuff, but there may be some who aren't. Yeah. There are also times in places where none of us adults as well as children should Should allow ourselves to get on our screens like at the dinner table. Let's all put our computers away So let's all put our cell phones away so we can be with one another at dinner don't I think it's good advice to anybody who's tempted to keep their phone on at night to just not take it into the bedroom, keep it outside of the bedroom because it might keep you awake.

You might not, you might hear it pop. You might hear a little ding and be an irresistibly wanna answer it. It's going to keep you up at night. Don't do that. So keep it out of the bedroom. Yeah. If you are involved, if you're going to a place where you're having a meeting with other people, like you or I would be very rude right now if we picked up our cell phone and started checking our email or our social media contacts.

What a rude thing to do. So don't take it to meetings where you're talking, where you're supposed to be there talking to other people. I think it's perfectly appropriate in school settings where you're going to have a discussion about something and you're all supposed to be present to say, park your I also think summer camps would be quite legitimate to say this is a camping experience where we are learning about being present in physically with one another and being outdoors.

And the smartphone is a distraction from that. So no smartphones during camping period. I think those are all legitimate things to do. To do but taking a smartphone away from a child of any age is taking away the most valuable Tool we have in our modern society. 

Ben: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense give them rules and principles you know the advice that you'd want to give anyone including ourselves but don't take away don't take away the actual tool.

Your book free to learn I think it's over a decade old. I was wondering in those years or even from looking all the way back. Do you still feel the core ideas are as important now as ever? I get this feeling as yes. And has anything changed over that time when you would put more emphasis on something now than you would have done previously?

Have you changed your mind about anything? 

Peter: I haven't changed my mind about any of it. The, As I've explained, if anything, the school system has become worse than what I was describing there, and I might have, if I were to do a revision of the book, I might put more emphasis on the harm of of schooling as we do it now, and especially of, especially since Common Core.

Common Core was just beginning to come into effect at that time, and so I didn't really have that data. But on all the other things things have gotten worse. I would have also, however, which I didn't do in that book, talked about the, I did in that book say that, people who are worried about about the internet and online activity, I did say this has been, if anything, the saving grace rather than the cause of the problem.

I would even emphasize that now more than I did that now that I have really looked at the data showing. That things improved, meant improved for kids during this, that decade between the time that we had, we began that most kids now had online access and the time when common core took effect, we had actually improvement in children's mental health.

I didn't talk about that at all in free to learn. That'll be a big topic in my next book. One of a number of big topics in my next book. 

Ben: Yeah, I think we're all very quick to jump on risks, but not so much on the opportunities, which are more slow moving. I guess in terms of your writing as well, you wrote one of the first psychology textbooks.

I looked up, I think the first edition was maybe around 1991 and you introduced concepts of, evolutionary or evolutionary psychology of the time. And I was just thinking about the influence that had on also your work on hunter gatherer societies and learning. And I think you're still updating or maybe that textbook is being updated, but I was wondering over that period of time, what do you think has changed in core psychology ideas?

And I don't know, why were we so late to thinking about evolutionary psychology? And do you think it's still influential in our thinking today? 

Peter: That's a good question. So at the time, so when I was, it would have really been in the 1980s that I was writing the first edition of the textbook.

And you're right, I think it probably came out in 1991. I subsequently revised it for six more editions over many years. And then the book was taken over by somebody else to revise who did two more editions of it. So it's currently in its eighth edition. It's been around for a long time. But at the time that I was writing it the idea of bringing an evolutionary approach to psychology, there was a lot of stigma about that idea.

There were a lot of negativity about it. I think that Nazi Germany put in everybody's minds a bad taste. about thinking about human beings from a genetic biological perspective, because in some sense that was the essential rationale of Nazism. And it was also an argument. It was an argument. There were arguments at that time based on kind of pseudo evolutionary thinking, pseudo biological thinking about racial superiority of whites over blacks, about the superiority of males over females.

There was a kind of There was a kind of general and some of the books from an evolutionary perspective at that time fed into that belief. So the kind of belief that distinctions between men and women, for example, are biologically ingrained and men are going to be dominant and women are meant to be mothers and domestic.

These kinds of. Things graded quite understandably on people. And so it gave the whole idea of looking at human behavior, talking about it in terms of evolved tendencies, gave it a bad name. And feminism was coming into its core, and the feminists at that time were adamantly opposed to biological theories about human beings, at least some of them were.

I had the advantage, and I think this was very clever on the part of the publishing company, of assigning an editor to me, who was not only a very experienced editor, but also was an ardent feminist. And I had to, in order to, in order I made it a goal. Anything that go, went into the book I had the right.

They were very clear. I could put whatever I wanted in the book. The editor was there really for, to help me. And I took that quite literally. I said to myself, if I can't, convince Phyllis, my editor, that this is real science, that this is legitimate, that this is, and that this is not something that's harming women then it's okay to go in.

And I think the book came out far better because I took that on. I didn't want to make the mistake of presenting Things that were biases that were came from a particular way of thinking. So this was also a time when really the evolutionary approach was just beginning. And so my textbook, my introductory psychology textbook was the first introductory psychology book really to bring an evolutionary perspective to bear in a real way.

Into the book and run it all the way through the book. I think it helped change psychology I think a lot of people who then became professors of psychology had learned about psychology as freshmen in with my book And I think it played a role not necessarily the major role, but it played a role in the evolution of psychology as a science to be more accepting of an evolutionary perspective about human behavior 

Ben: That's brilliant.

And it helped you retire or semi retire in your in your fifties. I say semi retire because you went on to do tons of other stuff as as well. I'd be interested perhaps a couple of things is for those who might be thinking about retirement, you seem to really enjoyed it and you've been doing lots of things.

What advice do you or thoughts do you have about retirement? People using their leisure time. I think you put a survey out also on your sub stack. I very much recommend listeners to check out the sub stack. But yeah what do you think people should be doing with their leisure time? And should we be looking to retire earlier?

Perhaps not all of us have got royalties from a textbook to rely on. But this thinking about how you've enjoyed retirement and what to do with our time. 

Peter: Yes. For me, it was a very wise decision. I, I did it for several reasons. I was far from typical retirement age. Professors tend to stay on forever.

Sometimes the administration wants to get rid of them and it's hard to get rid of them when you've got tenure, but some I was far from retirement age from typical retirement age, but I had already been teaching for 30 years. I had been chair of the department for a small portion of that time.

I was often involved in administrative responsibilities and I was And as much as I enjoyed some aspects of teaching, there were, as you might guess from my book, Free to Learn, there were other aspects of teaching and grading and so on that I was beginning to not enjoy and not really believe in any longer.

And I, and I certainly wasn't interested in becoming a dean or working on more administrative ways at the university. And I did, because the book made enough money I was set enough for retirement. I didn't have to worry about giving, maintaining that salary. And also, frankly, the university changed a little bit.

The the, I think people, I think that the spirit of kind of collegialism changed and this was not just at Boston College. This was everywhere. The, it became more driven by, universities wanted everybody to get grants and to get grants, you needed to publish a certain amount of research and people began to publish research just for the sake of publishing research to get grants.

And no longer were people spending, one of the great, leisure things about being a professor is just, like having long lunches with your colleagues and talking about ideas and people weren't doing that anymore. Here's the downside of the computer. They were eating their lunch in front of their computer, right?

Catching up on their email, maybe communicating with their colleagues on the other side of the world, whether rather than their colleagues down the hall. And so there was less of a kind of collegial environment that I had always enjoyed at Boston College. So that was another reason. And then finally, this is a personal thing, but my first wife died around that time.

And I began to realize life doesn't go on forever. And I really want to be sure that I'm spending every day doing what I most want to do and not wasting time doing things that I think are not. near the top of my list of what I want to do. And among other things I wanted to start writing for the general public I wanted to do.

And the research I had in mind doing didn't require that I be in an institutional setting. Although I could have continued to do it at Boston college if I needed to do it in an institutional setting. So all of that played into it. And And it was a great decision for me. What I can say, and I've told people repeatedly every day I wake up and say, whatever I do today, it's because I want to do it.

There's nothing that I have to do except like maybe wash yesterday's dishes. But the but in terms of the great bulk of my time, it's, it is in a certain definition play because it's my choice to do it. Or not to do it. I have, as a consequence, been able to do much more research much more writing than I could when I was when I was a full time, full professor at Boston College.

And I also have time for creating a great garden, for bicycling. I'm big into bicycling, kayaking, cross country skiing. I'm 80 years old and I think that the fact that I retired when I was in my 50s, which gave me time to, For leisure time and X and doing things outdoors that I enjoy doing. And I think it's been great for my health.

So it was a great decision for me. Now. I can't tell other people that it would be a great decision for them. But I can say if you're thinking of it and if you, if there are things you would like to do that, you don't have time to do it. And if you can afford to retire. Retiring early, I think, is a great idea.

That sounds excellent. There are some people who retire and they don't know what to do. 

Ben: You picked up on your own thing in your life. I I followed someone called Bernie DeKoven, who was someone who was all into, I guess we call it adult play, but it isn't. Like that, it's what, what you allude to, it's about independence, it's about agency, it's about fun, it's not about competitiveness, play, which you might think about, but all this playfulness and that comes into a lot of, I think, creativity and artwork.

I was thinking then if you had anything you would have said to perhaps your younger self, I don't know, your 16 year old self or your 21 year old self, or maybe speaking to a 16 year old today with all of this life experience that you have is there anything you would have particularly Advised your younger self.

It sounds like you know retire as early as you can sounds like a good piece of advice Or make sure like you say make sure every day you're trying to do things that you really want to do is there anything you would have thought 

Peter: you know, that's a really good question. I think that it's hard when somebody is fairly happy with their life which I am, it's hard to say that I would have changed something when I was younger, because if I had changed something when I was younger, I might not be who I am now.

So it's a little hard to say that. It's a little hard to say that for sure. I do think that, I do think that I do think that, like many people, throughout my younger years, I was too concerned about other people's judgments. And I think I restrained myself in a lot of ways. I think I'm not the only person who does that by any means.

We're all that way. I tend to be a little bit more that way than many other people. And I think that It was maybe too important to me that people like me all the time. And I think that was constraining on my life. I think I've gradually somewhat overcome that with time. But I think that, I think what I would say to young people today, but it's a different world today than the one I grew up in, is that is don't worry so much.

About school . Don't worry so much about that, because now I've been studying the, I've been studying now people who don't go to school who are self involved in self-directed education, either as homeschoolers following the following, the method of unschooling where they're pursuing their own interests or going to a school.

Like the school, my son went to Bury Valley. where you can follow your, and I see they're doing very well in life and they're discovering their passions. They're going into things that they enjoy. I think if I had opportunities like that, it might have, I might've gotten into what I ultimately got into quicker.

I went through a conventional school. I went to graduate school not really knowing what I wanted to do. I went to graduate school primarily as an alternative to going to Vietnam. I, and at that time you could still get a student deferment. And then by the time that was no longer case, I was married and had a child and had a deferment for that reason.

I didn't go into, I didn't go on to graduate school because I had a particular intellectual passion. I hadn't really developed an intellectual passion at that point. I was interested in a lot of things, but I wasn't passionate about them. And I ended up being a brain researcher, studying the brains of rats and mice and bindings of hormones.

And I did competent work. And I found it somewhat interesting but it wasn't passionate for me and I never was fully into it. I never felt it was really all that important. It wasn't until much later after I was already a professor at Boston College doing that kind of work that I then got interested in child development and that really was interesting to me.

Now the roots of that interest came were really present long before, but I never followed those roots of that interest. I followed what seemed to be a more conventional, safe path of brain research. I I got into a very, happened to who knows why into a fair, very selective university working with Top people who are doing brain research, and I felt boy, I really achieved that, and it was more like, because I could do it, I had to do it, with as opposed to, this is really what I want to do.

And so I think that, this is almost sounds trite because people say it at graduation speeches all the time, follow your passion. But to follow your passions, you have to discover what they are, which means you've got to have time to play and explore. And I, and although I had much more time than most kids have today, I wish I had even more time.

For that and had the opportunity To then by the time I was of college age to really know what it was I wanted in life and would have pursued it in a more direct fashion got into it earlier on 

Ben: That sounds like excellent advice. Don't worry too much about school and don't worry about too much about what other people think as long as you get on with it, that's great.

Okay coming to our last. Couple of questions then You what I had is around your own creative process, you write quite prolifically on your sub stack. You used to keep a blog kind of blog posts before you've also done research. Are you a sort of have to write two or three hours?

a day? Do you write more morning or night? Does it just come to you? You obviously spend a lot of time outdoors as well so you have all of these activities I guess does your walking activity outdoors spark the thoughts that you're having and where do your ideas come from? I just, everyone seems to have different creative processes, so I'd be very interested in how yours come about and how your writing in active day is.

Peter: Yeah, I think that so because my it would be different if I were writing fiction. Sometimes I wish I were writing fiction I could just make stuff up But since I am writing I'm trying to write I'm trying to present to people What we know about? or at least what we have good reasons to believe because of research evidence.

So I spend a lot, I spend more time reading research and doing library research than I do in actual writing, sitting down and writing. So I spend a lot of time in front of my computer. I used to spend a lot of time in the library. Now, fortunately, I can sit in front of my computer and get all the information that way, download articles from the library or from the internet.

So I spend a lot of time doing library research. I spend a certain amount of time doing still empirical research, but it's empirical research that doesn't require being in a laboratory survey research and so on. And but I also do spend writing. Interestingly has never been easy for me and maybe that's why I'm attracted to it.

Who knows when I was in school, I always got A's in math. Math was simple for me, but I never really was that interested in math. Writing was more of a challenge. Reading was more of a challenge. I was a late reader, and here I am, a life of mostly reading and writing. The and it's still a challenge.

I'm writing is and I have to go over and over. I try to make it look in my blog posts and and substack posts. I try to make it look as if it's coming easy and spontaneous, but that's the result of a lot of going over and over for the most part. So the other thing that I think helps in terms of the creative aspect is taking time off from it.

So when I'm out bicycling, which I spend at least three hours on average every day outside, is that an exaggeration? I don't think so. If I were really to average it out at least two hours every day outdoors. I have a habit of going for a 15 mile bicycle ride every morning as part of my routine. When I'm on my bicycle or when I'm kayaking or doing cross country skiing whenever we have snow on the ground in the winter, these kind of rhythmic activities in my mind is very free.

I very often come up with with ideas that hadn't come to me before. I, it's like the back of my mind, even though I'm not consciously thinking about it, is working on this and suddenly this new insight. sprouts into my mind. This is not unique for me. There's actually research showing that people have these kinds of insights when they have been working on some problem to be solved, some general area, and now they take a break from it.

And then suddenly some insight comes to them about what they had been working on before. I think the brain, I think there is a sense in which the unconscious mind continues to work on the things that your conscious mind had been working on before. And it's often in those instances that you come up with what we call insights, come up with a novel way of looking at what you have just been struggling with consciously before.

And so I think that's Part of it I really I really think that it, I believe this is part of the way the human mind works, that everybody who's involved, whether you're in, whether you're a writer, whether it's a fiction writer, whether you're a scientist, if you're involved in things that involve You know, a mental process that involves some sense of creativity combined with knowledge that breaks from what you're doing are really important and the kind of break that's best, at least for me, and I would guess for other people, is the kind of break where You're taking a break.

You're doing something that's refreshing and your body is involved in it, but your mind is not focused on that new thing. Your mind is running free. You're enjoying the scenery. You're enjoying the snow. You're enjoying the physical activity, but your mind is not. consciously occupied in a focused way on some new issue so that, so for example, playing chess would not be a good break for me to come up with insights about my writing, whereas bicycle riding would be a good place for that to happen.

Ben: Yeah, that sounds excellent. I recall reading, there's a Japanese author Murakami talked about it, running and thoughts, and I remember the, probably apocryphal, but the little anecdote, I think, is it Archimedes about his eureka, eureka moment in a bath, or it does stretch back. Yes 

Okay, great.

So final kind of double question, maybe for you one was, did you want to highlight any current projects that you're working on? So we have the Substack blog and your, you, seems to be some ideas writing in your book. And then maybe you want to give us any parting advice particularly I guess to parents and family about what your kind of work says for them.

So it maybe touches on your current projects, but current projects and any final parenting advice. 

Peter: So one, one current project I'm working on is what I'm, what I've been calling the Pediatrics Initiative. I'm, I've I've come to the belief that if the world is going to change on the things that I think they should change on, if parents are going to come to realize that their children need more free play and.

and and freedom in general outdoor freedom, independent activities. They have to hear it from their pediatricians. Pediatric, parents listen to their kids pediatricians and they visit them, at least once a year, all the way sometimes into the teenage years. And my wife initially convinced me of this.

She's an OBGYN and and so I've been working with the, with people at the National Institute for Play, which I've become involved with on developing information for pediatricians about the value of play, which they can then, in their well child visits with, clients, they can then talk about this value of play and even prescribe play to the kids with the parents permission standing there.

And so that's something I'm working on. We've developed a nice brochure to give out. If there are any pediatricians in your, and you're listening to the podcast get in touch with the National Institute for Play and you can get some of this material. We're also sharing this with psychologists who, psychiatrists and psychologists who work with.

Parents were sharing it with schools. I've been working with for some time with the non profit organization, Let Grow, which I was one of the founders with a lot along with Lenore Skenazy and Jonathan Haidt years ago bringing more play into schools. And we're involved with that. I designed a research study looking at the effects of these interventions, where children have an hour of absolute free play at school, age mixed play, and what consequences does this have for the kids and for the school climate, and so on.

I've been, that's some, so those are a couple research projects I'm involved in. And as I mentioned, I'm working on a new book. My working title for the book is Restoring Childhood. I believe that over time we've been gradually taking what is natural childhood away from children. And we need, if we're going to have healthy children, we need to bring childhood back to them.

And so that's what the book is about primarily.


Ben: Last question would be on any parenting advice or advice for families it sounds like that's the whole theme of our podcast is essentially bringing play back to children not being not being so worried, giving them more agency but any final advice maybe as to the principles there and how we can actually put that into action.

Peter: Let me, I could go on for two hours talking about that, but let me say that if I were to make one suggestion that, that isn't exactly what I've already said, as we've talked so far, is that, If you're a parent, it would be a good idea to ask your child this. So what is it that you might like to do that you haven't done before that might be might even be a little bit frightening to you, but you would really like to do it?

And then to have a talk, discussion with that child, with your child about that. And then think about whether you would let your child do that. So maybe your child, so this is a way of counteracting our tendency to restrict our children's activities. This is a way of saying, not imposing, not telling the child to do this or that, but finding out what the child would like to do.

that the child currently isn't doing, maybe because you haven't allowed a child to do it, maybe because the child just assumes you wouldn't allow them to do it, maybe because the child has been over, so overprotected that they haven't even thought about what they really might want to do. But you're raising that question, and Maybe even make a list of things he would like to do.

Part of the and so this is actually something that we are also doing through schools, where teachers are Asking that question. And then they tell the, then they tell the child you have to negotiate with your parents about doing what it is you want to do. And then you can report back to the school class.

We call this the let grow intervention is one of our interventions in schools and it works brilliantly, but it also could work at the. parent level, doesn't have to be a teacher, the parent who says my child really maybe needs more adventures that they're not getting. Let me talk to my child about this, what they would like to do, and then let me think about whether I feel comfortable with them doing it or not.

And maybe it could be even a whole list of things. There's a lot of evidence that this is how children build courage by doing things that they might be a little afraid of and realizing they can do it. And it's also how parents build trust in their kids by realizing, seeing that their parents, that the kids do these things.

And that it makes them happier and makes them stronger to do these things. Why not? One of the things that reinforces this, we did another little research project that I was involved in during the period of lockdown during COVID was a survey of many families about how they were adapting to this lockdown period when they weren't going to school, they were shut at home, all these extracurricular activities that kids were involved in were no longer being held.

And how were, what were kids doing? And we asked both the kids and parents several thousand over the course of two months that we surveyed. And what we learned is that at first the kids were quite bored, they didn't know what to do. But they mostly learned, they mostly figured out interesting things to do.

And parents were surprised that many of the kids wanted to do things that the parent never would have believed. Cook a meal, learn how to cook because here they were at home and they, and the parents were delighted in some cases to with what the kids came up with on their own. And in, in this let grow project that I've just described, sometimes kids say, sometimes they say, I really want to be able to ride my bicycle by myself to my friend's house, those kinds of things, which I would expect they would say, but sometimes they say things like, I would like to.

Cook a meal. I would like to know how to bake a pie. I would like to, and to then be able to do it by myself. Some of these things that we almost used to take for granted, of course kids would learn to do that. We'd want them to learn to do that. Some of these are things that parents are actually not providing their kids the opportunity to do, and they may not even realize the kids want to do it.

So that question of what, At talking with your kids about what they would really like to do that is and what they would like to, maybe they would need some help at the beginning, but ultimately to be able to do it independently. 

Ben: That sounds excellent advice. And what would you like to do? And it sounds to me like it should extend definitely to children, but maybe to all of us, that should be a question we should.

Peter: That's a really good point. 

Ben: And maybe and that's the thing it's like actually what's relevant for children is actually normally relevant for everyone or vice versa and maybe more people will end up wanting to do solo travel perhaps as young as 12, but maybe for all of us, but that sounds excellent advice to question.

What is it? We would really like to do so. With that Peter Gray. Thank you very much. 

Peter: Thank you very much. It's been fun.


In Podcast, Life, Science, Arts Tags Peter Gray, Education, parenting, play, psychology

Naomi Fisher: home education, unschool, agency in learning, meltdowns, child-led learning, cognitive psychology | Podcast

August 31, 2022 Ben Yeoh

Naomi Fisher is a clinical psychologist. She has written a book: Changing Our Minds: How children can take control of their own learning. The work is an excellent look at self-directed education also known in the UK as home education, or in the US as home school or unschooling.  You can follow her on Twitter here and her book is available here and her substack newsletter is here.

We discuss her background as a psychologist and her work with autistic people. We chat about her experience of eleven schools and why she has ended up asking questions about control. Why we control people and particularly why we control children.

Naomi discusses the different schools of thought on education and why progressive doesn't necessarily mean child-led education and why she likes the idea (Alison Gopnik) of a child as scientist.  

We chat about what Naomi views as  the problems of the current system such as the overuse of exams and why behvaiourism only covers a tiny slice of what learning is in the real world. Naomi highlights some of the benefit of self-directed education process and what home education can bring.

We talk about the amount of time we have spent in the world of Minecraft and why parents may be overworried about the use of technology and screen time. Why YouTube might be more beneficial than not.

Naomi answers my question on how to deal with child meltdown and outlines the idea of zones of tolerance. I pose a question on to what extent we should influence a child’s learning “syllabus” and Naomi outlines her view that a child should always have agency and not be forced into “learning” but that does not mean we should not seek to give a child a rich environment and opportunity to learn.

Naomi answers listener questions. First on if home education is only for rich people, and second the impacts of the pandemic on home educators.

We play overrated/underrated and Naomi rates: the government setting the curriculum,  the role of exams, social media and technical colleges.

Naomi talks about her latest projects including a second book on neurodiversity and self-direct education, called “A Different Way to Learn” and available in 2023.

Naomi ends with advice:

“my number one advice for parents would be trust your instincts about what your child needs and how your child is. There are a lot of parents I talk to they say, "I think that my child is really unhappy or I think that my child needs these things, but the professionals are telling me that I'm wrong." I think you need to just retain your knowledge that you know your child better and you probably have a really good sense. You don't just know your child better, but in most cases you share genes with your child. Therefore you often have a kind of intuitive understanding of the experiences that your child is having and that you can get inside their heads in a way that professionals often can't. So I would say really listen to your instincts, give yourself space to think about what you think as sort of apart from what everybody tells you, you should be thinking. The other thing is lean into the things that your child likes; whatever they are, lean into them and embrace them because this is a short time of life when they're like this and when they're young and it is an amazing opportunity to connect with them if you choose to do that rather than choosing to pull them away from the things that they love.”

Transcript below, video above or on YouTube (captions available). Podcast available wherever you get podcasts or below.

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Transcript with Naomi Fisher (only lightly edited, expect typos etc.)

Ben

Hello, and welcome to Ben Yeoh Chats. If you're curious about the world, this show is for you. Is the traditional school system failing us? And what can we learn from a child-led way of education? On this episode, I speak to Naomi Fisher. Naomi is a clinical psychologist who has studied how children learn. Her work focuses on the importance of agency and choice and putting children in control of their learning and allowing them to flourish. Hope you enjoy the show. Please like and subscribe as it helps others find the podcast.

Hey everyone, I'm super excited to be speaking to Naomi Fisher. Naomi is a clinical psychologist. She has written a book, "Changing Our Minds: How Children can take Control of their Own Learning," which is an excellent look at self-directed education, or some in the UK would say home education, or in America homeschool or unschooling. It also covers a brief history of educational thought. Naomi, welcome.

Naomi (01:03):

Thank you, Ben. It's great to be here

Ben (01:06):

Over 20 years ago, we studied experimental psychology and neuroscience together and then you went off, did some PhD work with autistic people and children. So tell me what you've learned and how you've ended up thinking about children and education and the route to where you've got to today.

Naomi (01:25):

What's happened to me since you mean.

Ben (01:27):

Yeah. Or even during.

Naomi (01:29):

Or even during, yeah. It's been a long way. It feels a long time ago that we were studying experimental psychology together. So I went off and did a PhD in autism and then I went on to do my doctorate in clinical psychology. I started working as a clinical psychologist and then I had my children. My oldest child is 14 and my youngest is 11. I had my own unusual education experience because I actually went to 11 schools when growing up. So we moved around the world. I went to schools in Botswana, I went to schools in the Congo, I went to like a state comprehensive school, I was at a boarding school. I really went through-- I was at a Steiner school at one point. I really got to try out the full range of educational experiences.

I think what that did to me was kind of fostered a slight cynicism about the claims that the education system make because as I moved from school to school, I would find that each school had quite strong an ethos about how they thought things should be done and they tended to think this is the way things always should be done. In fact, they make a big fuss about it. The thing I remember most is that I was at an international school in the Congo where no one had uniform. We came back to the UK, everyone had uniform obviously, and it was quite strictly enforced and it became an issue immediately. We were having our skirts measured as we came in the door and if your skirt was too long or too short you could be sent home. I don't remember at the time thinking this is really weird because my last school we all just wore jeans basically and nobody ever worried about it. So in fact, skirts weren't really a thing. It's weird that you made us wear this thing and now you are making it into an issue if we don't wear it the way that you want to wear it.

So I think that a kind of theme running through my whole life has been asking questions about control and why we control people and particularly why we control children. So to come back to post-study in adulthood, I did my clinical psychology doctorate and I then started working as a clinical psychologist. I had my own children and I quickly discovered that many of the things I'd learned as a clinical psychologist weren't as straightforward and simple as I thought they were. I couldn't just apply them to my own children. Also, as my children grew, I started to feel this real clash between what I'd learned as a psychologist and what I understood about how children grew and developed and what was going to happen to them in the education system. So my son was a very-- He's July birthday, summer born, very active little boy, not really interested in reading, writing at all when he was sort of approaching four. So we actually had a place for him at the school down the road; excellent primary school. I went long for the introductory day and they gave us a list of keywords and they said, "Can you teach him these words over the summer?" So I had my three year old and it was a list of words like, 'the, but, if.' They were completely out of context. I looked at this and I was like, "Wow, all of his learning up to now has been in context, meaningful for him because he thought he wanted to learn things. And suddenly, I am meant to bring this into our relationship of where I'm presenting this list of random words and I'm saying, “You need to learn how to read them." Why would I do that? What's the point actually? Won't I be teaching him things like actually reading isn't meaningful? Because it's such a thing for me that we learn when something has meaning for us.

So to cut long story short, we decided to home educate him and his sister as she came along too. And the more I did that, the more I was thinking all the time of how I thought psychological theory and what I was seeing happening in my children, that there was a really important story that needed to be told here. That I thought that the way that schools run doesn't take account of what we know of human psychology and human development. It actually in many ways makes learning hard and that maybe if we didn't do that, maybe things could be a lot easier.

Ben (05:44):

Yeah, that's really fascinating. And I guess that rolls into things like over testing and how schools are and all of that. I hadn't understood that you traveled and been to quite so many schools yourself so that's almost like a mini case study and cross-cultural studies as well as the catalyst of your own children and therefore reality coming up against theory. And obviously reality is the truth. It made me think that also in our studies if you go back in time to the time of Piaget or even before you refer to the school that Tolstoy built, that today there are kind of two broad schools of thought which have these deep historic roots. One of them-- I think they might call it constructionists, but in even words they tend to argue for this schools based, rules based, fact based, curriculum based system, where from facts and these kind of learn knowledge does everything flow.

Then the other school of thought which I guess you could call progressive, but in the sense tends to be child centered, emphasizes child agency and choice and curiosity driven learning. Has actually been around probably for longer actually, if you go back all the way to thought. Some people can even trace it to ancient Greece thought. A lot of your ideas seem to center close into the second school of thought but seem grounded in your psychological studies and things. I was just interested in what you think is maybe misunderstood and how you arrived there from, was it observing both your children and autistic people and just knowing, well, these are how we're meant to, or you seem to develop. We use real world situations, we learn in situ, we don't learn these kind of funny stripped down psychological tests which are very important for psychological models but don't affect how our learning works, and then this kind of joy or learning or curiosity which we see and I think a lot of people see in very young children. You can't stop them asking questions and things. And then this observation that a lot of people have, it stops them. It stops partly because parenting or adults or the system kind of tells it to stop. So I was kind of intrigued how that all catalyzed and come together and whether you'd have any comments about my characterization of the kind of history of those two schools or thought was approximately correct.

Naomi (08:21):

Yeah. I mean, when people say to me, which they sometimes do, "Your ideas are progressive," I generally say, "I think there's a different school of thought that's progressive." Because I think for me, the thing that is key about the way I see education and the way I see thought and learning and child development, is that how the child feels about what they're doing is really important. How the kind of center of the child being the person who is exploring the world. I love this idea from Alison Gopnik, “A child is scientist.” Child exploring, child asking questions, child hypothesizing. And I could really see that in my young children. It was just happening all the time. Then I came across the traditional ideas like the... I was interested because they used cognitive psychology to back it up.

They say these are cognitive science ideas and I was like, "That's really interesting," because I studied cognitive science for a long time and this is one part of it, but they didn't boil it down to this. When we did learning memory and cognition they didn't say, “We've stopped learning. This is how it works. This is the model. What we need to do is seat the children in rows, tell them what to do, test them frequently, do lots of retrieval practice, and they'll all get good test results and that's learning.” They didn't did they? What I basically learned in those courses was that learning's really complicated and that there's loads of different things going on here. I remember actually a supervision we had particularly at university where we were talking about learning and our supervisor said, "It's so easy to just reduce children down all the time. We're kind of reducing them down to this set of boxes.” But they're actual children and they're people and they're complex and they've got so much else going on. When we start reducing them to a set of boxes, what have we lost? And of course, I wasn't a parent at the time and I don't think I really got that until I had my own children. It's much easier to reduce children down to a set of boxes when you are not living with a three year old and seeing how it doesn't fit.

But I really wanted-- Part of me, whenever I see something that doesn't jive with me; like this particular thing about the best way for children to learn is to seat them in rows and tell them what they need to know. When I find something like that that doesn't jive with me, my first instinct is to understand why they say it. I want to go and find out. So I go and read all the stuff about why this is right. I read all the books and I listen to the podcasts and I really try and get in depth about why they think this is right, because when I understand why they think that, then I could start to develop my own critique. So that's very much what I did with that. But I thought even when I read-- because I also read about the kind of more progressive people, and I still felt that often in the field of more progressive education there's still something missing. And it's still who is in control of this whole process. You can read very progressive educators and it's all about how to form this, how to get the children to do what we think they should be doing.

So let's give you a really good example. Lots of schools are set up along the lines of children spending loads of time on outdoor play. That's their ethos and they have this idea of childhood they would definitely call themselves progressive. They would say, "Childhood is all about play, particularly about outdoor play; unstructured, outdoor play. Let's provide them with loads of time to play in the forest and we'll have sussed childhood." Obviously that's not. That’s a gross characterization of what they do but that's the ethos. Then you come across the child who wants to spend all their time playing on Minecraft and the child who doesn't want to be in the forest; who finds that quite kind of-- They just don't know what to do with themselves where they're unstructured play in the forest.

And then the model doesn't work because although it's meant to be this model for everybody, in fact, it only suits certain children. I think you find that across the board. When the model actually meets the child and when they meet a whole range of children, then that's when you see the problems. So that's why for me the key thing I always ask when I'm looking at any educational model is, "Does the child have agency here? Can they choose to leave?" And if they can choose to leave, then I think that makes all the difference. I think this is what is a big difference with home education and kids in school and I think you see parents go through this learning process when their kids don't go to school or come out of school, which is that children at home have a lot more power because they're in their homes. They have their stuff upstairs. They have their things that they do. If they really don't want to do what you're doing with them, generally they can stand up and walk out, and they do. Whereas at school they can't do that. Just that simple fact means that home educators have to get alongside their children in a different way. They cannot rely on control, peer pressure, "You can't leave this classroom because there's nowhere to go. If you get up and walk out, there will be consequences." They just can't rely on that. So they have to find a different way forward.

Ben (13:34):

Sure. That makes a lot of sense. So under this language you got traditional schools and we can come back to maybe how Victorians kind of set it up to control their population to read and write because they needed to power the industrial revolution and all of the thinking around that. You might have progressive schools but they may not be child centered or child-led .

Naomi (14:01):

Well they think of themselves as child-led.

Ben (14:02):

Yes. But if you force people to be in the woods, that's potentially the same errors as forcing people to be in the classroom because the child doesn't have agency and the learning is not child-led. So that makes a lot of sense to me. I've now met  - like you -  and actually to my initial surprise, many people who were unhappy at school. So I was pretty happy at school. I go back and ask a lot of my friends there and things. Again, this is not a significant end, you probably have the study. But I would say at least half of them weren't that happy and then another quarter were kind of neutral. So I would say maybe half was sort of saying, "School, average to below average." Another quarter was sort of, "No average, that's fine." And then maybe only a quarter were in my camp who actually actively got quite a lot of it. And I reflected that that's a really small number. Then I've seen some studies which seem to say-- Well, the surveys are always a little bit tricky, but seems to kind of hone in on the same number. 

Now I've met many people who are homeschooled-- They tend to say this in America whereas in the UK they prefer home education to that distinguishing between the structure school, or in the US they might say unschooled people or some people say deschooled if you've been in school and then that-- who have turned out to be pretty happy growing up. I'm not quite sure maybe why I've met quite so many now, but I have, and they've gone through a different route and they've ended up roughly in the same place given all everything. I think actually every one of them I've met have had essentially their curiosity intact and everything else, not saying that some other typical schoolers might not have, but some of them it seems to have died out which I kind of also find really interesting.

And I guess maybe another blob for me is seeing people who are either autistic or have had other needs or learned differently or things like that. I've seen a lot of them now also if they've been able to go into a different way of learning or system outside this institution and they have flourished; obviously not for everyone and everything and there's all of these complications around it. I've also found that observation really interesting. If the stats system is not working for so many people, why can that be and can we not do more about it? I don't know whether that resonates with you and if you've heard of any thoughts around how that is or whether you feel that's maybe right in the kind of work that you've done.

Naomi (16:43):

Yeah. I think it's really interesting that you say that so many of your peers weren't happy at school because I'm thinking-- I can't remember where you went to school, but I think you went to somewhere that was perceived as an excellent school, right?

Ben (16:57):

Yes.

Naomi (16:57):

The interesting thing for me was that in my tour through 11 different schools of the world, I went to schools that I really loved and I also went to schools that I really hated. So I had that experience for myself. I particularly had the experience actually of having been mostly socially okay at school and I went to one particular school where I was suddenly the outcast. It was when we came back from Congo and I went into this school where they had all been together as a class since they were like five. It was one of these schools where they kept everyone together. I went there and I was the one that nobody liked and it was horrible. But what was so interesting for me is that there was a boy in the class as well who nobody liked. I remembered from previous school experiences that there were so often the child who nobody liked and nobody would play with, but I'd never been them before. I remember that moment of thinking I haven't changed. I'm still the same person.

At my last school I had friends, I was happy, I was a valued member of the community. Here, I'm the outcast that nobody wants to have anything to do with. And it just made me think even at the time at 14, the environment that you are in makes such a difference to different people, but also that there's no fixed right environment for people. We can't provide one environment which is right for all young people and children. It's a bit like the Forest school. Parents go and see these schools and they think this is so lovely, it's so beautiful. Then the child gets there and they're like, "This isn't for me." So a school that for you could have been wonderful and excellent and exactly what you wanted for one of your peers could have been a frightening and hostile place, and it's the same school because it's about what we bring and how that interacts with our environment.

Ben (18:55):

Exactly. And that's it. My school is really high regarded and actually let me follow my curiosity a lot. I ended up doing A-level art, as well as theater, as well as sciences at A-level...

Naomi (19:07):

Which is amazing because you’d have to wait to university to do science.

Ben (19:11):

Yeah. Actually, I still did theater and all of that. But I know a lot of people who were unhappy, so it definitely does that. And I still remember the silly quirks which I sort of felt like that. "Like wow, uniform." I really clearly remember that you couldn't wear a colored jumper and it just seemed really ridiculous to me, but also it is not something which I know impacted me that much, but I still remember to this day. You wouldn't class that in any form of trauma, but the fact that I remember something so clearly from almost 30 years ago obviously had that sort of impact. Then I really see it now thinking about the autistic community because it's so obvious that autistic thinkers often don't work very well in school institutions.

But then I observe that and I observe it in a whole range of autistic thinkers and it strikes me that a lot of what applies to them actually applies to people who don't have such an autistic cognitive profile as well. So it kind of goes the other way. It's kind of like, "Yeah, well, what should we be learning for what autistic thinkers might do or need or think?" Some of that might be sensory. Some of that is following the center led for where you are there. So I guess I'm kind of interested in what do you think are the barriers in the system? I think in the UK the government has made it harder. The US is sort of a movement which depending on the state, seems to go sort of in parallel and fly under the regulatory radar, but they have a slightly different cultural ethos in some of them and actually they've also got a faith based things for that. So it'd be interesting what you think are the barriers and maybe what we could do or think about making it easier or particularly if you're interested in this kind of area.

Naomi (21:12):

Well, I think it's interesting that you bring up autistic thinkers then because I really think that autistic adults and autistic children highlight the drawbacks in the system. Clearly they show us that the system doesn't work for everybody. And unfortunately what happens often is that there's a kind of attitude. We kind of say, "Well, okay, so these people have special educational needs. They're different. They need something different, but it's okay for everybody else." I don't think our system is really okay for most of us. It works on its own terms, but that's because the terms that have been set are usually quite limiting. We are basically saying, "How do we get children to get to this end where they pass their GCSE and they pass their A levels?" That is the aim of this whole system that we're doing. For most kids that's what it's like. It's not always that there are some exceptional schools which don't take that approach.

But once we've defined that end point as we want you to get the top grades that you can in these GCSEs, then we've limited what we are thinking that this child is going to do through their education. When I talk to parents of autistic children or of children with special education needs, they're often more open to thinking about different ways of doing things I think because partly they can see so clearly that their child isn't going to thrive in that convention system. Whereas it's harder for parents who maybe think that their child might do well in the system to see the emotional damage that it's doing to them or the other damage. And I suppose the other part of my puzzle of what came in for me was that I worked as a clinician. I'm a clinical psychologist. I work with adults as well as young people and children. I know as a psychologist that when somebody comes along feeling powerless and feeling they have no control over things, it's associated with all sorts of negative feelings about themselves and also all sorts of difficulties with making changes in their life that they might want to make changes about.

It just seemed weird to me that we sort of induce that sense of powerlessness in our children. That we say to them for example, "You can't wear a colored jumper." Educationally, I can't see what the justification would be for saying, "Everybody has to have the identical jumper." It's control. It's about controlling young people. If you go to school from the start and maybe particularly if you're a relatively high achiever and therefore you get lots of approval at school and lots of validation, you kind of slowly get into this system of control. By the time you're 17 or 18 you are so used to being told exactly what you have to wear, exactly how you've got to cut your hair, the shoes you wear; all of that kind of stuff. You don't even really question it anymore because it's just how it's always been. I suppose that was something I really noticed coming in and out of the UK system. A different system didn't have those requirements and seemed to manage fine. So why did the UK think it was so important to have that control?

Ben (24:24):

I guess it's that all about agency. I'm not from the school of thought so probably I'm going to do that argument weaker. But I guess someone like the Michaela School or something would argue, "Well, uniforms make this certain culture, you follow certain rules, and that will help learning. You have less choice..." Describing it badly because to me it's like that is a controlling systems and you're preparing people for the workplace, but what sort of work you want them to do. But there is this idea that I think they argue, fun rules or routine and then they go fast to say that knowing a lot of knowledge comes through that. And I guess maybe it's because it's roots of just understanding. I think you mentioned this in the book; just a tiny slice of what behaviorism or Pavlovian learning has done, which is not the whole of learning. It's a certain section of learning for a certain thing and they've carried it through to a very far conclusion in a straight line drawing of just two or three little dots which are definitely true in themselves.

Naomi (25:39):

Tiny slice is a lovely way of putting it because I think it applies to the cognitive stuff as well.

Ben (25:45):

I mean, it's obviously true in its little thing.

Naomi (25:47):

It works. That when people say, "There's not a problem with the science, there isn't a problem with the behavioral science as it is defined and how it is used. There's not a problem with the cognitive science." The studies do show what they say they say that's absolutely indisputable. The problem is that when that becomes your approach to childhood and learning and education and everything, when you talk about creating a culture, I suppose my question would be, why do we want to create a culture of conformity? Because that's what we're doing. We are creating a culture of conformity and our people often say, "We set up these rules and regulations and things and children will learn these things and then they'll carry them all the way through life." Well, okay. But you know, carrying the-- I don't know how useful that is in terms of let's train our children to conform and not to question and to do what they're told without making a fuss about it.

Well, that only takes you so far in life really. I'm sure I'm not alone-- I know I'm not alone in this kind of feeling. I observed in my peers which was that we went through all the process of education. We were all high achievers at university. That's why we were there because we'd done well in the system. We got to there and then you come to the end and then you're like, "Well, now what? People have basically been telling me what to do all the way through this system. Now I've got to the point where I'm not being told what to do anymore and I'm maybe 24. I've never really made big, significant choices about my life." And I think it's really at odds with the cognitive neuroscience findings which are showing that in order to develop that system in your brain; the prefrontal cortex, the part that enables us to make decisions, we need those experiences. Have you read Sarah-Jayne Blakemore's work about the adolescent brain?

Ben (27:39):

Not yet.

Naomi (27:39):

I think her stuff fits so well with what I talk about because I think what's happening when we have self-direct education is that we are giving young people lots of practice in making those kinds of decisions; in making decisions for themselves. We know that part of the brain matures in an experienced dependent way. So if we give children lots and lots of experience of doing what they're told, keeping the rules, not stepping out of line, then that's what they're learning. It's all learning, I suppose. I'm frustrated at the way that schools define learning as the stuff that's in the curriculum because I think we have to look at everything that a child is doing at school. They're learning from all of it. Actually from my own memories of school, what I learned outside the classroom has stuck with me much longer than the actual stuff I learned in the classroom.

Ben (28:30):

Sure. Obviously I'm going to agree with all of that. I guess I'll go a step further. When I look now out into the world and you think about what governments or people claim they want; so innovation, new ideas, creativity, critical skills thinking, they've got all fancy terms for it. But you think where do new discoveries come from? Where do you push ideas which haven't been thought before? Well, they don't tend to come from conforming to the system. They do not tend to come from a bureaucracy because by their nature they are, "Well, whatever the rules are set for me." So when the rules are wrong, either scientifically or morally, if you've been told to just conform to them, well, that's no good because you'll be following something as a false premise.

You need to somehow have learned to question something either scientifically, morally, or whatever. A school system or any system which has taught you just to obey doesn't get there. And I think this is where it goes to the roots I briefly mentioned, or we mentioned; is Victorian roots. Because they did or purposely wanted a system of control. We can argue rightly or wrongly about how important that was for the industrial revolution where people were a lot poorer and no one could read and write. But to use a system which has basically... I don't know what-- Maybe you would probably know more, but hasn't really evolved in 150 years of thinking whereas the cognitive science, even educational pedagogy in its kind of small fields seem to have gone on a quantum leap in knowledge the way we school has not.

And there's not too many areas. Although there's some like maybe buildings, actually. We haven't seem to made a quantum leap in there. But in a lot of the knowledge rich industry, I find that's really fascinating about why is it? Do we not seem to know? Again, there's not been huge worldwide studies on it. But I would guess if you could do a controlled trial of a few thousand people who go through some form of child centered learning in any of its variation, and you control that to some control form in any of its variations, I think you'll end up with better outcomes for those. And maybe the academic outcomes of having that will be roughly equal. But I think all of the other outcomes in terms of critical thinking or happiness or anxiety and all of those from what I'm thinking would be higher. I would strongly bet quite a lot on that hypothesis, but I haven't seen the study. I don't think the study will be done.

Naomi (31:27):

No one's done the study.

Ben (31:27):

Why are there not 10 thousands of those studies as opposed to...?

Naomi (31:30):

Because school is the invisible intervention, isn't it? I didn't realize until I thought about not sending my children to school. I didn't realize that everything I had been taught in my developmental psychology courses at university, in my PhD, everything, assumed that all the children were at school and didn't even mention it because the assumption was that they were always at school. It's been such an interesting ride for me watching my own children but also watching children around me because of course, I now know lots of other children who don't go to conventional school. Thinking to myself, "Wow. I wonder how many of the things that I was taught as child development and how humans develop was actually child development in the context of school." Because 30 hours a week is a massive intervention. We do these controlled studies for psychology interventions. It's one hour a week. We think that 12 hours once a week is a lot. In the NHS that's a lot. 20 sessions is quite a long term intervention.

They're at school for 30 hours a week and nobody ever set up the random control style at the beginning. The Victorians definitely didn't say, "We'll, just see if these children are in a rich learning environment where other people are literate.” That is really important because people always say to me, "Are you saying children will just learn?" No, you need these things in your environment. Of course there are children all over the world who aren't learning to read and write because their environment doesn't have the necessary information for them to do that. The adults around them can't read and write. That's part of what the Victorians were working with.

The Victorians were thinking, “We have a largely illiterate population. We need them to be literate. Let's get the children in, we can deliver this, and they will learn how to do it.” And it worked. But we are not in that situation now. Our population is largely literate. We don't know what children learn when they don't go to school simply from being around other people, following their interests. It was such a moment for me when I was looking into this when I was thinking about not sending my children to school. I looked at the research done on self-direct education and on schooling and I was thinking, "Wow. So if it really is true that you don't have to go to school and you come out at a quite similar place but without having had lots of the difficult experiences lots of people have at school, why don't more people know about this?" Because people feel trapped in school and I think that's a serious issue. It's definitely an issue for many autistic people and parents of autistic children. That they feel like, "This is really going wrong. I think this is doing a lot of damage to my child but I don't think there's anything else I can do. We are told school is the only way.” I think schooling works and I think the most effective thing it teaches us is that we must be schooled. We have to go to school, and we are taught that right from the age of three, right through until we're 18.

Ben (34:28):

Yeah. I guess there is another way. I think anecdotally if you go back to the Victorians, their rich elites didn't do the school system.

Naomi (34:36):

They had something different.

Ben (34:37):

So there is a sort of not quite paired control, but you can see how, and they did quite well. And I think I do see some studies that's not necessarily always child-led, but tend to be these small group mastery type of things but often are actually very influenced by what the child wants to do. It's often like a child and adult choose, or there's a sort of selection of choice. It's not a hundred percent child-led, but it's not, "Oh, we're going to do this." So they end up if they want to do maths all week or whatever they go, "Okay. We'll do that." So it's not quite a hundred percent 0% curriculum or that. It's interesting now if you think about it sort of maybe turning to some of the practice rather than in the theory and we can go a little bit as to what it might mean to deschool. But even if you're not-- I guess I'm moderately a techno optimist about the world and I think people miss a lot about how children use technology in the same way that I think people were really worried about reading newspapers a couple of hundred years ago and things.

So for instance, I spent I'm pretty sure hundreds of hours in the worlds of Minecraft with both of my sons; one who's more of an autistic thinker, one who's probably a little bit less of an autistic thinker, and I've seen whole worlds open up. Some of them have used this kind of discord chat thing, there's a whole community out there. It's not necessarily adults excluded, but most adults I know, certainly if you're over the age of 40 will typically not know anything about these discord communities and they are some of the biggest communities in the world. I learned so much about creativity, what they might think, how they think, and some of these decisions that you make in a world of digital pixels, but which actually does reflect our own world. I was wondering what you think about how people use technology as well, or I guess it comes to what you sort of said earlier. You can lean into technology or you can lean into time in the woods. It kind of depends on how the child is learning. But do you find that people, parents or families are almost-- they can be too technology phobic if that is what their child is learning?

Naomi (36:51):

Definitely. It's one of the number one things that families come to me worried about. Screen time is what they say. "I'm really worried about screen time. They've got way too much screen time," particularly if children come out of school. Because when you're in school, you have all these hours every day when you can't be on your device because you're at school and you're not allowed to take your device with you. Then you come back and you have to be in bed by a certain time. Your whole day is structured in a way that means that you can't spend eight hours of it playing Minecraft. And then the child's now home educated and they will be--

Ben (37:23):

They can do eight hours playing Minecraft.

Naomi (37:25):

They can spend eight hours playing Minecraft. I also have spent hundreds and hundreds of hours playing Minecraft. Some of the best memories when my children were little were us all playing Minecraft together. I think there are many different ways that children use technology. But I do think that fear-- When I talk to parents who are frightened of it-- and I talk to a lot of them, they often have very little idea of what their children are actually doing on it. Typically they'll say things like, "It's so isolating. They're not connecting with other people. It's passive." They have all these words that trot out. None of them really make any sense to me when I spend time with my children on a screen because it's generally not too passive. Minecraft is certainly. If you're passive, you're not going to get anywhere in Minecraft. You just get there, you sit there, and nothing happens until you're killed by a zombie or something. You have to be active. But also, there's so much that children can do on their devices. It's a place where they can feel really competent. One of the theories I write about in my book is self-determination theory and I think it's a lot of what underpins self-direct education. It says there are three things children need or adults need in order to have this kind of intrinsic motivation. It's autonomy, competence, and relatedness. Competence is this kind of feeling, "I can do it." Doesn't have to be being good at something. It's this sort of sense of this is something I could do. I think you see children getting that in Minecraft when they don't get it anywhere else.

I often work with parents whose children are really unhappy at school, are really struggling and video games are the only place they're really happy and their parents are worried about it. I think that's so sad because the only thing which is really bringing this child to life is the thing that their parent is trying to limit. So I always say to parents, get alongside them, sit with them, learn how to play it. And they say, "I don't know how to start with Minecraft." I say, watch the YouTube videos. There are loads of YouTube videos showing you how to get started with Minecraft. Just go in there and have a go. I've actually played enormous numbers of video games with my son in particular. My son is really into video games. The interesting thing is that neither of my children have limits on how much time they can spend on their device and that has always been the case. My son now at 14 is spending a lot of his time coding. So he played games a lot and now he is making games all the time, writing games. He's taught himself how to code using Codeacademy and he's in game development basically, most of the time. My daughter isn't really into spending any time on a device. She's into making stuff and she always has been. She's into constructing, painting; she's really creative with her hands. People often say to people, "What about addiction? Aren't you worried about addiction?" And I mean, we both know as psychologist addiction is about so much more than the 'thing.' You can be addicted to all sorts of things. But it's not just about the 'thing.'

Alcohol is a prime example. Alcohol is all around in our studies. Some people are addicted to alcohol, some people aren't. Why is that? It's generally about everything in their lives and the way that they're using alcohol. I do see some children who I think are using withdrawal into a video game because the rest of their life is so unhappy and they are very attached to it. Parents will say, "We try and get them off it and they shout and scream. They must be addicted." And I'd say, "No. You need to think about what's going on in the whole rest of their life. Let's think about that. Let's make that better." Limiting the thing that they really enjoy, banning it, or making it restricted, isn't going to make their life happier. We can pretty well guarantee that. I think the more that parents lean into it, the less fearful it becomes because the more they can see what their children actually do.

Ben (41:16):

It's their happy place. My youngest has taught me-- In fact, both of them have through these YouTube videos because a bunch of them teach better than most teachers. A whole range of esoteric thought from wars in China, how the US Senate works, to the latest in alternative proteins. Actually, the sheer variety.

Naomi (41:41):

It's amazing. And then they bring it out, don't they?

Ben (41:43):

Exactly.

Naomi (41:44):

And it's such a surprise. They're like--, and you're like, "Oh, okay."

Ben (41:46):

"Yeah, I didn't know that." Why should we persuade? You made this point in the book. That's kind of what-- I would use the term, that's what adulting is. Adults you go, you find this thing and you... I think adults spend probably-- Most people in knowledge work industries if they're gone into that, they're on their screens eight to 10 hours. Some of it is in Excel spreadsheets, but some of it is on Facebook or YouTube or whatever it is. I'm interested what else practically maybe our own stories then? So I did a lot of Minecraft, you did a lot of Minecraft. We do some handcrafting as well. But what else have you learned from your children do you think? What are a couple of pivotal things or skills or maybe anything which has surprised you or not surprised you?

Naomi (42:27):

Okay. So there are loads of things that have surprised me. One thing that surprised me was when we started out with this, I had the assumption which I think lots of parents have which is that play-based learning is great when they're younger and that our system cuts that off too short, too early. Four or five is too early to stop playing to try and channel them into more formal education. So I thought, "Well, let them play for longer. And by the time they're about seven, they'll probably be ready for some more formal work." You read about education systems in Denmark where they don't start more formal education until eight. And I was like, "Okay, that'll be fine. They get to seven." In no way were they in any way interested in any kind of formal work. In fact, by the time they got to seven, I would say that the gap between them and what a school child was doing had widened. And I was perhaps thinking it wouldn't. I was thinking that they would mature and it would sort of shrink. Actually, it just widened and widened and widened. Because what I saw was that they were developing in a different way. 

Both of my children learnt to read much later than I would've expected them to. We are very literate environment. I learnt to read at the age of about three. I love reading. We have books everywhere. I thought that they would be reading early. My son learnt to read between the age of about eight and 10. The first word that I knew he read-- well kind of, he looked at a sign on the road and he said, "Does that say zombie?" Now you're going to get the reference of why he was able to read the word zombie. It didn't say zombie, it said zone. Minecraft is this amazing game where everything has the name underneath. So he started reading things like obsidian and all these words that he learned from Minecraft and it took a long time as well. People sometimes say, "They start learn to read, it all clicks into place." And I was like, "Okay, we've started to learn to read. Now it'll all click into place." It was actually about two years before he was a fluent reader. Now, he's a really fluent reader. He's just read the Lord of the Rings. He's an enthusiastic reader. He reads books for pleasure all the time and yet he wasn't doing that. So I think that really surprised me.

The other thing that I saw which I think is really important is how lots of children sort of cycled round to doing things in a way that I think school stops people doing. So talking particularly about imaginative play. I noticed that lots of children that I saw around me would've been either, they were autistic-- They might have had diagnosis, might not have had diagnosis. But many children weren't playing imaginatively in those early years which as a clinical psychologist, been taught looking for this, looking for them to be playing imaginatively in these early years really important, they should be doing all this. Quite a few of the children I saw around me weren't doing that. They were much more interested in facts and feelings or Minecraft or doing other stuff. But what I would see is that as they got older, they would start playing imaginatively. At a much later age like eight or nine, at the point where many schooled children had really moved on from that stage completely. And it was often connected to the video games they played. So I'd see a lot of children playing real life Minecraft, real life Plants versus Zombies.

And again, their parents would have sometimes a slightly denigrating approach to that. They kind of say, "Well, it's not like real imaginative play because it's derived from this other stuff." But I would be like, "It is real. It's in their imagination." In fact, I think a lot of imaginative play goes on in Minecraft. And I think for lots of autistic kids in particular, that's where loads of imaginative stuff goes on and it's not really seen by the adults around them because what they're looking for when they're thinking about imagination is tea parties and playing school and all this kind of teddy bears and dolls. As play gets more sophisticated, if children were allowed to continue to play without being stopped from doing so, we haven't really got a roadmap for how that becomes so much more sophisticated and that was just a moment of real insight for me and interest.

Ben (46:40):

Wow. Yeah. That's amazing. So I'm going to ask for two free pieces of consulting, if I may then.

Naomi (46:47):

Okay.

Ben (46:48):

So one is a question of again, practically around this area. I have a lot of discussion with people around giving children this wide choice. So parents often feel like, "I want to have a basic level of maths, or you've done it with reading and things like that. I want to give them choice, but that." And I guess the sort of pure child centered way of thinking is that, "Well, you keep the environment rich and they will fall into it in terms of reading and things like that.” But I hear a lot particularly on the math bit as well, and maybe reading has come from that time. How do you balance or do you even balance some of the things you might want to expose your children to? Maybe because you just really love it yourself. So I guess part of it is I do my sort of things like podcasting and children may or may not naturally pick up yours. But I do get this thing from others that just talk about, "I'm really worried. I need to do this," or to what level can you shape a curriculum or not on your thinking around that? Then my second question around this is maybe this tends to be sometimes a little bit more for people in an autistic profile, but not only is-- Sometimes we all-- whether actually adults or children, is we kind of lose control. I really don't like the word tantrum because actually in my view, mostly it is not. It tends to be a sensory overload or something hasn't gone things, or it's not triggered in that.

So we work a lot on trying to get regulation and emotional regulation and we can talk about the development of that in that. But again, I know a lot of people within this and particularly, I guess within a home education environment they're kind of worried about, "We don't have the techniques and methods for dealing with dysregulation or where it goes really wrong." Some people might hit out or some people might do whatever there is. So I guess those are my two thoughts that you have from your field and your experience. So one is I guess the kind of more positive learning aspect. How do we think about giving that really wide range of richness and is it okay to nudge or not, depending on all things? And the second is on the other side of like when things are slightly going wrong, when they do it or people get dysregulated, how should we think about that? Is there a different way? This is probably because they would've exhausted all of the other things that they're normally being told about this type of behavior and this has led to it which is why they're now thinking of that. So I think we can assume that a lot of the 'regular ways' have been done.

Naomi (49:41):

Okay. So let me start with the maths. So a lot of people say that to me as well. They say, "Isn't it so important that we can't just leave it up to chance." I usually say, "In my opinion, things that are really important are too important to make children do, because we know-- I don't have the studies to mind, but we know that an awful lot of children finished the school system thinking they can't do maths or actually not able to do basic maths. You can be taught maths for 11, 12 years and come out in the end still struggling with basic number concept. It isn't a guarantee. So the way I see self-diverse education really is that we are providing the opportunities and the environment for learning to occur. The moment that we bring in compulsion we have messed that up a bit, basically. The moment we've said, "You must do this," we've taken away some of that ideal intrinsic motivation environment which is going to change the child's relationship with that thing. So some children might be like, "Yeah, I love maths. That's great. I don't mind if we're going to do math every morning because I really enjoy it." Okay. That's fine. That child's intrinsic motivation probably won't be bother. I actually was a math lover and I was a bit like that. What frustrated me in maths was I was always like it was just boring because I'd done it all. Once I was allowed to accelerate in maths, I love maths so I would be doing maths for the joy of it.

But also, there's nothing in self-directed education which says you can't offer stuff, make suggestions, have it in your environment. The bit that you can't do is compel them to do it. So we have maths and stuff around. We had like maths manipulatives when they were little and those-- whatever they called them, can't remember. You know when you have all the different number cubes and all that kind of stuff, we had it all around. You by doing this podcast, your sons are going to be exposed to that as a thing that's happening. If they're interested, they know how they can go and learn more about podcasting. They may never be, and they may not choose to. If you said to them, "You must learn about podcasting. One of my aims for your education is that you will come out of this able to make a good podcast at the end of it," the likelihood is that you would immediately-- I don't know what your sons would be like. But certainly if I said that to my children, that will probably pretty well guarantee that they weren't going to learn how to do podcasting.

Ben (52:07):

In fact, never podcast ever in their entire lifetime.

Naomi (52:13):

Exactly. When you have a child like this-- my son is like this, I think they're such a gift because they make you really alert to any kind of hidden agenda. My best Minecraft story is that I read stuff about Minecraft online when my son was quite young and I thought Minecraft would be great. I thought we should do it. I suggest it to my son and he would not even look at it. For like a good year afterwards he was like, "No, I downloaded it. I bought it on the iPod. I downloaded it." I said, "Oh, let's look at this game." He was like, "No, I'm not interested." And that was kind of his approach to suggestions from me at this stage in his life. Every time I would bring it up, I'd try to casually bring it up and he'd be like, "Nope, we're not playing that boring game." The only reason we got into Minecraft was we were at some gathering, he saw another child building a house in Minecraft and he was like, "Oh, actually I’d quite like to have a go at that." Didn't comment. Didn't say anything about the fact we'd have it on the iPod for a year. But he had to come to it in his own way. And I think that's the case for so many kids. He has played Minecraft. He's sort of almost coming to the end of his Minecraft playing now, but he has been playing Minecraft for like eight years and it has developed along with him. It's amazing to see they start code... They can code and everything in Minecraft, but I almost killed it at the beginning by being too enthusiastic.

His math story is really interesting because I learned from things like the Minecraft, I learned that I needed to really keep back off. Provide opportunities, but don't push them. Don't make them a compulsion because the moment you do that, you've introduced that element potentially of resistance. So he did no maths at all until he was 12. I didn't introduce any kind of formal mathematics. We had workbooks, I had them around, but he wasn't interested. Didn't want to look at them, didn't want to do it, so I didn't do it. Then he went to this place that he's at now, the Self Managed Learning College in Hove where they have learning advisors and where you can you can say, "I want to learn this" and they will help you do it. And the learning advisors will do a group. So they do one-to-ones on you, but again, it has to come from you. They're not going to say, "Right now, you need to do math." He started doing maths, he absolutely loves maths. He's now two years in and he's working sort of above a GCSE level. Having done nothing and really nothing until he was 12. I think it's just because he watches videos like you're saying about YouTube. He looks up videos about maths on YouTube. He watches stuff. He even at some point said, "I'm going to go back and just go through the whole of Khan Academy and look at all the earlier maths in case I've missed anything” because he's motivated.

So when you are motivated you learn these things in a whole different way. I think because the school system takes away that motivation from children, because it says, "This is what you have to learn, we decided what you're going to have to learn," things take a really long time and they have to be done in a slow and ponderous way. Then because we are mostly schooled, we come out thinking that's how it had to be done. We think you had to have 12 years of maths, for example, or you'd never be a mathematician. But actually I think a lot of that early stuff is what people are learning is maths is hard, maths is something that I'm not really good at, I don't know how to work this out. They're learning all those things along with the maths. If we just back off from it, they don't learn those things. But I don't think there's anything to stop parents having an influence. Sometimes parents sort of equate unschooling or self-direct education as we don't do anything unless they bring it. That isn't what it's about. It's just about it's here round, but we don't make you do it. We don't insist.

Ben (55:56):

It's the agency point.

Naomi (55:57):

Yeah.

Ben (55:58):

What happens when children get dysregulated sort of the other side?

Naomi (56:03):

So, okay. I guess it's another thing that's important to know that that isn't something that schools have got sassed.

Ben (56:09):

Not at all.

Naomi (56:11):

So it's not like we're-- The maths people are going to say, "Well, they math at school, they'd be doing maths." So lots of children have math down.

Ben (56:18):

Isn't this even worse, like go and sit in isolation on the naughty step or something?

Naomi (56:23):

Yes.

Ben (56:26):

At least maths works for some people in school. I think dysregulation bit works for basically no one, but anyway, I'm interested in your thoughts.

Naomi (56:36):

So, one way that I find helpful to think about this is basically that what happens is that when children have accumulation of stresses around them, they get pushed over the point of what they can manage and we come out of the window of tolerance. Do you know about the window of tolerance idea? Should I talk about that briefly?

Ben (56:55):

Yes.

Naomi (56:56):

So the idea of the window of tolerance is that we all have a zone in which we can cope with psychological stresses. We can cope with the things that happen to us. We're calm and engaged, we're able to learn. If something happens, we're able to manage it. We're able to be flexible within that zone basically. If things happen that pushes out of that zone, we go two ways. We either go into the fight or flight response which is a kind of danger response. It's the kind of I need to fight something or I need to run away, or we can go into a kind of more shutdown response; a freeze response or the foreign response which is kind of like going floppy, submitting. Those are all responses that are designed to keep us safe. That's the survival part of our brain. It's a pretty primitive part and it's basically our brain trying to keep us alive. It's responding to threat and it's responding as if the threat is a wild animal. If you're about to be attacked by a lion, really your choices are-- Well, with the lion fighting it's probably not going to be great unless it's maybe a baby lion. But you're going to run away, you're going to fight it, you're going to freeze hope it doesn't notice, or you're going to fall and you're going to play dead. And you're going to hope that it'll just kind of back you around and then go off.

So when children go out of their window of tolerance they go into this zone where they're not really processing information rationally anymore because when you're in your survival system, your point is about keeping yourself alive. It's not about listening carefully to what's being said to you. So I think what parents can often find is that if their children have quite a narrow window of tolerance sometimes, and we expect toddlers to have a narrow window of tolerance. We know that toddlers often get out of their window of tolerance because they're offered the wrong color cup, for example, or because their food is slightly darker or they haven't got chicken nuggets today, or the chicken nuggets are a slightly different shape to how they're meant to be, or it's dinosaurs rather than chickens. All sorts of things can push children out of their window of tolerance and then they have these meltdowns. We expect children to grow out of that relatively quickly and lots of children don't. This is a bit like I was talking about before that we have this kind of schooled form of thinking about how development should happen. That by the time children are four or five they should be past this stage. They should not be going into these meltdowns anymore. They should be able to regulate themselves better. Loads of children can't. Loads of children need more help with it.

So I think the number one thing for me is seeing that as distress, seeing it as an overwhelmed child, and seeing it as a situation which you're not going to be able to rationalize that child out at all, you're not going to be able to punish that child out at all, you're not going to be able to do something right and then it will all go away. Effectively in that moment it's just about we need to calm the nervous system down, we need to help soothe you, to help you bring yourself back into this window of tolerance because lots of children can't do that. Once they're into meltdown they don't know what to do with it and it's really frightening for them. The big shift that I find parents make is if you're just seeing this as this is distress and that there's nothing that I can-- This isn't something I've done because parents will often say, "Why are they behaving like this? It's bad behavior." It's not bad behavior. There's nothing intentional about this. This is the child showing you that the demands of the situation is too much for them. They cannot manage the demands of the situation whilst keeping themselves within their window of tolerance. And so you see this.

Ben (01:00:29):

That makes a lot of sense. Based on my own experience I would say that is true. The ability to regulate back down before you can do anything. I have a pet theory, actually. So we say it's in children. I actually think a lot of adults don't really have this nailed either and that's why you see in the workplace even these kind of-- I guess it comes out in what we interpret as either bullying or harassment or this anger and these things. But actually if you think about it as how we think of a toddler, is actually a lot of adults go out of their window of tolerance. They don't have the mechanisms or they're out of it and then they're in this other system which leads them to all of these 'irrational behaviors.' But it's this other thing.

Naomi (01:01:15):

Yes. Because they're not thinking rationally. The survival system cuts off all that rational thought because you cannot afford to think rationally when there might be a lion about to attack you. You just have to get out of there.

Ben (01:01:25):

Yeah, exactly. So this happens a lot more. Great. Did you have something else you wanted to comment on that? Otherwise, I have another couple of questions.

Naomi (01:01:33):

No. I was just going to say I think you're right. And I think that one of the things that happens at school perhaps is that children are learned to kind of not show that distress, but they don't necessarily actually learn how to manage it. Because you have to not show things at school, don't you? That's the kind of key thing at school. You need to not show if you're feeling distressed because everybody will notice and you might feel... There are all sorts of reasons.

Ben (01:02:02):

Yeah. We talk a lot about it in communities I speak to about-- Essentially they say the word masking because there's a lot of masking and actually we talk about in that. But I think it’s true actually there's masking overall for everyone to a certain extent.

Naomi (01:02:17):

I think schools are full of children masking and workplaces as well. I mean, actually, that's what you have to do. It's a functional response that humans need to have these kind of different ways of being in different situations. The problem is when it means that you are squashing down your own emotions in order to project that kind of different way of being

Ben (01:02:39):

Yeah, that makes sense. So I have a couple of questions in from readers, listeners, social media, Twitter. Please follow Naomi on Twitter if you are a Twitter type of person. So one was around COVID and the pandemic. I guess this actually had two parts. One was whether the experience of home education was maybe more resilient or different I guess, for those already doing it? And then the other one is like it gave people, I think a glimpse maybe as to how bad trying to do school at home on Zoom didn't work versus this other thing. And then the second question I have which has come through this which you haven't touched on is I guess the kind of potential critique of saying, "Isn't this just the kind of rich person, middle class person way of doing that? If you have a lot of resources, if you have the privilege or luxury of doing that.” And I guess there's a hint or truth to that because of the system, but I'd be interested-- I think you have a much more comprehensive view and how that maybe isn't just the case. So one I guess is thinking around the pandemic and the second is this just a rich person's thing?

Naomi (01:03:50):

Yeah. Okay. So the pandemic. Really interesting what happened with the pandemic. Families responded in so many different ways as I think you said in the question. Many families tell me that they were quite horrified to see what their children were doing and also how hard it was to keep their children doing the stuff they were meant to be doing for school. And I thought that was really interesting because I think it was like the control that goes on at school was suddenly brought into homes. You know how I was saying how a child at home has much more power than a child at school and that therefore I think any home educated child is going to be more autonomous than a schooled child unless they're from an extremely-- there probably are some homes like this, unless they're from a very strict and controlling home who deliberately set out to be very strict and controlling.

But with COVID, suddenly the classes were happening, the children were behind the computer screens, and it was up to the parents to try and keep the children on task. The parents discovered how much the children didn't really want to be on task or how much they weren't really interested in what they were doing. And so I was actually really hopeful for a time with the pandemic. I was like, "Maybe everybody will realize that we should be doing things with children that doesn't require this degree of control that we don't even see." I think it's weird that we don't see the control in a whole set of six or seven year olds all seated in rows, all dressed in the same clothes, all in one classroom of other children their age with one teacher at the front. We did it. We were all put through that system and so we don't see it as controlling. But if we came from another planet we'd be like, "This is a really odd thing that they do to their children. They dressed them all up in the same way and they make them all sit at the same desk and then they make them all do the same thing." But that control is invisible to us because it was done to us. So I was quite hopeful about that with the pandemic. But actually what happened was lots of parents or few who can send them back to school where we haven't got to do the control bit ourselves, but there were also parents who found that their children were much happier once they were out of school. And I think that was a bit of a revelation for parents who had thought that their children were just the way they were, quite dysregulated generally, or quite unhappy, quite stressed.

Then suddenly school stopped and their children were at home. These were often the parents who gave up quite early on with them making them do the Zoom stuff which is what some parents did. And they would be like, "Wow, everything is more relaxed. House is much more relaxed. Things are generally much more relaxed. Why are we doing this? Why are we making them go to school?" So I've known quite a lot of parents who haven't sent their children back to school after COVID for that reason. But I think the question also was whether the impact of COVID was less on home educated children? I think that's very dependent. I don't think that's necessarily the case because most home educated children do go to see other children. They go to groups, they go to outings, they go to visit places, and all of that stopped.

So I think that for lots of children their lives became much more limited. I think they were probably less affected in a way than the school children because they usually already have friends online. They already had connections with other children online and often their parents would have already had a more relaxed attitude to screens which probably helped, because by that point everything had to be via screen. I talked to quite a few schooling parents who were really worried about the amount of time their children were spending on screens during COVID. And I was like, "Well, this is the only thing that they can do that connects them with the rest of the world." I mean, in a way isn't it amazing that when we had this lockdown we had it at a time that we were able to make these connections via technology because if we hadn't been, our children really would've been very limited. But I think the impact is variable. It's probably as many impacts as there are children.

Ben (01:07:45):

Yeah. And in some ways everyone's agency was lowered or taken away for various reasons--

Naomi (01:07:50):

Yeah. Completely it was.

Ben (01:07:51):

Regardless of that. And so, I mean, that is why arguably all nations were stressed along with everything else. I think it was through the agency framework along with everything else.

Naomi (01:08:02):

Totally. And I think our ideas of what choices we had about our lives and our children's ideas of what choices we as parents had about their lives were really shaken. So yes, we didn't know or did we? I didn't really know that the government could simply say, "All right, everybody. You have to stay at home. We're closing everything down." It was a shock to know that they could do that and that that could happen. But I think it was a shock for children to see that that could happen to their parents because younger children in particular think their parents are all powerful. They think their parents are the ones who can make things happen. And suddenly, their parents also can't go out the house or can't go to work. It's a huge psychological shock across the board really for everybody.

Ben (01:08:48):

Yeah, exactly. Is this just a rich person's thing?

Naomi (01:08:53):

Yes. I was going to go on to privilege. So I get asked this a lot. One of the things that I always say is that if you spend any time with the home educating community, you will discover that the way it's perceived from the outside and the people who are really in the inside are very different. So home education or homeschooling in particular in the press is usually portrayed as something which people do to try and hot house their children, to get them into Oxford at age 14, or to allow them to develop some very special skill like tennis or golf, or that they're going to be these kind of supercharged children with this very intensive program. A very high percentage of children in the UK at least. I don't know about the US and I don't actually know about the research. But I know from my own experience and from surveys that I've seen, a very high percentage of children who are home educated come out the school because they are absolutely not managing school.

So some of those children are excluded or in some cases their parents think they're heading for exclusion and they take them out before that happens. These families are not a privileged group of families at all. In fact, I think that the group of families who I've met the least probably in my experience have been the more privileged families and that's because they have the capacity to move their child to a private school. For example, move their child to a school that's much smaller, where you have smaller classes. They have many more choice by virtue of having the money. And actually, families for whom school is really not going well at all, home education is one of the cheapest things that you can do as an alternative because it doesn't require you to pay school fees. Also, a lot of these parents that I talk to, if your child's having a really hard time at school or if your child has significant special needs, it's very difficult for families to continue with two parents working. So people often say, "Well, you have to have a parent at home." Not everybody can afford to have a parent at home. But actually, having a child who's really unhappy at school pretty well requires you to have a parent at home as well because parents will tell me things like, "I would drop the child off at school. I get to work within an hour. There'd be a call saying, 'Can you come in, please? They're having a meltdown.'"

One parent I talked to from my book said they're on the porta-cabin roof. Child's always on the porta-cabin roof. They would call me to come and get my child. And she said, "My employer said to me, 'You're going to have to choose between answering the calls from the school or this job.'" And she was like, "Well, there's no choice." I can't say to the school, "Sorry, just leave him on the porta-cabin roof. He'll be fine." So I think there's a real misconception about who home educators actually are. I think there's a very high percentage of special educational needs and a very high percentage of actually less privileged families who are doing really the only option that they can do when school isn't working for their child because it is a cheaper option than other choices. But I think there's obviously always a certain amount of privilege in being able to make a choice. I don't think you have to have abundance of stuff in your home to make this choice. There are lots of home education groups where people go and where you can pool resources basically with other families. 

I know of parents-- I know many single parents who've made this choice and who've made... People do all sorts of things to work around it. Just in our example, I gave up work in order to home educate my children. I gave up my job in the NHS which was actually my dream job in the NHS. It was exactly the job I wanted. The way we made it work was that I worked in the evenings and on Saturdays. So I set up a private practice. My husband would be at work during the day, he would come back, hand the children over, and I would go down the road and fit in a couple of clients. It was really hard work. I would not recommend it. I used to buy lucozade at the local shop on the way back and I'd literally be chugging it down because I just had a whole day with a five year old and a two year old and now I was going to go and see clients. People do these things of kind of working around it because it's like we need to do something. I think you'll find that families from all over the walks of life are doing it.

Ben (01:13:19):

Yeah. That's my experience too. I think it echoes in the US where-- Although there's also a US group which are a little bit faith based in this as well.

Naomi (01:13:27):

Yeah. That's different. I don't think we really have that group in the UK. I've talked to Americans. They always assume we do, but I haven't met many people who are home educating for religious reasons as their major motivation.

Ben (01:13:42):

Great. So I have a little section of overrated and underrated. So I'll give you some quick fire and you can say overrated, underrated, or you can pass, or you can make some comments. I actually think now having had this conversation I know what you're going to say on all of these. But we can see how they go. So overrated or underrated, a government set curriculum?

Naomi (01:14:08):

Completely overrated.

Ben (01:14:14):

No redeeming feature whatsoever?

Naomi (01:14:16):

I don't think it does. I cannot think why the government would be setting a curriculum.

Ben (01:14:23):

So overrated, underrated, exams? So I guess we would say we have talked about the fact that we're over tested. Is there any place for exams or testing? Can it do anything or is it pretty much like a waste of time?

Naomi (01:14:40):

I think there's a place for exams as a kind of entry to other things in a very practical way. I think part of the problem with our GCSE and A-level system is there's far too much invested in it and it's used almost as a way of evaluating whether you are a good and worthwhile person or not for the rest of your life, whether you're going to be a loser or a success. That's how it feels. I would like it if exams were much more like the driving test. If you want to be able to go and drive you need to show that you have a certain level of confidence in driving, but nobody thinks that that test indicates anything about you as a person, apart from whether you can drive or not. I can say that because I failed my driving test three times.

Ben (01:15:23):

I can't even drive.

Naomi (01:15:25):

Well, there you are. So I don't think you should just be able to go out and drive. We need to have competency based tests for things, but I don't think we should be rating everybody against each other in the way that GCSEs do because GCSEs aren't actually a competency based exam. It is about where are you in the spectrum of everybody else. And I think we need to get rid of this idea that everybody does these exams when they're 16, everybody does these exams when they’re 18. What I would like to see is, so young person would like to go to be a games designer or something. In order to do that, they need to demonstrate that they have certain levels of literacy and numeracy. So they do those because they can see that that has a point and that's the next thing to do. I haven't got a problem with entry requirements and stuff like that and demonstrating competency, but I think that's the real problem with these high states exams. I see so many young people who think that their life is over because they're not going to do GSCEs at 16 for example. They think that this is it. There's such a high stakes feeling around that whole period of development of adolescence and I just think that's really unhelpful.

Ben (01:16:36):

Okay. That makes a lot of sense. So overrated, underrated, social media? Although I guess we could go social media overall and then social media within children.

Naomi (01:16:48):

Well, I have mixed feelings about social media. Social media in particular I think can be a source of lots of bullying for young people. I do have concerns about the way that if young people are being bullied at school and everybody's on social media, that bullying basically continues around the clock 24 hours 7. My approach generally to technology is the parents need to lean into it. Parents need to know what's going on. I think social media's an amazing tool but I think it's only as good as the people behind it. It's not a thing in itself. If your child's in a community where they're being bullied a lot, then you might want to rethink whether they're actually always being accessible by that community.

Ben (01:17:38):

Yeah. So that's neutral. All right, that makes sense. And then overrated, underrated, technical colleges or a schooling where it's kind of more I guess, skills based? There is sort of this, but you're maybe learning carpentry or coding or something. We don't have such a great tradition of that here in the UK or at least not anymore, but at least the concept of having more-- I don't even really like the term technical college, but it is more of a skills based type of learning or maybe apprenticeships.

Naomi (01:18:11):

Yeah. More of an apprenticeship based model. I think those would be great if we had more of those for young people. And I think that would go alongside-- I mean, again, I don't think that should be enforced on anybody. I don't think it should be a, "This is what you have to do." But I think if young people are doing something that's meaningful and that they find rewarding, then I think we would have... Many adolescents would have an easier ride and society might have an easier ride with them. But I also think it's about getting away from this idea of academic exams being the be all and end all and being the kind of market... There's a nice YouTube video by Ken Robinson. You know his work?

Ben (01:18:48):

Yes.

Naomi (01:18:49):

One of the things he says is we have this weird system which puts being a university professor at the top of the hierarchy. The skills that we teach children in school are all these academic skills which I use every day as a university professor. But actually, I'm this tiny part of society. There are so many other things which we don't prioritize in the same way. It's like we measure everybody against this benchmark of how far did you get towards being a university professor? How many qualifications did you get? I would just love it if we could see child development and education in a much wider way.

Ben (01:19:24):

Great. Okay. So coming up to the final couple of questions. What projects are you working on now? Do you have another book or ideas? Obviously you're running on your own consulting? What's happening today?

Naomi (01:19:40):

Yes. So I've actually just finished my second book on self-direct education yesterday. I sent if off to the editor. And that is on neurodiversity and self-direct education. So it's called “A Different Way to Learn” and it's going to be published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers next year, I hope. I interviewed lots of families with neuro divergent children of all types and also young people. I also interviewed neuro divergent adults about their experience of school. So as compared to my first book which was more theory based, it's a lot more experienced based. I hope it will give parents the confidence because often parents will say to me, "But my child's autistic and I've got all these reports that say they must be in school. If they're not at school..." It's so common. I've heard people say so often with autistic children in particular, "They have to be in school to learn how to socialize." And I'm like, "How does anybody-- That's not what school is for, for a start. But also, have you talked to any autistic people about their experience of socializing at school? And really what do you think they're learning through it?" So I'm kind of trying to give accounts balance to that. As you say, I'm doing webinars at the moment and I'm thinking of moving in to do some online courses about how parents can help their autistic children with various different things like anxiety and trauma.

Ben (01:21:03):

Great. Well, I look forward to reading that. The final question then is, do you have any life advice or advice for parents and families in your experience maybe who are thinking about this or any other observations that you've had about the world?

Naomi (01:21:23):

So I think my number one advice for parents would be trust your instincts about what your child needs and how your child is. There are a lot of parents I talk to they say, "I think that my child is really unhappy or I think that my child needs these things, but the professionals are telling me that I'm wrong." I think you need to just retain your knowledge that you know your child better and you probably have a really good sense. You don't just know your child better, but in most cases you share genes with your child. Therefore you often have a kind of intuitive understanding of the experiences that your child is having and that you can get inside their heads in a way that professionals often can't. So I would say really listen to your instincts, give yourself space to think about what you think as sort of apart from what everybody tells you, you should be thinking. The other thing is lean into the things that your child likes; whatever they are, lean into them and embrace them because this is a short time of life when they're like this and when they're young and it is an amazing opportunity to connect with them if you choose to do that rather than choosing to pull them away from the things that they love.

Ben (01:22:29):

That sounds excellent. So follow your intuitions and follow your child's interests.

Naomi (01:22:37):

Pretty well. Yeah.

Ben (01:22:38):

With that Naomi, thank you very much.

Naomi (01:22:42):

Thank you, Ben.

Ben (01:22:44):

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In Podcast, Life Tags Naomi Fisher, Unschool, home school, psychology, autism, home education
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