"My goal is to support these humans in my care, to discover and explore life every day in their own ways, knowing and trusting that in doing so, they are learning more than I could ever hope to teach."
I love this. Elen Morrigan is an admin at HEFA (Home Education for All), the amazing Facebook group that supports, advises, and guides home educators like myself. She is disabled, and her children have a range of disabilities and conditions, and her voice is loud and brilliant! Her book is honest, experience-based, and well-researched, with loads of evidence (studies, litigations, and case laws) referenced. Of course, the current Labour government are bringing about all kinds of changes, not least the Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill, so another book may soon be needed!
Morrigan is supportive. She is clear on her stance as a champion of unschooling but gives balance, tolerance, and kindness to school-going families, other home ed styles, and any combination of the above. She acknowledges and validates doubts, "wobbles," and challenges and reminds us to grab cups of tea and "breathers." She's also sarcy AF and hilarious: "PS grab a snack as the next chapter is a beast." I am certain we'd be friends IRL. The chapters are punctuated with reflective activities, which I found highly therapeutic and thought-provoking.
My favourite thing about Reality vs. Expectation? Its unflinching politicism and radicality. "Our society views education as a commodity. Children receive this raw material of education so that they may become the finished product and become a commodity of society, valued and accepted for what they bring into the economy." Uncomfortable truths.
This isn't the most beautifully bound book, and it is riddled with typos and grammatical errors, none of which bothered me in the slightest. The ethos is about laying yourself bare, being open to mistakes, and embracing the messiness and unpredictability of it all. This is a self-published work printed by Amazon (Morrigan even designed the cool pop art cover). I am so glad Morrigan put herself out there to provide this refreshing companion to the home ed journey.
"... Learning is not linear. It's messy and abstract and tangible and repeating and beautiful! So much more beautiful than any of us have been schooled to believe."