The year of learning dangerously Adventures in homeschooling

Quinn Cummings

Book - 2012

A blogger and former child actor recounts her misadventures in first-time homeschooling, an endeavor marked by her own math aversion, experiments with current trends, and a chaperone venture at a home-school prom.

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Subjects
Published
New York, New York : Penguin Group 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Quinn Cummings (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
229 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-228).
ISBN
9780399537608
  • Breathless
  • School. Daze
  • Tribes
  • Magical History Tour
  • Unchartered Territory
  • Joy Story
  • Le Math
  • Veni, Vidi...
  • The Fourth R
  • Rhymes with Orange
  • Go, Team
  • Cabin Fever
  • The Perils of Sensual Reading
  • Oh, What a Night
  • Mapquest
  • Graduation
  • Parent/Teacher Conference
  • Acknowledgments
  • Further Reading
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Cummings's witty memoir records her family's homeschooling experience and offers a critique of "mainstream" homeschoolers. A blogger and former child actor, Cummings (Notes from the Underwire) pulled her daughter, Alice, from the public school system after feeling that Alice wasn't meeting her potential, worried that increased homework loads would leave Alice "less free time to follow a sudden curiosity." The family sets off on a haphazard homeschooling plan for Alice's sixth-grade year, dabbling in various methodologies ranging from hyperstructured online charter school approaches to active avoidance of structure before finding some middle ground with live, online classes taught by credentialed teachers. After recognizing and dismissing common concerns about socialization, Cummings launches into a brief history of compulsory education and the birth of modern homeschooling. She then walks through various subsets of homeschoolers and their approaches-from the "unschoolers" to Christian fundamentalists. In an effort to find her niche within the homeschooling world, Cummings attends meetings and conferences with homeschoolers ranging from the most liberal to religiously motivated conservatives (this latter group being the founders of the modern homeschooling movement). Her own story, and that of her daughter, occasionally feels overshadowed by her larger critique of the movement, but Cummings's self-deprecating humor and parental earnestness makes for an enjoyable journey. Agent: Kate Garrick, DeFiore and Company. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Cummings (Notes from the Underwire: Adventures from My Awkward and Lovely Life) and her partner, Daniel, were frustrated when their daughter Alice had difficulties in public school. After much thought and debate, they decided to homeschool her. Most of the burden fell on Cummings, whose insecurities often had her second-guessing their decision. Cummings discovered various homeschooling methods--online charter schools, Radical Unschooling, the Fundamentalists, Gothardites. She enrolled Alice in an online course, only to abandon it six weeks later, and went to conferences to check out other homeschooling groups. In the end, they stuck with Cummings's original curriculum, and Alice flourished both personally and academically in the process. V-ERDICT Professional educators may dismiss this as fluff. But along with her wit, Cummings offers concrete proposals for the future of education. Her book should have wide appeal and is likely to give readers a more positive view of homeschooling.-Terry A. Christner, Hutchinson P.L., KS (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.