Posts

My Experience as a Homeschooler

       I have participated in many of the common forms of non-traditional education such as Uni’s Agora Days, Montessori, and homeschooling. I don’t remember much about my time at Montessori as I was only there for one year of preschool, but because I was homeschooled for 3+ years, its impact on my education was profound. When I was homeschooled, I took all my classes through online platforms such as Online G3 and Athena’s Academy. Obviously, my parents forced me to take the core class (math, English, science), but aside from that, I was allowed to choose my own schedule. For 2 years, I took a grammar class called Magic Lens, which analyzed complex sentences and broke down the function of each word and clause. In the 3rd year, I decided to take a coding course that taught me how to create my own Minecraft mod.       Through my time as a homeschooling student, I learned how important creativity is regarding my education. I had a great deal of freed...

Real Knowledge

            According to the Cambridge Dictionary, knowledge is the “understanding of or information about a subject that you get by experience or study” ("KNOWLEDGE"). While knowledge can be experienced, for most children it is obtained through “study”. They go to school for 8+ hours a day and learn a curriculum established over 100 years ago. Even the structure of the classroom has failed to change. They have one teacher who is in charge, and everybody else is expected to follow their orders and do as they are told. They are taught not to speak up for themselves and to follow the crowd. The bias of these teachers, no matter how well they think that they can hide it, leaks into their classroom and onto the impressionable children. This personal prejudice furthers institutionalized racism inside of the school system.             For example, if there is a white teacher, specifically someone from a wea...

The Impact of Brown v. Board of Education

Brown v. Board of Education By: Ezra Akresh      Brown v. Board of Education was a landmark supreme court case in the mid-1950s. Its ruling put an end to the “separate but equal” era and forced schools to desegregate. Many of the schools for people of color ceased to exist as many of the black students began to go to white schools. However, even though the law supported the integration of schools, many black students were harassed and even bullied when they tried to attend white schools. One of the most famous examples was the Little Rock IX. Every day on their way to school, they were physically and racially abused. It even got so bad that the National Guard got involved to maintain the peace and make sure the kids got to school safely. In the end, only three of the original nine graduated high school, and all were exiled from their community (NPS). As a result, many black families decided not to send their kids to school, which led to many uneducated generations of blac...