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Difference between revisions of "Essay:student unionism and student self-education"

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(New page: {{incomplete}} Students' unions and other such organizations tend to organize within already-established state-owned or private-for-profit educational institutions (from middle-to-high...)
 
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I propose the formation of a student-managed self-education cooperative, in which students join together in a mutual agreement to both teach and learn from each other. It uses [[autodidacticism]], [[Learning by teaching]], [[democratic education]], and [[free school]]s.
 
I propose the formation of a student-managed self-education cooperative, in which students join together in a mutual agreement to both teach and learn from each other. It uses [[autodidacticism]], [[Learning by teaching]], [[democratic education]], and [[free school]]s.
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[[Category:Essays]][[Category:Political essays]]

Latest revision as of 00:16, 4 May 2012

Template:incomplete Students' unions and other such organizations tend to organize within already-established state-owned or private-for-profit educational institutions (from middle-to-high school grades on up). But what about those institutions which are voluntary consolidated AND not-for-profit? Should students unions of students' interests be represented in such democratically-governed educational institutions?

At the present, the institution which is closest to such an ideal is the homeschool cooperative, which only works up to high school grades before the parent-teachers send their children off to one of the previously-mentioned types of educational institutions. Thus, when students are shipped off to either type of educational institution, isn't there a third, democratic option for post-secondary education?

I propose the formation of a student-managed self-education cooperative, in which students join together in a mutual agreement to both teach and learn from each other. It uses autodidacticism, Learning by teaching, democratic education, and free schools.