write an article on life within four walls
Answers
Answer:
I am 13. I go to school but my school does not have four walls, a curriculum, a principal, timetables or classrooms. My school is the world; I am a world schooler.
For the last four years, along with my twin brother and parents, we have travelled on a shoestring budget, to 30 countries on six continents.
While my former classmates sit in a room reading about the French revolution, I have been blessed with the opportunity to walk the hallways of Versailles, taking in the unreality of a palace so extreme in its opulence that one can immediately understand just how a comment such as “let them eat brioche”, could have been erroneously attributed to Marie Antoinette. Here I see first hand her extravagance and ignorance, so removed from the dire poverty that the people of Paris were experiencing.
What I have learned over the past six years is that world schooling – or home schooling, un-schooling, non-traditional schooling or whatever you want to call it – much like the French revolution, is a controversial topic, sincerely misunderstood. It tends to polarise people, institutions and governments into extremist camps of for and against. In all this arguing, what tends to get missed, even purposefully ignored, are the real life cases on which informed opinions might be formulated.
Having experienced both world schooling and traditional schools, perhaps I could add a little clarity and elucidation as to some of the benefits of world schooling, and share with you the approach we take as a family and how we choose to learn. I use the word choose purposefully, as choice is a big differentiator between traditional and more unconventional approaches to learning.
Hope the answer will help you plz mark it as the brainliest answer.