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5 replies
  1. Chris
    Chris says:

    The important takeaway for me from that video was the kids were skater boys. My 13 year-old son is learning about the world through his love of skating. He spent the summer waking up late, rendezvousing with friends, and exploring Los Angeles via bus and skateboard. This included trips to the Venice Beach skatepark, where he once told his visiting aunt, “Hold your breath at this part. There is a lot of pot smoking around here.” My feeling is that he is learning some important life skills by stretching his tether on his skateboard. Interestingly, when he got back to school, the word on the street was that “the 8th grade skater boys spent the summer smoking pot.” When the video you link to went viral, I thought, “See. Those skater kids are actually pretty cool.” It’s nice to have validation.

    • Penelope Trunk
      Penelope Trunk says:

      For a brief bit Zehavi was a skater and I was really impressed by how self-directed skaters are. There is no set curriculum, no levels to pass, and the classes are sort of dorky. So it’s kids deciding what they should learn next and then figuring out how to learn it. It’s a great way to see how self-directed learning works because there’s really not another way to do it for skateboarding.

      Penelope

  2. Micah
    Micah says:

    this is a cool story have good moral to learn. The video was awesome, very inspiring kids and model to others especially to those people doesn’t even know the word HONEST!

  3. Anastasia
    Anastasia says:

    This is exactly why Montessori for elementary grades works so well. They are constantly working together to figure out a task or problem without any teacher or adult telling them what to do.
    You should do a little more research into Montessori to see how much they do without adult supervision and how much time they DO spend outside. The whole philosophy is that the classroom is the whole city or town you live in. I believe that’s pretty spectacular for busy boys and girls.
    Plus, what is so wrong with expecting kids to use an indoor voice when they are indoors?! Please explain why they shouldn’t be able to do that. It’s called respect!

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