Our Non-directed Support Organization
This essay, by Earl Gary Stevens, was originally published in the Talk
About Learning column in the May-June 1995 issue of Home Education
Magazine.
Over the years I have spoken many times in these pages about our
large, diverse support organization, the Southern Maine Home Education
Support Network. Individuals and families within the network have
worked and played together for a long time, and this has led to the
flowering of both friendships and community. Almost 10 years have gone
by since we began with only a handful of families, and we have learned
much along the way.
In recent months parents from many different places have told me
stories about disagreements and confusion and hurt feelings within
their own support organizations. While groups begin with families
joining together in a sincere desire to cooperate in sharing support
and resources, all too often they find themselves sinking into
seemingly unresolvable differences of opinion over the details of
group activities and events.
Disagreements among members can begin with attempts to define what it
is that "the group" should do. For example, what kind of
support meetings should be offered? Who will lead them? What
philosophy of home-based education should be emphasized? Should kids
be welcome at all support meetings, or should there be some gatherings
for parents only? Should discussions be moderated, or should they be
entirely informal? In addition to support meetings there are sports
activities, social events, field trips and a host of other
possibilities to consider. All can provide ground for conflicts.
We are often asked how we can manage to advertise a variety of support
group meetings and a long list of activities and events in this part
of the state with very little debate or disagreement over how they are
conducted. The answer is that the sponsoring individuals make all the
decisions, and the network itself never offers anything. Every member
is free to make his or her own decisions about what to offer, either
as an individual or in cooperation with others. While some of our more
active members may be perceived as leaders, especially by newcomers,
the truth is that no leader or group of leaders decides what is to be
on the calendar.
This is not to say that everyone agrees about everything. No matter
what the activity or event, there will always be somebody who feels
that it should be done differently. Sometimes even longtime members
get confused about the process and protest that some aspect of a given
activity is not sensitive to the needs of this kind of family or that
kind of philosophy; when this happens they must remember that they are
free to offer an alternative.
Seven years ago I decided to offer an activity which I called Family
Baseball. I wanted to create an environment where parents and boys and
girls of all ages and skill levels could have fun playing together
with a non-lethal ball, relaxed rules, and a spirit of helping each
other learn the game. I placed an ad in our newsletter giving the time
and place and a description of the game. (See HEM, July/August 1989.)
At the beginning I was feeling my way along and having to make many
decisions. One parent thought that the game should be more challenging
for bigger kids. Another parent wanted it to be less challenging for
little kids. Another felt it was too disorganized, while still another
believed that any adult direction at all was too coercive. Can you
imagine trying to figure all this out at a support group meeting? I
listened to everybody and kept to my vision. Some people drifted away
because it wasn't their cup of tea, while others became regulars in
our weekly games, but these differences never became a source of group
conflict as they might have if the game were sponsored collectively.
For those who wish to try our approach the key is to create a point of
contact for families in which individuals and groups of individuals
are free to figure out ways to meet their own needs. This may be a
simple transition for some organizations, but in other cases it might
be easier to start a separate mailing list with its own calendar. Just
focus on making it possible for families to explore their own ways of
working and playing together.
While it is true that a network is not a community, Eileen Yoder, who
co-founded SMHESN with me, points out that within our network we are a
community of people at various levels of commitment and caring and
willingness to give. Some people give a great deal, and, as time
passes, they tend to be seen as leaders. But as long as we claim
ownership and responsibility only for what we as individuals offer to
others and not for any kind of group authority, then we avoid
misunderstandings and debilitating conflicts.
It is surprisingly easy to forget this principle. I've done that
occasionally when I have neglected to leave my name attached to an
activity so that in the newsletter it appears to be a group offering
rather than an offering by Earl Gary Stevens. I realize this has
happened when I find myself feeling responsible for pleasing everybody
instead of allowing myself to be guided by what I feel that I can
give.
These are some of the practices and concepts that make SMHESN work for
us. This approach requires a lot of respect for the authority of
individuals to make their own decisions. Most of us have been
well-schooled to look for authority from above and it can be hard work
to begin looking within. It is fun to see the enthusiasm when
newcomers first realize that they have the freedom and the means to
create opportunities for themselves and for others anytime they like.
With each passing month we learn more from each other.
© Earl Gary
Stevens 1995. State and local nonprofit volunteer-based support
organizations may reprint this article for their members without
asking for permission. As a favor, please send a copy to 25 Belmeade
Road, Portland, Maine 04101. All others please ask.
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