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Brian Villanueva's avatar

Our family are homeschooling Christians. I am actually writing this from our homeschool coop, so we are deeply embedded in a chosen community that is distinctly countercultural. This author underestimates the difficulty of sustaining that. A "secular countercultural community" may well be an oxymoron -- the root of "culture" is "cult" so it's debatable whether a secular culture has ever or could ever exist.

Religious communities (homeschooling Christians, Jews, non-assimilating Muslims) aren't bound together by a dislike of "secular culture". They are bound by a shared love of what they hold sacred. "We're a community because our kids don't use smartphones" just isn't nearly enough. The Jewish example of leaving their son at synagogue is telling: they trusted the other parents not because those parents eschewed some secular things, but because those parents shared their Jewish culture and worldview. I trust any parent at our homeschool coop to reprimand my children precisely because we share a culture and a philosophy. You can not create that out of a simple desire to negate popular culture. There may be lots of parents who agree that phones are bad but disagree on almost everything else.

Being countercultural isn't a goal. It's a byproduct of believing deeply in a radically different culture. It's a positive not a negative orientation, which is why I believe this author's approach will not succeed.

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Trish Wagner's avatar

Thank you for this post.As a high school educator of 35 years, who has been focussing on supporting my students and my greater community to thrive in dopamine addicted world for many years , I truly appreciate the concrete examples that you give for parents and educators. I will be including much of your post in my presentation to parents this coming week.

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