Yu really have to be a motived self-starter and avid researcher for unschooling and pick things that will broaden you and take them to their limits.
I took observational astronomy to the point of getting published in Sky and Telescope at age 16 and taking pictures of the moon with a $5 box camera and TriX Pan and doing my own processing and enlgaring.
I had to build my own enlarger initially with a toilet paper tube and a magnifying glass.
Now there's you unschooling. Getting a small telescope a small camera, some film a Yankee processing kit some Tri Chem and Microdol X printing paper and learning how to do the process.
I went on to color work and built my own color head for my Durst J33 englarger by going to the hobbie shop, getting some opaque plastic and ethelyine dicholoride and a small cutting saw.
I designed an enclosure, made a tray for the filters, make clips to deal the enclosure to the enlarger and light source.
Now you have that kind of gumshum and resources.
I taught myself programming in BASIC on 6 platforms including CP/M, DOS, Windows, Mac, Amiga, Atari.
I'd decide to try and learn how to program like the big guys, but without copying their code. I made spread sheet programs, word processing programs with justification, word wrap, cut and paste, I made data bases I made paint and draw programs.
I finally made a few commerical programs including the worlds first no code web page maker.
I, as far as I know, was the first to make a NO CODE web page maker in 1993. Long before there was a Front PAge or Dream Weaver
My software was being used by teachers, 10 year old students, ministers to make their own web pages in an era when there was no Tripod, Free Yellow, You Tube, 360 and no templates.
I was making money from this then I design a CD cover maker that also indexed your CD directories so you would know what was on your data disks and music disks.
That made me a fair slug of money from 1997 until about 2003 when the competitioni killed me.
Now, you ready to do that.
You ready to go into competition with Microsoft by the 10th grade.
I put a data base together for a private library that let you research titles, directors, actors and parsed through 5,000 titles showing you rentals and sales and video offering.
In filmmakign I taught my self how to do in camera lap dissolves, fades, split screen, superimposed titles, beat to beat sound adding (ADR), anamorphics all on 8mm and then I switched to 16mm and started doing documentaries and TV commercials for people.
I had a complete editing rig with old stuff I accumualted at good prices. A view scope, rewinds, split reels. I rented my synchronizer and amplifier.
I also rented the moviolas and flat beds.
I did not own negative conforming and checkerboarded for invisible edits.
My works been on TV more times than I can count and my work taught me more about TV and video operations.
I learned video linear editing by watching two guys from Lockheed do it on a production I did the sound mixing for.
With one day experience I started editing U-Matics for musical acts.
I got myself a Pinnacle Capture Card and Studio software and swtiched to non-linear in 2001 and I also experiemneted with Video Vegas and PRemier.
My current stuff has been around the world with music videos.
My work in audio started when I was 8 years old and moved to stereo tube equipment when I was 10 and to 4 track at age 20 and then straight to 16 and 24 track.
I was one of the first few people in 1986 mixing to Sony PCM 16 bit digital on video tape from analog multi-track.
The records I produced sell on E-bay for $30 each
All of this was unschooling and it took years.
You ready for the commitement.
My unschooling included English, Grammar, Vocbulary, History, Science, Technology, Geometry, Trig, journalism, video, film, television, audio, music (I play bass, guitar and keyboards, all unschooled or homeschool with my mother who was conservatory trained).
I'm published in a variety of magazines and have been working on breaking into the book market for 15 years now.
My reference libary included every College Abstract Barnes and Nobel published and I read them all, about 20 books on Psychology and Psychiatry, 40 books on Programming and I can program in BASIC, C, C++, Modual2 and PAscal, plus I dabbled a little with both 86 and 6800 Assembler.
I had the complete set of HArvard Classics
I did comparative studies of the Bible with 7 different texts.
Most of what I am professionally came EXCLUSIVELY from UNSCHOOLING
I was private institute trained in Electronics but I never put it much work, but I can open up a device and understand how it flows, so long as it's descrete (I actually learned Tube electronics, specialising in Color Televsion theory).
I graduated electronics school at 12.
Now, what's your game plan.
In unschooling you have to have a game plan. The concept is to learn something and then look at all the adjuncts.
I have several unrelaized projects including a History of Women Filmmakers in which I interviewed several women and read just about everything I could find at UCLA, Cal State, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and at one of the most complete private libraries in Los Angeles.
I am a foremost expert on Women Filmmakers from 1895 to present.
Including Animation.
My readings lead me into strange directions. By accident I read a translation of a 300 BC Greek Astrology text. I was into astrology for a while and had all the emphermerises, table of houses, time changes in America. I had about 30 books on Astrology and I am one of the few people to have read this Doctorial Dissertation on a translating, with maps of the sky, from a 300 BC Greek Astrologer.
That's what unschooling can lead you to.
You take a turn, strike gold in a SEGUE and go after it because it means something to you, even though you're out reasearching women filmmakers.
Unschool means that MANY things mean something to you and when doing one thing you find a totally unrelated item but it strikes your fancy so you take a 3 hours break, read it and then xerox a copy of it for your own use.
This is what unschooling is.
I was out reaserachig women in medine for a period piece fiction book I was planning in the period between the dark ages and rennseance and I ran into two more modern ones, including one about a woman who is basically the prototype for Dr. Quinn Medicine woman.
And 1800s woman who was not very pretty, not very shapely and it took her 12 years to get enough education to be a doctor for NO man would train her for more than a year.
She even did 1 year stint with a Dentist.
She eventually settled in the plains states as was their only Medical person for 1,000 miles.
I just put down my reasearch on Mid-evile times and read this biography of the first American Medicine Woman from the 1800s.
See that's history and I jumped from Rennesaunce history to American Post Civil War history
The common theme was Women MEdical pratitioner.
I read about a French woman who trained with sevearl male doctors and she was good at what she did. She was homeopathic and hollistic and the Paris School of Medicine refused her credentials.
You want to unschool, go to the College or Universtity (state run ones, they are open to everyone) and just start going through the computer data base and you will be amazed at the esoteric things you will find.