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Homeschooling ~
- Should You Homeschool?
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Making The Choice
Making the decision
to homeschool or not isn't an easy one. Everyone has to decide
what's best for their children and their family. First thing
to know is that it takes a great deal of patience to homeschool.
At first it might be hard as your child would rather play than
study. You'll need to keep your cook and try to find ways to
make studying seem like play.
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- Most counties in the U.S. have specific requirements and
justifications that you have to meet in order to homeschool.
The most common requirement is for the schooling parent to have
a college degree. But you can argue this point and get around
that requirement. Don't let their literature intimidate you.
The most common reason given for homeschooling is based on religious
justification.
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- School Boards today have a lot of information online about
how to register your child for homeschooling and the requirements
associated with doing so. There are also a large number of homeschooling
sites that can provide good information to fight a rejection
by your local school board for homeschooling. Just take some
time and do your research to make a fully informed decision.
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- Advantages
- Closer interaction with the child usually circumvents a lot
(not all) of the teenage conflict with the parents. The "us"
(children) against "them" isn't as strong because both
"us" and "them" are working together. When
people work together, they have greater opportunities to understand
the point of view of others.
- Ability to focus on a specific subject for as long as the
student wants to work on it. In other words, the student doesn't
have to stop working on an interesting project after 50 minutes
to go to another class. On the other hand, he/she doesn't have
to continue with a boring subject. Either an alternate activity
or another method to teach the subject can be tried.
- Ability to go on field trips at will.
- Ability to devise learning moments throughout the day and
not just during a particular 800-300 period of time.
- Ability to tailor the work to the child's learning style.
Although I liked to read a lot as a child, my sisters did not.
It surprised me that they learned almost as much as I did from
watching movies and TV. (It was hard to win at Trivia Pursuit.)
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- Methods
- School at Home Everything I have heard indicates that the
student and teacher burns out within a year.
- Classical A program which is similar to the above but is
focused on literature, ....
- Traditional
- Unit Studies
- Eclectic
- Unschooling
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- Beginning Assumption Traps
- Assumption: Your child should be
working on education for the same amount of time that he would
be at public school.
- Reality: Your child will be able to work at his own
speed. This means faster at things he gets quickly and slower
at things that are harder for him. Because time won't be taken
to go to different classes and to discipline other kids, he will
likely get learn more in less time.
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- Assumption: Your child is goofing
off when she is playing on the computer, watching TV, engaged
in her favorite hobby.
- Reality: Your child can learn in a multitude of unstructured
environments. In chat rooms and on message boards, she can learn
new vocabulary and typing (keyboarding) skills. There are many
educational games which kids find fascinating. See my personal
list later. See the benefits of watching TV shows and movies
below also. You can turn any hobby into an education in itself.
For example, take the care and showing of horses or dogs. Your
child can learn how the horse has evolved (science: biology,
archeology); how the horse got to America, what role has it played
in wars, farming, technology, sociology, class structure (history,
sociology, technology), care of horses including what they eat
and how much (math), their physical needs, how their species
fits into other classifications (science: anatomy, health, biology),
how they act (psychology), develop horseback riding skills (physical
education). She can also learn responsibility, dependability
while pursuing such a hobby. If she is interested in this hobby
as a business, you can add business subjects such as business
math and business plans. Reading stories with horses as a part
of the story (Black Beauty, the Black Stallion and other books
by Walter Farley) and writing reports about what she learns while
engaged in her hobby will fulfill her English requirement. If
she participates in 4H Clubs, she will engage in social interaction,
reading, competitions, etc.
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- Assumption: Your child can't learn
anything if he isn't sitting down with a book and/or pencil and
paper.
- Reality: In centuries before this, many children learned
by doing and through apprenticeship. He can learn as much (probably
more) by preparing the fish he caught himself as he can by reading
a book about a fish's anatomy. He can learn more about math and
measuring by building a dog house than he can by measuring a
few lines in his math book.
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- Assumption: Your child can't learn
anything if you don't lay it out for her.
- Reality: Learn to find teachable moments in life.
Are you cooking dinner? Measuring ingredients is math. Do you
want a larger or smaller quantity than the recipe calls for?
Converting it to larger or smaller quantities is math. Do you
walk in the woods? Take a bird book or a tree book or an insect
book to recognize and understand what you see there. Do you go
out at night? Look at the stars. Learn to recognize various constellations.
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- Older students and decompressing.
- Assumption: As soon as you start
homeschooling, things will be better in your family or that your
child will jump into her studies and become an excellent student.
- Reality: You may be beginning homeschooling for social
reasons: to remove your child from bad influences or from physical
and emotional attacks at school. The longer she has been in public
school, the longer she needs to decompose. This doesn't mean
that learning should be ignored but it does mean that education
may not look like it did in public school. (See above assumptions.)
Warning: The average length of decompression is about a year.
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- Special On Grades For High Schoolers
- There is a book called Senior High: A Home-Designed Form+U+la
by Barbara Edtl Shelton with lots and lots of forms including
lesson plans, weekly plans, and records for transcripts and such.
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- Transcripts:
- More and more colleges accept homeschool transcripts straight
out of your computer. Design your own. You'll need to check with
the college/university you want to attend. Until recently, the
military has required an accredited degree or GED but there have
been changes. Check with them first if your child is headed in
that direction
better yet, have him/her do the checking.
Your solution may be to sign up with an accredited correspondence
program. Some local high schools will grant a diploma with testing.
Check with your public school system.
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