Why did you take your child out of public school?(or why did you choose to home school since Pre-K?)?
Favorite Answer
Instead of paying Sylvan or some other tutor service the enormous fees, we decided to home school.
It worked. We can explain in different ways until we are sure that he understands the subject matter and our expectations. He cannot bluff his way through. The immediate improvement was in his self concept, his maturity and his attitude towards education. He will probably never love learning, but he knows that it is something he must do and he is understanding that he cannot get by with good looks and great personality.
So my son is in 3rd grade this year, doing at least a year ahead in everything but writing (he hates handwriting) and since I let him take a year off from that and do computer based last year I have seen a developmental shift in him. When we started back to school today after taking 6 weeks off from all school and the year from handwriting, he picked up his pencil and wrote better than I have ever seen him. And another weird thing, he unconsciously switched from left to right handed. I am wondering what would have happened in a school envoirnment that would have forced the issue rather than wait for a natural skill developement.
So, at this point we will always do this. If we get into high school or even upper middle and it is not working, we will re-evaluate, but I think it has turned out to be such a blessing for my child and my family to this point, it is amazing! My younger son is 2 1/2 and started some preschool activities today at home. We plan on a mothers day out 2 days a week and have not ruled out preschool for him, as it gave such a great foundation to our 8 year old, but we will play it by ear a bit and see what works best for him.
Our kids are 6 and 9 and we have no regrets. Our kids love being at home. We hear the stories of stuff that goes on in school for our nephews and things they come back home saying and doing (and we’ve seen the attitude our one nephew picked up) and we are even happier about our decision. I see the homeschooled kids as they play together, varying ages, varying genders a lot of the time, and I think it’s such a shame that most of us didn’t get that kind of childhood. I think of their individual academics and am so grateful they’re not being stuck into a particular model that tries to make everybody the same. I love homeschooling.
I agree a lot with parents given the primary responsibility of educating the children. No matter if your child is schooled at home or is schooled by some one else, YOU are the one who will stand before God and account for what they learned and how they used it. I am not sure if using a condom and having “safe sex” is what God would want us to be teaching our children at such young ages.
That being said, We actually started out with our children in a private school. When my oldest daughter got to 6th grade, we decided she could try to go to a public Charter School. It was a nightmare! It seemed all the kids where in control, no rules or accountability. I actually sat in on a few classes and even tried to help out through volunteering. When it became evident that nothing was changing, we decided to pull her out.
The next year, after lots of research on the state of public schools, curriculum’s that where dumbed down and striped of any mention of our countries rich religious history and by personal observation and discussion with public school students and teachers, we pulled out my youngest daughter from her PRIVATE school and never have looked back. It saved us a lot of money for the youngests tuition, and I found I could get a whole days worth of work and more done with her at home in about 2 or maybe 3 hours.
Hope this answers your questions!
Homeschooling was a spur-of-the-moment thing, and was supposed to be temporary.
We loved it so much, and it was working so well for her, we kept homeschooling her. And we never bothered sending our two younger children.
She’s 17 now and things have been great.
After my son complained about being “bored” at school, we tried “public school at home” via a virtual charter school. However, the curriculum was too restrictive, too boring, and too regimented. Finally, I decided to try homeschooling with a curriculum that worked for my son, and he has been thriving spiritually, academically, and intellectually ever since.
I hope this clearly explains the “whys” behind my choice.
Our youngest son was getting his lunches stolen and again the staff ignored it. We solved the problem by filling double stuff oreo’s with Habanero sauce.
Teachers put more effort into favorite students than any other. One teacher for every 30 children and very little help to go around. The teachers were more like glorified babysitters and admired the title of teacher but refused to actually work.
What they could not teach our oldest one in 5 years, we did in 1 year. It’s all about who applies themselves and these teachers sadly lack the ability to.
I would NEVER put my child in a public school. I did three internships at public schools. Never again.
I homeschool because most public schools have low standards and methods that suck the joy from learning.
I home school because public school takes first graders who are excited about learning and in short order turns them against learning. They pick up anti-intellectual attitudes from their peers (“smart kids are nerds”).
I home school so my kids can learn Latin and Irish.
I home school so travel can be a part of education.
I home school to have the flexability to spend the entire day dismantling a machine or working on writing a story.
I home school so my kids can move ahead when they “get it”, and take longer for those things which they find more difficult. In public schools some kids are always waiting for others to catch up, while others are swept along with the group before they’ve mastered the material at hand.
these are just a few of a long list of reasons.