home schooling opinions?
i understand some parents have no other choice in this matter due to the geography in which they live. This is not aimed at you !
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They are not limited by being in a group of same aged people. They are not limited to interaction that is controlled by teachers in classroom. They are allowed to be individuals and not a clone or worse, a person who is wounded from resisting being made into a clone.
The ‘socialization’ issue is a myth.
I know many home school students and many public school students. I work in a public high school. I home school my son. I meet students from both areas who are very socially graceful.
I know of more public school students who are not prepared for real life experiences and who are not able to co exist.
Let me share a typical homeschoolers week.
Our school is very active in the community, church and neighborhood.
We have some sit down work in our class room. It is a small part of the day. The students deliver senior meals to the elderly and handicapped. Our students do chores on a working farm one day a week. The students help at the feeding program during the summer. Go swimming at the public pool.
The students in our school make friends very easily. Have taken a train trip through the Rockies. Love people.
So to answer the question about co-existing with other people later…”They may have trouble co-existing with people that only want to be involved with only people their own age or people that are stuck in just a “normal life”. The homeschoolers I have met are “movers and shakers” in the things that interest them. They are motivated by themselves.
Hope this helps you with any concerns you may have if this was the reason for the question.
We choose to homeschool so we can include God the creator in our education.
Whereas, homeschooled children are often out in the real world, interacting with people of all ages where they learn how to socialize (or co-exist as you say) in the real world…not some classroom filled with kids their own age.
I guess people think homeschoolers lock their kids in the basement with workbooks all day or something, LOL!
Prior to the 1852, there were no compulsory attendance laws in this country. So, before the late 1800’s most people were schooled at home. They did fine, socially, which is why we are all here now (they grew up, got married, and begat all of us!) Abraham Lincoln was homeschooled, and he seemed to be pretty good with people. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compulsory_education
Instead of worrying about how social homeschoolers are, maybe you should look at the alternative: how well are the schools “socializing” people? Do people learn in school how to put others first, love others who are different from them, be kind to weaker people, to have integrity, and to fight for what is right? In school, do the teachers teach the students how to hold an intelligent conversation, how to make friends, how to keep friends, how to make up after an argument, how to forgive, how to get along in spite of differences, and how to respect the beliefs of others? That’s what I teach my kids at home, and that’s what I call “co-existing with others.”
I’m certified to teach in the state of Texas, and I’ve been a classroom teacher, so I know that none of the above are taught in the schools. They simply don’t have the resources. They don’t even have the time or wherewithal to teach the simplest of virtues: gentleness, kindness, respect, politeness. Basically, the best they can do, with what’s given to the teachers, is to hammer in as much material that will be on the state assessment tests as possible, and try to keep the kids alive and healthy. But, they can’t even do that, as we all know. :o(
http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1998/schools/
http://news.yahoo.com/fc/US/School_Violence/
http://www.cnn.com/2003/EDUCATION/07/01/health.lunch.reut/index.html
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,147179,00.html
Yes – there are extremes — those people who shelter their children from the world around them, but that goes deeper than a homeschooling issue. Those children will be messed up because their parents shelter them from everything – from knowing anything about the real world around them.
Homeschooled children are some of the most well adjusted children I know.
As I wrote in another question these are some of the things my kids are involved in with other homeschoolers in the community:
gym class, swimming, swimming lessons, dance class, film school (where they write, produce, set design, act, edit their own films), soccer, musicals, drama productions, field trips, etc. They are usually with 30-40 other kids of all ages and backgrounds.
Most hs’ers involve their kids in all sorts of programs. I know in the States a lot of kids head to their local public schools for sports programs.
They meet people at the grocery store, swimming pools, malls, neighbourhood just like any other child.
Just because they do their book work one-on-one with a parent doesn’t mean they don’t know how to co-exist with other people.
Teeby – my guess is that a lot of the kids in the national spelling bee (homeschooled or not) are on the autistic spectrum and have Asperger’s Syndrome like my son. That is the reason for their social skills, lack of eye contact and memory skills. Not because they are homeschooled.
Yes, there are some people who keep their kids away from social situations, and there are kids who just plain aren’t social by nature, but these kids wouldn’t be socialized if they were in school. It takes a lot more than being in a room with people to be “socialized”.
Many homeschooled children have better social skills than their classroom counterparts, for the most part. Our kids have the opportunity to take classes with kids of differing ages and backgrounds – rather than being in a homogenous setting all day long. They have the chance, as they get older, to work in volunteer and apprenticing settings where they learn real life skills, not just what’s in the lesson plan. They are involved in real life every day as they learn alongside their sibs and parents.
Much of the time, these are students that don’t go back into the public school system, so they are not the students that are usually thought of homeschooling is mentioned. Most of the comments I have seen on here are of the “I knew this kid who went back to school, and…” or “the homeschooled students who came into my class were…”. The students about which these comments are made are generally the students for whom homeschooling either wasn’t done properly, or it just wasn’t right for them.
My child, along with hundreds of other homeschooled kids in our area, is involved in so many “social” opportunities that he asked me to scale it down so he can have some downtime! He’s active in co op classes, Scouts, church activities 2-3 times per week, sports, clubs, volunteer opportunities, and playing in the neighborhood and at parks with local kids. He can read to toddlers at the library and talk to adults on an intelligent level.
Although he does prefer the low level of distractions he gets from homeschooling, he is able to function quite easily in a classroom. It’s just way more efficient to be able to do things at his own pace, and I don’t see the point of making him suffer through the poorly implemented schedules at our local schools.
There are a good number of schools that are excellent and don’t have as much empty time in their schedules as others; unfortunately, such a phenomenon doesn’t exist in our district.
Please understand that true homeschooling does not stick kids away from society, huddled over a worksheet or computer all day. True homeschooling is a lifestyle of learning, and those who homeschool have learned how to help their kids learn in many different ways, including *gasp* social situations. Promise, our kids aren’t lacking 🙂