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Archive for August, 2009

How to Homeschool Your Child : Is Home Schooling a Good Idea?

Monday, August 3rd, 2009


Teach your children from home; learn what factors to consider when deciding whether to home school and if it is a good idea for you and your child in this free video on homeschooling your child. Expert: Sharon Wilharm Bio: Sharon Wilharm is an experienced home teacher, and she has written homeschool curriculums that are available to the public. Filmmaker: Fred Wilharm

Home schooling?

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

I am writing a discursive essay on home-schooling and whether it is beneficial to children or should be banned.

Does anyone have any opinions which I could use as evidence or which I can quote?

Thanks x
Wow Renee ..
That helped a lot!
Thank you very much.
I hope everything keeps going well for you family.

Thanks again x
I never expected to get such amazing feedback!
Thank You to everyone!

Wilandhil - Thanks for letting me quote you. I found the virtual way of learning very interesting!

Thanks x

The Call to Dunkirk

Saturday, August 1st, 2009


Exodus Mandate video calling all Christians to remove God’s children from the Government schools. … Exodus Mandate Christian education homeschool homeschooling Ray Moore Frontline Ministries Public Schools Voddie Baucham Bruce Shortt government indoctrination call to dunkirk exodus mandate

The Truth About Home Schooling

Saturday, August 1st, 2009
Home schooling vs. public schooling, this is what the parents must decide. When we consign our children to public schools, we feel satisfied that they are receiving ‘quality education’. But, are we really getting our money’s worth? More importantly, are the children gaining anything from this kind of a learning procedure?

As the failure of public education becomes more obvious, more parents are chaffing at the restriction of freethinking afforded our children in public schools.

I refer to free thinkers as those who embrace individual responsibilities and ideas; those who practice time-tested rules and morals without restrictions imposed by the public school system. Hence, there is a movement afoot for parents to take more responsibility for their children’s education.

The home school movement has brought about many superior, efficient, and exciting teaching approaches. Most of you reading this were taught in a public school using the traditional textbook method.

The home school movement has brought about many superior, efficient, and exciting teaching approaches. Blot out all your preconceived ideas of how you think school should be and your previous experience of education.

Find out how you and your children like to learn. Real effectiveness is developed over time by improving a few steps at a time. All children have different gift and talents. Read the Parable About the Animal School to put this into focus. Browse through the different teaching approaches on this site to find the method that fit your family.

Scholastic education aside, what about moral education? Public schools are teaching high schoolers proper condom usage, while staying away from such alternatives as chastity. Pro-homosexuality and anti-gun sentiments are being hurrahed in schools, yet prayer is banned.

With recent tragic events, many parents and schools are being forced to take a closer look at our present schooling structure. Everyone is looking for reasons as to why our children are either part of, or in a defensive position of this social chaos. The result of this chaos? Gangs, guns, drugs, a high rate of teen-pregnancy and even terrorism.

The 1998 study by Dr. Rudner of 20,760 students, found that eighth grade students whose parents spend $199 or less on their home education score, on the average, in the 80th percentile. Eighth grade students whose parents spend $400 to $599 on their home education also score on the average, in the 80th percentile! Once the parents spend over $600, the students do slightly better, scoring in the 83rd percentile.

The message is loud and clear. More money does not mean a better education. There is no positive correlation between money spent on education and student performance. Public school advocates could refocus their emphasis if they learned this lesson. Loving and caring parents are what matters. Money can never replace simple, hard work.

On average, home-schooled students in grades one to four performed one grade level above their age-level public/private school peers on achievement tests. Students who had been home schooled their entire academic life had higher scholastic achievement test scores than students who had also attended other educational programs.

Home school and the public school system can comfortably and successfully co-exist. And in the best-case scenarios, these two entities actually become benefactors of each other’s time and talents. As home schooled, having the respect of a local educational community is an essential factor in this co-existing equation and is readily achieved by following three very basic, yet vital, steps.

Parents new to home schooling often have a thousand of questions to ask. It has been accepted that parents have an inherent right to determine the pros and cons of home schooling.

There is little long-standing knowledge among regular school goers because most things are learnt for the exam. There is no correlation of facts with life. The child may know a lot, but understands very little. This is where the home schoolers beat the regular school goers. Ultimately, home schoolers emerge more adept at facing the outside world.

The bottom line on this home schooling vs. public schools issue is who do you want your children to be molded by? You or some gun-toting, drug testing, bureaucratic soldier working for the state?





By: Richard Sherland

Methodologies Used In Home Schooling

Saturday, August 1st, 2009
The idea behind home schooling involves to handle a curriculum at home. When parents take a decision to home school their children, they bear the onus to help the child to cope with the syllabus recommended by officials for that particular grade or level. There are a number of methodologies adopted for home schooling. With each method, the variety of materials also differs.

In the case of educational philosophy, the focus is on a particular linear education like the Charlotte Mason pattern. While in the case of classical education, the focus is on the cream side of literature in any subject, its understanding and application. Then, there is the good old Montessori method that involves the learn-by-grade system. This is similar to the pattern observed in the traditional schools. These are just a few to mention, but with the adoption of anyone method comes along special requirements.

The best method is, without a doubt, the mixed eclectic. The home schooling parent can access a number of resources designed to address the different methodologies. There are specially designed curricula, books, public and private libraries, catalogs, retails, bookstores etc. The home schooling community is also able to receive dedicated help from television, video or radio. The connectivity of the Internet has made it possible for home schooling parents to interact within live forums and a rostrum that is world wide. There are correspondences, which are accessible and designed specifically for home schoolers.

The methodologies and the applications change due to the laws varying within government statutes of one region to another. All the methodologies of home schooling can be successfully imparted and learnt with the help of study strategies like the ‘unit’ method. The unit study method addresses art, social sciences, math and science and theology. The idea is establishing connectivity among the topics. The unit study methodology enables parents with more than one child to teach all the children effectively and simultaneously.

In the case of the all-in-one methodology, the subjects are taught in sets or comprehensive packages. Each package is designed to cover many subjects. The all-in-one methodology includes the supply of special books and material. This methodology is the best for the families, who live in remote areas and have no access to libraries or public schools. This method is widely adopted because the child is able to enjoy a smooth transition to a regular school or college later. The smooth transition comes from the similarity of subjects and the school like atmosphere generated at home.

The all-in-one methodology for home schooling your child is not cheap, but the system allows the application of easy to use material and minimal preparation. The all-in-one methodology comes with step-by-step instructions and regular testing, just like the traditional schools. Parents who are home schooling their children can also consider the approach that enables the student to progress at his or her speed.

The online home schooling option is also there. Regular, traditional institutes have now made homeschooling easier. They offer online assistance in the way of tests, games and practical-hands on exercises. There are a number of communities that also source information directly from places associated with the activity or subject like museums, athletic clubs and science preserves. Another popular methodology of home schooling a child is by taking help from the support group in the neighborhood.





By: Kris Koonar

Why Do People Home School Their Children?

Saturday, August 1st, 2009
Of course in America there are many options to educating our children. There are public schools, private schools, charter schools, Montessori schools and, of course, the option of home schooling. There are advocates of both home schooling and public schooling. Those of us who don’t home school, which is still the majority of Americans, need to fully understand the reasons why people choose to home school their children.

Religious or Philosophical Convictions:

Religion is not permitted in the public schools. Many families feel that religion needs to be a larger part of their child’s education than that which the public schools allow.

People who have deep religious beliefs show great passion. These are the individuals who are passionate about their children’s education and feel that only they are able to teach them to the best of their ability and the content that they feel they should be learning. The home schooling parent is in charge, they call the shots and they like it that way.

Socialization:

Some people that don’t understand home schooling believe that it is confining rather than socializing. But those individuals that believe that are stuck in thinking about the stereotypical socialization of an age-based classroom. Children that are home schooled are exposed to social situations in a mixed age range. They have “age-mates” instead of “class-mates”.

Many home schoolers feel that their children need to be exposed to the appropriate ways to behave not inappropriate. They feel that their child should be exposed to the model behavior of people who have learned to make decisions and handle themselves in various social settings. By being exposed to appropriate modeling of social behavior, home-schooled children will learn how to act appropriately.

Parents of home schooled children can also see when their child “gets-it” when they model for a younger child appropriate behavior.

Home-schooled children get a reality based social lesson. On a daily basis they see adults they know, love and trust manage and balance life day to day. Modeled for them is academics balanced with real life chores; caring for a sick friend or neighbor, shoveling the driveway and walkway, doing the grocery shopping and dropping of the dry cleaning, cooking dinner while folding laundry, putting laundry away and talking on the phone with Aunt Sara. These are real life situations that home schoolers are exposed to and public school children are often sheltered from or are privy to a controlled school environment.

Academics:

Home schoolers have several advantages over publicly schooled children. The curriculum is designed specifically for them – not for children their age and what children at a particular age are expected to know and learn. Public schools differentiate instruction the best they can. However, a home-schooled child has a curriculum tailored to their needs. They may read at a 4 th grade level, spell at a 3 rd grade level and complete math at a 6 th grade level.

A home-schooled child is neither rushed nor not given enough time. There are no other children to “keep busy” so they are free to work at their pace and move as quickly or as slowly as need be.

Much research has been done on how children learn best. A home-schooled child is not only taught by the person who knows them best in the entire world but also since they are the only student, the learning style never has to be varied. If a student learns best through music, then the curriculum of a home-schooled child can be tailored to meet their needs so they will be more successful.

Home-schooled children get to spend more quality time as a family. They are not trapped in a traditional school setting for 6 hours a day but are free to spend quality time as a family every day.

It is said that parents are a child’s first teacher. Families that home school want to continue to be their child’s teacher because they feel that their children need the guidance of their family and God and not the guidance of someone hired to do a job that is naturally theirs from the day their child was born.





By: Warren Yarnall

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