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Making the Decision to Place Your Child in Home Schooling

By mike mcgee, published Jun 25, 2006
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When weighing the factors in deciding if you should pull your child from a conventional school program and shift them into a home schooling program, the first question should be whether you are prepared to commit the time to it. Home schooling is a long-term commitment.

Depending on the grade your child is in and how many children you will be home schooling, you can expect to devote a minimum of four hours teaching daily and potentially as many as six. You need a well-rounded program that will ensure your child gets a variety of subjects, especially the basic programs that all children must take. These include mathematics, English, sciences, history, geography and health. Can you discipline yourself to teach at home, and more importantly, can you discipline your child to learn with you through home schooling?

The next question is why would you decide that home schooling is a better option? What will your child get out of it that they do not get in a regular school program? Often the reason to put a child into home schooling is because you don’t feel that the school they are attending is meeting their educational needs. This can be because the school is unable to provide a program that is stimulating enough to a very bright student. Therefore by home schooling you can be sure that the extra needs of a bright student are met by an enriched program. You can do that easily through home schooling.

On the other end is the student who struggles in school and requires the one on one attention that cannot be guaranteed in a classroom. Through home schooling you can easily give this child the attention they require to better understand the work they need to get done. Home schooling your child is very rewarding for both of you.


Takeaways
  • Home schooling is a long-term commitment.
  • You need a well-rounded program that will ensure your child gets a variety of subjects
  • why would you decide that home schooling is a better option?
Did You Know?
Often the reason to put a child into home schooling is because you don�t feel that the school they are attending is meeting their educational needs. This can be because the school is unable to provide a program that is stimulating enough to a very bright student
Comments
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from my experience (graduate may 2008) the who go on to become teachers may have great intentions, but they are, with tragically few exceptions, the most unmotivated and lazy bunch in the entire campus. whoever is too incompetent or simply too much of a party animal to put in the effort for a "hard-core" major (think: physics, engineering, computer sci.) can fall back on Teaching/education. american public schools are a joke. south korea's primary schools are better. they spend less per student, but here's the deal -- a teacher is paid on par with what an engineer is paid, and those who go into the teaching field are often near the top of the class and are an unofficial "elite". Here, they are little more than well-intentioned dolts. I speak from four years of undergraduate experience at the U of Illinois, and way too many more years being disciplined for not paying attention on how to take notes because Marcus Aurelius's Mediations captured my attention more than the snore-fest nea

Posted on 07/30/2008 at 12:07:13 AM

 
If a parent does not have a teaching credential, they are not qualified to teach a child. Teachers go to college, while any 15 year olds can produce a child, regardless of education. Homeschooling produces sheltered and socially awkward children as well as overbearing parents.

Posted on 11/20/2007 at 5:11:00 PM

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