Thursday, March 15, 2007

A good introduction to homeschooling by Michael Strong

Michael Strong, CEO of FLOW, has an excellent introduction to homeschooling over at edspresso - How to Give Your Child an Expensive Private Education – For Less Than $3,000 per Year.

I like his paragraph on socialization:

"That said, most of the socialization that goes on at most schools is not positive. School children are often more cruel than adults ever are. In traditional cultures young people were far more closely integrated into the adult community than are our children in schools, and as a consequence such traditional cultures did not have the rampant breeding grounds for immature cruelty that is characteristic of most of our schools, public and private. A homeschooled child who spends several hours each week in peer group activities (group lessons in music, dance, martial arts, art, academics, etc.) is likely to develop healthy, positive peer relationships without experiencing the unnatural cruelty that routinely takes place in schools."

In the next paragraph Michael addresses some of the concerns many parents have who are considering homeschooling:

"The term 'homeschooling' frightens many parents because they have been taught to believe that there is some special expertise required to 'teach' children, and that it is wiser to relinquish control of their children to the 'experts.' While it is true that under some circumstances, especially regarding learning disabilities, in which specific expertise is helpful, in those circumstances a parent may hire an appropriate tutor or coach with expertise in, say, dyslexia. Much of the remaining 'expertise' represents a set of overrated strategies for managing large groups of students who are, in essence, prison inmates and forcing them to 'learn' meaningless terms that they will forget as soon as the test has been taken. If your child has been raised well in a loving environment, which has included the consistent setting of firm boundaries, then much of the most challenging task of educating your child has already been achieved."

Homeschooling is snowballing. As more parents try it, more parents think to themselves, "Hey if John or Ann can do this, I can do it." It becomes less scary as they recognize that average parents can be great homeschoolers.


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Technorati tags: homeschooling, homeschool, home school, home education, parenting, children, education

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for offering up many current articles and lots of information about homeschooling. Many other homeschooling blogs I've visited just see to have anecdotes about "Mark drew the most amazing...". Which is fine, but isn't as helpful to a couple of soon-to-parents trying to plan for a future that can include homeschooling.

I'm looking forward to the rest of Mr. Strong's article.

Thanks for making a great blog. Please keep it up, heh. :)

ChristineMM said...

Thanks for mentioning Strong's post. I enjoyed it and will be referring local HSers to read it, too.

Henry Cate said...

I am glad you both enjoyed the article.

And Lisa, thanks for your kind words. I am glad others find our posts useful and helpful.

Jen said...

Speaking of finding your posts useful and helpful, I come here every day to read tips, articles and anything else that will help this new adventure. I've just started homeschooling my son (Grade 1) because the school couldn't do it properly and am finding your blog to extremely helpful. Thank you.

Henry Cate said...

Thanks Jennifer. It is nice to hear we are making a difference.

Good luck.

Anonymous said...

Homeschooling via tutors can be expensive, but there are several companies offering unlimited tutoring for under $100 per month and I was wondering if you have any experience with them. I’ve come across a number of online tutoring websites (e.g. tutor.com, homeworkhelp.com, tutoreasy.com, www.schooltrainer.com, etc.). Has anyone prepared a comparison of the various companies (pricing, quality, etc.)?

Janine Cate said...

I've never looked at any of the online tutoring stuff. It would be interesting to hear from someone who has.