Posted on 10/11/2023 4:44:02 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
I wanted to graduate mid-term in 12th grade. Counselor discouraged it. We’d miss out on senior ditch day and the stature of being a senior on campus. Then I became aware of a popular girl who graduated a whole year early.
It’s butts in the seats to the establishment. Money. A big waste of time I can’t have back.
16 year-olds should be allowed to take the GED and upon passing they should be free to get on with their lives without the schools dictating anything.
This ping list is for the other articles of interest to homeschoolers about education and public school. This can occasionally be a fairly high volume list. Articles pinged to the Another Reason to Homeschool List will be given the keyword of ARTH. (If I remember. If I forget, please feel free to add it yourself)
The main Homeschool Ping List handles the homeschool-specific articles. I hold both the Homeschool Ping List and the Another Reason to Homeschool Ping list. Please freepmail me to let me know if you would like to be added to or removed from either list, or both.
She missed the most important things of all. Your kids won’t miss:
* Woke
* Trannies
* Drag queens
* Homos
* Anti-American curriculum
* Marxism
* Rainbow flags
* Teachers in purple-haired, tats, and facial jewelry
* Teachers talking about their weekend romps with their “partners.”
* Police cuffing your kid for misbehaving
I’m sure I missed a bunch.
The teacher’s unions hate private schools and charter schools so the only other option is homeschooling and naturally they have a negative opinion of that too!
Indeed. I think that this former teacher knew exactly what she was doing.
I see a lot of stories on FR that suggest a large percentage of parents in the country are not capable of homeschooling their kids.
I thought this was going to be about special services such as speech pathology or extracurricular activities such as school trips. I don’t know about all states but in some even if a child is home taught they have a right to services offered by the public school system and to partake in extracurricular activities. The logic is that parents do pay taxes to support the school so barring children from these would be discrimination.
“Seems to be advocating for “everyone gets a trophy” in the schools.”
I don’t think that was what she was promoting at all. Children learn at different paces. Some pick up on reading very quickly, but struggle with math. But, their classes are all 40 minutes for each subject. If home-schooled, they could work 35 minutes on reading and then 55 minutes on math. That would work best for that child. Some are just the opposite.
Some children are gifted at music and others at art. However, they never reach their potential in those subjects because they are in classes where some students can’t keep a beat and some can’t even color in between the lines. All students in such a learning environment are miserable and none actually learn anything at all. Learning should be enjoyable.
I certainly agree with her criticism on the time schedule that has children up and at school by 8:00 a.m. (or even earlier). Especially for pre-teens and teens. Around that age, they are not awake until 10:00 a.m. and anything that is presented to them before that time never makes it to their brain. Putting a child on a school bus at 6:00 in the morning is cruel.
So much (the majority) of time in public school is wasted time. For home-schooled children, Reading, Spelling, and English, along with Math and Science, can be taught during a three hour period of time. Another hour or so on other subjects, with alternating days for electives, and a child’s entire school day can be completed in five hours with a break in between subjects.
That’s why I always believed it’s best to have PE or some form of exercise before the first class of the day.
“That’s why I always believed it’s best to have PE or some form of exercise before the first class of the day.”
—
Agreed. Exercise gets the blood pumping and all the muscles and organs working at optimum levels. Including the brain. It also burns some of that excess energy in young boys. At that point, they may be ready to sit down and listen for a bit.
bkmk
No, they want them at the same or less education level as illegal aliens.
Marxism?
We saw this with my children’s non-homeschooled friends. Most of the work was meaningless. The same was true when my kids were in college. That was a bit of a culture shock for them. They were so used to having clearly defined learning objectives and a teacher, me, that showed them the shortest path to meet the objectives. There were no multiple week group projects that taught a lesson that would otherwise take 20 minutes.
Government indoctrination centers are simply full of waste. They waste time, money and minds.
Every child learns differently, and different forms of education are appropriate for some percentage of them. A really efficient school system would be able to test kids and determine how they learn, then put them into the appropriate learning environment.
The one size fits all, being inclusive is what matters most process in place now is making idiots of our greatest resource.
So no midnight bull sessions at Starbuck's like the Korean students out here who are determined to get into HYP (Harvard, Yale or Princeton).
That’s fantastic
LOL about your Tom.
We have homeschooled our kids for 11 years, and it is absolutely worth it. I’m not going to say it’s easy, nor do I necessarily think it’s for everyone, but I am thankful we have.
My wife had a high school friend who, after she was married, had a little boy who she let set his own bedtime. So she ended up staying up with him til he fell asleep on his own. He became a spoiled little brat. Move forward a couple years, her husband was killed in a one car accident, and so she had to raise him on her own. She STILL let him do whatever he wanted. He got into trouble with the law, stole money from her, pretty much bossed her around.
Well, about a year ago HE was killed in a one-car accident. We don’t know what became of her. Sad.
THEY NEED DISCIPLINE. I’m not saying boot camp from day one, but they have to have some structure in their lives.
She was a piece of work, herself.
That’s funny. I remember sitting at church waiting on my homeschooled son at cub scouts having a long discussion with a school teacher on why us homeschooling was so bad. This was about 25 years ago, so we were “strange.” We went through all the usual reasons and she had to agree that indeed he was learning and had friends (after all, he was right there in cub scouts). I finally had to acknowledge that she was right on one point - my son was not learning how to deal with bullies.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.