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To: GonzoII
I pulled this off the Internet a while ago when arguing with someone about being home schooled.

1. Please stop asking us if it’s legal. If it is — and it is — it’s insulting to imply that we’re criminals. And if we were criminals, would we admit it?

2. Learn what the words "socialize" and "socialization" mean, and use the one you really mean instead of mixing them up the way you do now. Socializing means hanging out with other people for fun. Socialization means having acquired the skills necessary to do so successfully and pleasantly. If you’re talking to me and my kids, that means that we do in fact go outside now and then to visit the other human beings on the planet, and you can safely assume that we’ve got a decent grasp of both concepts.

3. Quit interrupting my kid at her dance lesson, scout meeting, choir practice, baseball game, art class, field trip, park day, music class, 4H club, or soccer lesson to ask her if as a homeschooler she ever gets to socialize.

4. Don’t assume that every homeschooler you meet is homeschooling for the same reasons and in the same way as that one homeschooler you know.

5. If that homeschooler you know is actually someone you saw on TV, either on the news or on a "reality" show, the above goes double.

6. Please stop telling us horror stories about the homeschoolers you know, know of, or think you might know who ruined their lives by homeschooling. You’re probably the same little bluebird of happiness whose hobby is running up to pregnant women and inducing premature labor by telling them every ghastly birth story you’ve ever heard. We all hate you, so please go away.

7. We don’t look horrified and start quizzing your kids when we hear they’re in public school. Please stop drilling our children like potential oil fields to see if we’re doing what you consider an adequate job of homeschooling.

8. Stop assuming all homeschoolers are religious.

9. Stop assuming that if we’re religious, we must be homeschooling for religious reasons.

10. We didn’t go through all the reading, learning, thinking, weighing of options, experimenting, and worrying that goes into homeschooling just to annoy you. Really. This was a deeply personal decision, tailored to the specifics of our family. Stop taking the bare fact of our being homeschoolers as either an affront or a judgment about your own educational decisions.

11. Please stop questioning my competency and demanding to see my credentials. I didn’t have to complete a course in catering to successfully cook dinner for my family; I don’t need a degree in teaching to educate my children. If spending at least twelve years in the kind of chew-it-up-and-spit-it-out educational facility we call public school left me with so little information in my memory banks that I can’t teach the basics of an elementary education to my nearest and dearest, maybe there’s a reason I’m so reluctant to send my child to school.

12. If my kid’s only six and you ask me with a straight face how I can possibly teach him what he’d learn in school, please understand that you’re calling me an idiot. Don’t act shocked if I decide to respond in kind.

13. Stop assuming that because the word "home" is right there in "homeschool," we never leave the house. We’re the ones who go to the amusement parks, museums, and zoos in the middle of the week and in the off-season and laugh at you because you have to go on weekends and holidays when it’s crowded and icky.

14. Stop assuming that because the word "school" is right there in homeschool, we must sit around at a desk for six or eight hours every day, just like your kid does. Even if we’re into the "school" side of education — and many of us prefer a more organic approach — we can burn through a lot of material a lot more efficiently, because we don’t have to gear our lessons to the lowest common denominator.

15. Stop asking, "But what about the Prom?" Even if the idea that my kid might not be able to indulge in a night of over-hyped, over-priced revelry was enough to break my heart, plenty of kids who do go to school don’t get to go to the Prom. For all you know, I’m one of them. I might still be bitter about it. So go be shallow somewhere else.

16. Don’t ask my kid if she wouldn’t rather go to school unless you don’t mind if I ask your kid if he wouldn’t rather stay home and get some sleep now and then.

17. Stop saying, "Oh, I could never homeschool!" Even if you think it’s some kind of compliment, it sounds more like you’re horrified. One of these days, I won’t bother disagreeing with you any more.

18. If you can remember anything from chemistry or calculus class, you’re allowed to ask how we’ll teach these subjects to our kids. If you can’t, thank you for the reassurance that we couldn’t possibly do a worse job than your teachers did, and might even do a better one.

19. Stop asking about how hard it must be to be my child’s teacher as well as her parent. I don’t see much difference between bossing my kid around academically and bossing him around the way I do about everything else.

20. Stop saying that my kid is shy, outgoing, aggressive, anxious, quiet, boisterous, argumentative, pouty, fidgety, chatty, whiny, or loud because he’s homeschooled. It’s not fair that all the kids who go to school can be as annoying as they want to without being branded as representative of anything but childhood.

21. Quit assuming that my kid must be some kind of prodigy because she’s homeschooled.

22. Quit assuming that I must be some kind of prodigy because I homeschool my kids.

23. Quit assuming that I must be some kind of saint because I homeschool my kids.

24. Stop talking about all the great childhood memories my kids won’t get because they don’t go to school, unless you want me to start asking about all the not-so-great childhood memories you have because you went to school.

25. Here’s a thought: If you can’t say something nice about homeschooling, shut up!

7 posted on 01/06/2009 11:56:49 AM PST by SkyDancer ("Talent Without Ambition Is Sad, Ambition Without Talent Is Worse")
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To: SkyDancer

Everybody is homeschooled; government schools’ job is to overcome it.

The purpose of a formal classroom is to homogenize opinion and enforce cooperation.

It all comes down to reading and encouraging curiosity.


10 posted on 01/06/2009 12:09:43 PM PST by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, then writes again.)
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To: SkyDancer

Amen, sister!! I have plenty of schoolteachers in the family who routinely quiz my children!! It’s so insulting and little do they realize how ridiculous they are making themselves. Yours is a particularly well-written list of responses. I wish I could have them on file!


11 posted on 01/06/2009 12:12:00 PM PST by browniexyz
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To: SkyDancer
Nice list. I have seem a few of those in the last couple decades but that is the most complete so far.

15. Stop asking, "But what about the Prom?" Even if the idea that my kid might not be able to indulge in a night of over-hyped, over-priced revelry was enough to break my heart, plenty of kids who do go to school don’t get to go to the Prom. For all you know, I’m one of them. I might still be bitter about it. So go be shallow somewhere else.

Heh! I met my wife here on FR in a thread about a homeschool prom.
18 posted on 01/06/2009 12:30:17 PM PST by TalonDJ
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To: SkyDancer

That’s great!!!!!!!

I have asked very similar questions to folks who criticize homeschoolers and homeschooling, and my daughter attends public school.


23 posted on 01/06/2009 12:41:53 PM PST by Gabz (Happy New Year)
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To: SkyDancer

sorry but the good homeschooling parents are saintly at least.

The do deserve credit for being able to ensure their children recieve a superior education. (non homeschooler here)

I remember the “establishment teacher complex” used to ridicule homeschoolers. Now they seek to compartmentalize the homeschoolers away from the inferior public school product. (see oprah winfre’s speech contest where the homeschoolers are shoved into a category to prevent them from taking all the prizes)


46 posted on 01/06/2009 2:16:24 PM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: SkyDancer

Good post. Now reverse it to represent publicly schooled kids, as not all public schools are bad and people on both sides of the issue are using broad brushes ti denigrate the other side,


51 posted on 01/06/2009 2:44:11 PM PST by Netizen
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To: SkyDancer

Just GREAT! Laughing and laughing!


124 posted on 01/10/2009 2:16:44 PM PST by wintertime (Good ideas win! Why? Because people are NOT stupid)
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To: SkyDancer
7. We don’t look horrified and start quizzing your kids when we hear they’re in public school. Please stop drilling our children like potential oil fields to see if we’re doing what you consider an adequate job of homeschooling.

That was our know-it-all pediatrician. I wanted to switch doctors the first time I heard about his interrogation of our kids.

But now for the rest of the story... It's been ten years since we began with him, and lately he's been telling my wife that he thinks homeschooling is a good idea, from what he's seen of homeschooled kids.

My wife bites her tongue.

146 posted on 01/12/2009 11:32:23 AM PST by Aquinasfan (When you find "Sola Scriptura" in the Bible, let me know)
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