ticks
Hunting Crazy
Just wondering.
i agree. plus i like it a lot better than public school, it is more fun and when i go to homeschool groups the kids are really nice. :coolsunBeekissed said:I think its the ultimate in self-sufficiency but, not so much in monetary value, as in cutting out all the unnecessary things and habits learned in public school and replacing them with individualized, effective schooling that doesn't require so much of a child's time.
When I homeschooled, the children had so much more time for real life lessons. We interspersed our day with discussions about what they were learning, how one would use it in practical applications and a lot about problem solving. The main lesson about self-sufficiency that is taught in homeschooling is how to educate oneself! How to analyze a situation, prioritize and allocate time, and come up with practical solutions to everyday problems. This they don't teach in public school and my children absolutely LOVED learning when it was something over which they had more control.
To not depend on someone to tell you how to learn, what to learn, test you to make sure you learned it just the way they wanted, to adhere to some national standard....well, its sad that so many children will stop learning when they get out of that system, because they have been made to learn according to some state formulary. The excitement of learning is often quite deadened by the time they reach the end of this treatment.
I think the self-sufficiency part comes in when they have learned to teach themselves, and have taught themselves to learn.
People are everywhere!ticks said:I don't know, how does homeschoolig allow kids to meet knew people and friends?