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#11
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Homeschooling for free?
"llama mama" wrote in message . .. | "Ali's Daddie" wrote in | : | | | "Candio" wrote in message | s.com... | | On 18 Jul 2003, Joni Rathbun wrote in | | : | | | | | | On 19 Jul 2003, COcon28932 wrote: | | | | If anyone knows of a school online or correspondence courses that | | are free, please write. There is very little money, and our town | | does not really have anything for this! We do have a high school | | online here, but my daughter is too young for that. | | | | Do you have a library? Check there for other homeschoolers. | | Otherwise, if homeschooling simply means correspondence courses to | | you, I urge you to consider sending your child to the nearest | | public school. | | | | Homeschooling is for fundie morons who don't want their children to | develop | | social skills or independent thought. Public schools are there. Use | | them. | | That is the old home school stigma. Newer homeschooling is more along | the lines of a parent owned private school... | | Plus the education is better ;-) | | are you planning to homeschool Allegra? we were planning to homeschool | even before Boo was born. granted he's going to start Montessori | preschool this year, but that's just so i can avoid the state placing him | in a really horrible (dark, only used/broken toys) preschool for | developmentally delayed kids (he's in speech therapy). i think he'll do | better with 3 hours of being with 15 3-5 year olds, than with 8 hours of | being with 30 other developmentally delayed kids, most of whom don't have | just speech delays & therefore consume more teacher time. | i expect he'll be back to home schooling by first grade, unless *he* | chooses to stay at the Montessori school. | It's something I have been thinking about since Kris (our niece) was born, and now it is a requirement for us. New Mexico schools ranked next to last in education. I have gone as far as starting a parenting group and will be starting from that, a homeschool network. I have about 40 families interested here in Albuquerque. So I think it will be a success. We are going the Montessori route with my niece until the HS network is ready. But I will have my own daycare up and running in the very near future (in January most likely) And from that an international summer camp in about 5-7 years.. I over think some things, and as you see my plans have escalated into this monster! lol But I am ready ;-) -- LES! Daddie to Alegra Lee. May 25th 2003! "Daddie's Little Diva" before you reply to me via email, please remove your hat ourHat Take a look at my eBay auctions I just might have something you can't live without :-) http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/dads2003/ |
#12
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Homeschooling for free?
"Marion Baumgarten" wrote in message m... | Ali's Daddie wrote: | | | | That is the old home school stigma. Newer homeschooling is more along the | lines of a parent owned private school... | | Plus the education is better ;-) | | I think this is way too broad a statement- home school education varies | just as private school education. Particularly now that my daughter is | goind into high school, I can state that the education she and my son | have received in the public schools is better than what we could have | provided at home. | | Marion Baumgarten You are right. I should have said for us it is better.... But yes, I do feel that homeschool (networks, not 1 on 1) are better, for the most part, than public schools. -- LES! Daddie to Alegra Lee. May 25th 2003! "Daddie's Little Diva" before you reply to me via email, please remove your hat ourHat Take a look at my eBay auctions I just might have something you can't live without :-) http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/dads2003/ |
#13
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Homeschooling for free?
llama mama wrote in message ...
"Ali's Daddie" wrote in : That is the old home school stigma. Newer homeschooling is more along the lines of a parent owned private school... Plus the education is better ;-) are you planning to homeschool Allegra? we were planning to homeschool even before Boo was born. granted he's going to start Montessori preschool this year, but that's just so i can avoid the state placing him in a really horrible (dark, only used/broken toys) preschool for developmentally delayed kids (he's in speech therapy). i think he'll do better with 3 hours of being with 15 3-5 year olds, than with 8 hours of being with 30 other developmentally delayed kids, most of whom don't have just speech delays & therefore consume more teacher time. i expect he'll be back to home schooling by first grade, unless *he* chooses to stay at the Montessori school. lee You've seen the public special ed classes, and they're that bad? And 8 hours? I've never heard of such a thing, and it's really sad, I think. We sent our daughter to the public special ed preschool last year as a peer model / typical student (no special needs ). The classes are a max. of 12 kids, with 8 special needs and 4 peers. All classes have a minimum of 2 teachers (usually with masters degrees in early childhood ed), most have one or 2 aides as well, and they had a music therapist, physical therapist, and gym teacher for everyone, plus a speech therapist for the kids who needed it. There were also student teachers/interns throughout the year, including one in my daughter's class who was a man -- I think that's nice to see, and uncommon in early childhood education. It was also only three hours a day. There were 4 adults for nine kids most of the year in her class. They had plenty of new and nice toys and more art supplies than they could've possibly used. They also took 5 field trips on which there were always enough parents volunteering to make the ratio 1:1 (kids:adults). We're in Ohio, and I think this is the standard here. It's competitive to get in as a peer model, and plenty of people choose this over private preschools (there were 6 classes at my daughter's school, 3 AM, 3 PM, so 24 peers could get in from our district.). [Let me amend that -- it's highly competitive among some families. Some people are horrified at the thought.] We were thinking of homeschooling our kids, too -- and still may -- but this was a very good experience and opportunity for all of us. I'm sorry your area doesn't do the same thing (or else does it in a not so nice way). I'm not doubting your son will do better at the Montessori you've chosen, I'm just sad that your local schools haven't done better accomodating minor developmental delays. Tina. |
#14
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Homeschooling for free?
Ali's Daddie wrote in message
That is the old home school stigma. Newer homeschooling is more along the lines of a parent owned private school... Plus the education is better ;-) LES! That's a pretty generalized statement. I know my kids wouldn't get a better education if I tried homeschooling. They are much better off with me supplementing and being involved in their schooling than staying home with me all day giving them worksheets to work on. Not all kids benefit from homeschooling. There are some who have good school districts and probably have a better chance going to school than staying home. I know a few people who homeschool. Some are doing a great job and a couple are doing their children a huge disservice by homeschooling. -- Sue mom to three girls |
#15
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Homeschooling for free?
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#16
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Homeschooling for free?
CBI wrote: "Clisby Williams" wrote in message ... One point of homeschooling, even with a canned curriculum, is that the child can move along at his/her own pace. Also, according to my first cousin who homeschooled 3 children, you avoid a lot of time-wasting stuff that goes on in a regular school. The time saving stuff is true enough if you keep the kid at home or in real small groups. I still think that many of the purported benefits are lost if they do it this way. What I specifically had in mind is my neighbor who runs a "homeschool" where they rent a room and 20-30 teens attend a class. To me this doesn't seem much different than other schools and it does not allow them to move at their own pace. -- CBI I'm not familiar with that type of setup as "homeschooling" - it sounds like it's just a private school. My daughter attends a very small private school (about 40 children from preschool through middle school), but it's not homeschooling. Clisby |
#17
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Homeschooling for free?
There are thousands of websites with educational materials you could use
with your daughter. In addition, there are a few online charter schools, depending on where you are, so you may want ot check on this. National standards for most subjects are either available online or for a nominal charge, and can serve as a good guideline. Regardless, homeschooling will cost-either you have to spend the time to put together the materials yourself, or you have to pay for someone else to do it. I don't think anyone is going to give you a complete plan, free. |
#18
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Homeschooling for free?
"Clisby Williams" wrote in message ... One point of homeschooling, even with a canned curriculum, is that the child can move along at his/her own pace. Also, according to my first cousin who homeschooled 3 children, you avoid a lot of time-wasting stuff that goes on in a regular school. The time saving stuff is true enough if you keep the kid at home or in real small groups. I still think that many of the purported benefits are lost if they do it this way. What I specifically had in mind is my neighbor who runs a "homeschool" where they rent a room and 20-30 teens attend a class. To me this doesn't seem much different than other schools and it does not allow them to move at their own pace. -- CBI |
#19
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Homeschooling for free?
"Candio" wrote in message s.com... On 18 Jul 2003, Joni Rathbun wrote in : On 19 Jul 2003, COcon28932 wrote: If anyone knows of a school online or correspondence courses that are free, please write. There is very little money, and our town does not really have anything for this! We do have a high school online here, but my daughter is too young for that. Do you have a library? Check there for other homeschoolers. Otherwise, if homeschooling simply means correspondence courses to you, I urge you to consider sending your child to the nearest public school. Homeschooling is for fundie morons who don't want their children to develop social skills or independent thought. Public schools are there. Use them. There are a lot of kids who are not best served by public schools. The very gifted can be insignificantly challeneged, leading to serious lack of motivation and under acheivement, as was my uhsband when he was in school. S |
#20
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Homeschooling for free?
"Joni Rathbun" wrote in message ... On Fri, 18 Jul 2003, CBI wrote: "Ali's Daddie" wrote in message ... That is the old home school stigma. Newer homeschooling is more along the lines of a parent owned private school... The last couple of parents who have discussed how they were "homeschooling" their kids with me have described something that was not all that different than a smaller version of regular old school. I'm starting to realize that in some cases "homeschool" is just a small, private, unregulated school. In many cases that's exactly what it is. I've seen a lot of drill and practice (in and of itself not a bad thing) and a lot of worksheets and canned curricula. Some people are happy with that and that's okay by me because I believe parents should be allowed to make these decisions. Tho when I homeschooled, I did it precisly to get away from that kind of instructional method.... Even if you have a strict instructional method, you will still have much smaller class size than with a public school. S |
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