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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "Has anyone just give up and homeschooled?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I am a former home school SN parent and a former public school teacher. I think PP's point about de-toxing is that so much learning can (and should) take place outside of a classroom. We tend to get so focused on the academics that we forget there is a real world out there. I agree that some detox is necessary when starting homeschooling. Kids and parents new to homeschooling need to lose their school-based anxieties. But a year while just keeping up with one subject also seems excessive to me. I would say that if reading (for example) were causing a lot of anxiety, I would totally back off the 'learning to read' component of reading and just read to my DC and discuss books (and you'll be working on comprehension and vocab while you are doing this). Once the anxiety surrounding learning-to-read is reduced, you are a lot more likely to have success teaching it (or recognizing when you are out of your league and hire a tutor). If math is the culprit, go back as far as you need to go and find where math is easy and fun. It may be skip counting or counting backwards. It may mean rolling a lot of dice and figuring out all the ways to add up to 7 (or 5 or 9, etc). This is ok. This is the beauty of home schooling ... you can move at a pace appropriate for your child and avoid cycles of failure. OP, I would strongly urge you to make contact with local homeschool communities and talk with people in your geographic area who are homeschooling. Only you know yourself and your DC well enough to be able to say whether the circumstances are right for both of you to make this jump. Many people are able to make this leap and it is an option well worth considering. There are lots of curricula on the market, and as you mentioned, there are on-line options. Some people have weird prejudices about socialization and home schooling. I can assure you that school socialization is quite often a very negative experience for our kids and their social skills can be well nurtured outside classroom settings.[/quote] Lots of wisdom here![/quote]
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