Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, what's your other option? Would you homeschool? Could you get him into a private school somewhere?
I homeschooled my child last year and it was great. I kept my child socially connected with positive friends and activities. There is a homeschooling page on dcum as well as lots on Facebook like SEA (secular, eclectic, academic). What are your means like? DC is great about homeschooling in one regard - very hands off. However, they don't provide resources- other states do. We used the library a LOT.
PP, no offense, but as someone who has homeschooled nieces and nephews, and other homeschooled kids, it is very difficult to provide any social interactions that really resemble, and teach the lessons, of the day to day, unsupervised socializing that occurs among kids in school. I hate to say it, I know many homeschooled parents are good parents, they try hard, they teach their kids academically fine...but there is a reason why homeschooled kids are a bunch of weirdos. You simply cannot learn how to act in society unless you are in society.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, what's your other option? Would you homeschool? Could you get him into a private school somewhere?
I homeschooled my child last year and it was great.[b] I kept my child socially connected with positive friends and activities. There is a homeschooling page on dcum as well as lots on Facebook like SEA (secular, eclectic, academic). What are your means like? DC is great about homeschooling in one regard - very hands off. However, they don't provide resources- other states do. We used the library a LOT.
PP, no offense, but as someone who has homeschooled nieces and nephews, and other homeschooled kids, it is very difficult to provide any social interactions that really resemble, and teach the lessons, of the day to day, unsupervised socializing that occurs among kids in school. I hate to say it, I know many homeschooled parents are good parents, they try hard, they teach their kids academically fine...but there is a reason why homeschooled kids are a bunch of weirdos. You simply cannot learn how to act in society unless you are in society.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, what's your other option? Would you homeschool? Could you get him into a private school somewhere?
I homeschooled my child last year and it was great. I kept my child socially connected with positive friends and activities. There is a homeschooling page on dcum as well as lots on Facebook like SEA (secular, eclectic, academic). What are your means like? DC is great about homeschooling in one regard - very hands off. However, they don't provide resources- other states do. We used the library a LOT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has the behavior chaos always been there, or is it new?
NP. My kid, who shares a lot about school and really likes Wilson, has not talked about “behavior chaos” at all. Like, not once. The only thing I see on this thread that I’ve heard from him is weed-smoking in the bathrooms, which sounds to me like the Gen Z version of cigarette smoking in the bathrooms that was prevalent at my high school in the late 80s. (Not here for a debate about the relative dangers of cigarette smoking vs weed smoking—simply analogizing the rule-flaunting behavior.)
I’m not saying that fights don’t happen or that there aren’t disruptive classroom incidents. But this thread makes it seem like they are pervasive, and that’s simply not my kid’s experience.
Anonymous wrote:There seems to be a lot of crazy behavior by my 9th grader's friends from an upper NW DC elementary school.
My kid is on the periphery of this friend group and also sees it all play out on social media.
Tons of drugs (pot, acid) and alcohol and also a lot of sexual behavior, especially from girls to both 9th grade boys and older boys. Most disturbingly, an alleged rape.
I don't know if this is just normal for early high school (I'm sure much of it is) or is more pronounced this year because the kids are coming of 18 months of home school.
Regardless, I think it 's really sobering. These kids are mostly 14. 14 is really, really young for sex with multiple partners (which is happening) and/or drugs.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, what's your other option? Would you homeschool? Could you get him into a private school somewhere?
I homeschooled my child last year and it was great. I kept my child socially connected with positive friends and activities. There is a homeschooling page on dcum as well as lots on Facebook like SEA (secular, eclectic, academic). What are your means like? DC is great about homeschooling in one regard - very hands off. However, they don't provide resources- other states do. We used the library a LOT.
NP. What is your feeling about homeschooling in HS and then college? I am interested in doing longterm homeschooling but worried it might make the college application process more difficult (no GPA, no recs from teachers, etc.).
Also, beyond activities, do homeschooling resources in DC enable you to find other homeschooling families and do some joint coursework? I know this is possible at the elementary level, but I worry there are not enough homeschooling high schoolers in the area to do something similar at this level. It would be nice to be able to pool resources for science learning, for instance.
Anonymous wrote:Has the behavior chaos always been there, or is it new?
Anonymous wrote:Please, where exactly is the Whole Foods corridor? I know where Wilson is, and Whole Foods, but where is the corridor?
Signed,
Dcum (on undercover patrol)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD and her friends report there are pretty bad fights at Wilson multiple times a day. Fights in hallways, in class. Boy on girl, kids getting jumped etc. I know this is “normal” high school behavior but it’s become quite disruptive for DD.
It isn't normal. This behavior doesn't happen in all high schools. Teenagers don't have to be violent.
DD showed me a video of a few of the fights that are going around Instagram. It’s so sad. Some are in class, some are at the Whole Foods corridor after school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, what's your other option? Would you homeschool? Could you get him into a private school somewhere?
I homeschooled my child last year and it was great. I kept my child socially connected with positive friends and activities. There is a homeschooling page on dcum as well as lots on Facebook like SEA (secular, eclectic, academic). What are your means like? DC is great about homeschooling in one regard - very hands off. However, they don't provide resources- other states do. We used the library a LOT.
NP. What is your feeling about homeschooling in HS and then college? I am interested in doing longterm homeschooling but worried it might make the college application process more difficult (no GPA, no recs from teachers, etc.).
Also, beyond activities, do homeschooling resources in DC enable you to find other homeschooling families and do some joint coursework? I know this is possible at the elementary level, but I worry there are not enough homeschooling high schoolers in the area to do something similar at this level. It would be nice to be able to pool resources for science learning, for instance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, what's your other option? Would you homeschool? Could you get him into a private school somewhere?
I homeschooled my child last year and it was great. I kept my child socially connected with positive friends and activities. There is a homeschooling page on dcum as well as lots on Facebook like SEA (secular, eclectic, academic). What are your means like? DC is great about homeschooling in one regard - very hands off. However, they don't provide resources- other states do. We used the library a LOT.
NP. What is your feeling about homeschooling in HS and then college? I am interested in doing longterm homeschooling but worried it might make the college application process more difficult (no GPA, no recs from teachers, etc.).
Also, beyond activities, do homeschooling resources in DC enable you to find other homeschooling families and do some joint coursework? I know this is possible at the elementary level, but I worry there are not enough homeschooling high schoolers in the area to do something similar at this level. It would be nice to be able to pool resources for science learning, for instance.