Anonymous wrote:We have two kids, currently 5yo in Kindergarten and almost 2.75yo in daycare. I was recently laid off and DH works for a European company and is able to work remotely anywhere in the US or EU. We have been talking about renting our house and homeschooling/traveling/worldschooling until our kids are entering K and 2nd. Our kids are awesome travelers and have been to 4-6 countries each already. My main concern is would this be damaging to my older daughter to miss 1st grade in school? If it matters, she is already reading and does all addition and subtraction problems using numbers 0-20. We'd keep up on learning and hopefully provide a ton of experience the classroom couldn't. I would be mindful of socialization opportunities as best I could.
Doable or crazy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid learned a lot of math and writing in first grade. It is a foundational year and I worry that your daughter would miss out. There are some great homeschool curriculums (Singapore Math is supposed to be really good for math) but what she learns from you might not match up with her public school curriculum. (If she is in private you can buy the curriculum and keep up with the work.)
LOL no
Smart kids will be fine missing everything up to 3rd grade
But what if OP's kids aren't academically advanced and have undiagnosed learning disorders and need the guidance of a teacher?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid learned a lot of math and writing in first grade. It is a foundational year and I worry that your daughter would miss out. There are some great homeschool curriculums (Singapore Math is supposed to be really good for math) but what she learns from you might not match up with her public school curriculum. (If she is in private you can buy the curriculum and keep up with the work.)
LOL no
Smart kids will be fine missing everything up to 3rd grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid learned a lot of math and writing in first grade. It is a foundational year and I worry that your daughter would miss out. There are some great homeschool curriculums (Singapore Math is supposed to be really good for math) but what she learns from you might not match up with her public school curriculum. (If she is in private you can buy the curriculum and keep up with the work.)
LOL no
Smart kids will be fine missing everything up to 3rd grade
Even if this were true, why are you so confident OP's DD qualifies as a "smart kid"?
I think this is a risk. I would not be blase about it.
Anonymous wrote:It will be fine. Contact your local school district to see what kind of documentation you need. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:It’s fine. I homeschooled for all of 3rd grade because of Covid and my kid did just find going back for 4th.
As long her as her English and math standards are on a 2nd grade level when she returns she’ll be good. If she learns different science, social studies etc that won’t be detrimental.
Anonymous wrote:OP it is fine but you must make sure school still comes first.
You need to make sure you are capable of teaching your child properly
Find a good homeschool curriculum check with you state. Do not do a religious based one for god's sake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid learned a lot of math and writing in first grade. It is a foundational year and I worry that your daughter would miss out. There are some great homeschool curriculums (Singapore Math is supposed to be really good for math) but what she learns from you might not match up with her public school curriculum. (If she is in private you can buy the curriculum and keep up with the work.)
LOL no
Smart kids will be fine missing everything up to 3rd grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you would have to actually home school her...present some kind of curriculum to the school system. You can not just keep her out at 6. I am sure there is something you can buy or subscribe to. Otherwise...go for it!
If they were staying home I would agree with you, but as they plan to be traveling it won't be clear which school district would even care.
Few countries are as tolerant of homeschooling as the US. OP may get in serious legal trouble by keeping her kids out of school in another country.
As tourists?