Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you home school? Concern over education quality at your local school options or do you worry about their interactions with other children?
Do you worry they’re missing out on mainstream life experiences?
OP here-- already covered the why question.
For the bolded-- not really. They get a lot of them through their co-op-- lots of unstructured time with sizeable groups of kids with different personalities. Are they missing some? Probably, but considering the prevalence of screens in modern education (but no my children are no computer illiterate) as well as bullying in schools, I do not consider this to be a net-negative.
My 3rd grader has picked up so much bad language at school and we’re in a highly regarded public school. I don’t blame parents for keeping their kids away from that.
Anonymous wrote:Do you think you are better than other parents who send their kids to public school? I ask because whenever I am around homeschooling parents the conversation inevitably turns into how bad regular schooling is and they don’t seem to find this offensive.
Anonymous wrote:Where do you live?
Do you travel often with your kids/family?
What do you have to do when you start out to get “approved” by the state to homeschool? Does anyone ever check up on you to make sure you’re giving the kids a good education?
Where do you buy your teaching materials?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your teaching qualifications?
College degree, experience substitute teaching, experience teaching Sunday school, extensive reading on psychology, child development, and learning styles.
So pretty much every parent in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you so against traditionally schooling your children?
Anonymous wrote:Good on you. The proof is in your kids. We homeschooled ours for two years and it was wonderful. The best part is they keep their curiosity and love of learning. Also you can keep the conversation going throughout the day - to the lady that said what do you talk about dinner. (With our kids in school the conversation went: ‘How was school?’ Kid replies: fine.). I find it hilarious that you were asked for your credentials. The so called experts in MCPS STILL have our kids on a totally failed curriculum 2.0 for NINE YEARS. Even if you picked Tier 1 curriculum and followed the teachers manual your kids would be better off than Jerry Weist’s corrupt deal. Good on you! Keep it up!
Anonymous wrote:Do you ever worry they’re too sheltered?
Homeschooling sounds great to me especially because my own experience in public schools wasn’t that good (lots of terrible teachers, too many disruptions from other students, too many transitions, a lot of classroom mgmt issues and not enough time to focus on subjects that interested me, hardly any individual attention, overcrowded classes, too much focus on testing, etc etc) but public school is also how I learned a lot about others who had different life experiences, came from different backgrounds, and how to be strong, resilient, work on my own stuff through the distractions, etc...I wonder how homeschooled kids fare in the “real world” as they get older.
Anonymous wrote:Do you ever get tired of the smarmy, idiotic, condescending questions from other DCUMs?
What's it like having the smartest kids on your block?
Do you ever worry that your kids aren't being bullied at school?
Haha I like you!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are your teaching qualifications?
College degree, experience substitute teaching, experience teaching Sunday school, extensive reading on psychology, child development, and learning styles.