RangerDave wrote:
Lenas wrote:
My cousin just got a schedule approved for 3 days home school, 2 days private school. If you could work something out like that, I think it'd be beneficial.
This sounds like a good approach. My biggest concern with homeschooling is that the kids only get exposed to one teaching style and one perspective - the parents'. I think there's a definite benefit to learning how to navigate different teachers' approaches. The 3/2 split would allow for that while still letting you add all the benefits that homeschooling can bring too.
Why do homeschooled kids only have to be exposed to a single teaching style? Sign them up for community college courses, art classes, take them to learn from local craftsmen, etc. You can get them as many teaching styles as you want.
It seems like lots of people focus on the 'home' portion of homeschooling. I personally spent most of my time outside, working, doing things around town, or at the library. Very little of it was at home.
I guess I should technically say there are two styles of homeschooling: one is what most people think of- you teach your kids at home, they take classes, etc.
I got tied into a pretty big 'unschooling' group- this style is basically that your kids will learn what they need to with very little time needed, and they should spend the rest of the time exploring- reading newspapers, watching the news, getting involved in the community, taking up crafts and hobbies, etc. This is definitely the type of homeschooling I suggest- don't just get curricula and run through them by rote. Teach them via experiential learning.