The Top 15 Benefits of Homeschooling
You get to...
Control what your children learn and when they learn it.
Show your children that learning is not boring, but exciting.
Build intimate and meaningful relationships with your children.
Tailor your teaching to fit your children's dominant learning styles.
Give your children in-depth, personal attention in any subject with which they struggle or excel.
Create a weekly schedule that fits your needs and allows you to do things without the constraint of a traditional classroom schedule.
Transfer your values and beliefs to your children and address their questions when they have them.
Protect your children from the negative influences they may encounter outside the home.
Teach more effectively by interacting with your children 1-on-1.
Nurture your children's natural (musical, artistic, mathematic) talents so they thrive and grow.
Address "big issues" with your children when you feel they're ready.
Share with your children the common, everyday joys of life.
Help your children mature through the difficult times in their lives.
Share the joy of teaching your children with your spouse.
Take vacations during the school year and make them educational.
The Top 10 Potential Disadvantages of Homeschooling
You may have to...
Spend 24 hours a day with your children for several days at a time.
Justify homeschooling to family and friends who oppose your decision to learn at home.
Be very patient with your children when it seems they aren't learning anything at all.
Deal with the frustrations of sometimes being "behind."
Spend more money on your children's education than you're accustomed to.
Get out of your comfort zone to learn how to homeschool effectively.
Encourage your children even when you don't feel like it.
Seek advice from other homeschooling parents when you encounter problems you're not equipped to handle.
Research a few curriculum programs before you find one that works for you and your family.
Put forth more effort to find children with whom your children can build quality relationships.
Though by no means exhaustive, I trust this list of the benefits of homeschooling, and also the disadvantages of homeschooling, gives you valuable homeschooling information you can use to reach a decision.
Making the decision to homeschool is often a difficult process, but that process is worth it. You definitely wouldn't want to homeschool if it's not right for you; and you definitely wouldn't want to miss out on homeschooling if it is right for you.
So do your homeschool pros and cons research carefully and take the time you need to make an informed decision.
THESE DAYS ITS SOMETIME NOT SAFE TO SEND YOU KIDS TO SCHOOL. I THINK ALL SCHOOLS SHOULD HAVE UNIFORMS AND CONTROL THEM BETTER. WHY SEND A KID HOME FOR GETTING IN TROUBLE SO HE/SHE CAN VEG. OUT ON THE COACH AND WATCH SOME MTV EAT FROZEN PIZZA.
NO I DONT THINK SO. I THINK SCHOOLS NEED A CLOSER LOOK AT THINGS AND MAKE SOME BIG CHANGES.
I AM ALL FOR PRIVATE SCHOOLS THAT MAY BE ANOTHER OPTION FOR YOU...MAKE SURE IF YOU DO HOMESCHOOL YOUR CHILD GETS OUT WITH KIDS HIS OWN AGE FOR SPORTS AND OTHER FUN STUFF. SO HE CAN ALSO BE A KID
2006-12-31 06:43:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The causes of home education:
-changing society (includes a lack of uniform values and beliefs)
-an education system seen as faulty or lacking (this can be academic or even in terms of security)
-change in perspective by parents--this can be simply about wanting to be parents instead of having the schools be the primary caregivers or it can be about parents being proactive and preventing problems before they happen
Effects:
-that's going to depend on the child and the family and while there are trends, there's no guaranteeing that any effect is actually from homeschooling itself--except in perhaps obvious cases where homeschooling parents completely forbid interaction with others outside the family (this is not the norm where I live, that's for sure)
-certain believed 'effects': better grades, better ability to be self-motivated, self-directed, love of learning, higher-level social skills when provided the means (I still remember one Time article where the guy was COMPLAINING about the homeschoolers he'd observed because they were "too" adult-like: they were willing to talk with people they'd never met, talk with people of differing ages...)
-of course, there is also the potential effect of people rejecting you simply because you are homeschooled--a lot of people have negative views and will find ANYTHING they can wrong with somebody who was homeschooled and go tsk tsk. I know of homeschooled kids who were hanging out just fine with some public schooled kids until those kids found out the others were homeschooled. It was as though they'd announced they had some infectious disease.
2006-12-31 08:25:42
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answer #2
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answered by glurpy 7
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Our family belongs to a Christian based home school. We have a very positive support system.
I had always thought the children were sheltered, but that is not necessarily the case. we have winter formals, prom, basketball team, etc. My 15 year old has plenty of outside activities and social activities as well.
One thing I have discovered is my daughter being bi-polar, I can teacher her differently than a "normal" classroom. If you have 30 kids in a class and two don't understand the subject the teacher has to move on understandably therefore leaving the struggling students confused and behind.
If you have more than 1 child you see how very different each of them are, there is no cookie cutter way of teaching. You can focus less on a subject they find easier and focus more than an average teacher could in a classroom setting.
2007-01-01 17:54:40
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answer #3
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answered by Michele H 2
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Causes:
Child may have severe health problems that keep him from going to school.
Child may be academically far ahead or behind of his peers.
Child's schools may be too dangerous.
Child's family may want to instill strong religious values.
Child is bored in school.
Effects:
Not such a nicely laid out list, sorry.
Advantages:
Kid learns on his own time in the best way for him.
Kid is in a more nurturing environment.
Kid has more access to the world.
Kid generally has more fun.
Kid learns to keep himself on task before college.
Kid can learn advanced material.
Kid can devote himself to a potential career. For example, if he loves playing guitar, when he's done with his work -which rarely takes more than a few hours- he can just jam all day.
Disadvantages, all if homeschooling is done improperly:
It can be tough doing something so out there during the high school years; you can't relate to what other kids are talking about.
Kid has to put up with a lot of crap from closed-minded people who have decided he is narrow-minded and sheltered.
It can potentially be isolating if many factors come in to play.
For the vast majority of kids, homeschooling produces competent, confident, capable adults who face the world as well -or better- than their schooled peers.
2006-12-31 08:58:37
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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That depends upon which state you live in...
Most states require that you teach your child at least a minimum study course and have them tested periodically to make sure they are meeting the standards...
The good thing is, you won't have items that you are required to teach that perhaps are against your religion...
Many people home teach their children because most public school systems are not setup to handle any with an IQ of about 120 or above.. so gifted students taught at home can graduate (get their GED) and go to college much sooner (at 14 yrs old or perhaps younger)...
Home teaching does lose some of the social skills building and many of the sports activities... but if you make up for those in other ways (or some communities will allow your child to participate in sports or drama even if home taught) then it will not be much of a problem...
There are whole networks of people on the internet to assist those who want to hometeach their children and there are many materials available at a price... it is not cheap.
2006-12-31 06:44:04
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answer #5
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answered by ♥Tom♥ 6
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Some homeschooling advantages:
1. Allow quality time, providing individualized attention and instruction. Homeschooling parents can better understand their children; observe how kids progress, what areas they find difficult and help them out.
2. Children learn in their own pace. At homeschool, children can advance at any time, not waiting on others or if the kid is a slow learner or having difficulties in a certain subject area, she/he can remain to focus on that area without pressure that others are already moving on.
3. Parents pattern their teaching style and curriculum in accordance with the child’s learning style, allowing him/her to successfully understand the subject matter, thus better results are achieved.
4. No peer pressure. At a homeschool, age classification is not a factor, therefore children not only associate with children their same age level, but with children of different ages and adults as well, so they can decide on their own without the influence of peers.
5. “Hands on learning”. Activities which are outside the context of books are very much essential to the child’s learning process. Trips to the park, the museum, the zoo, going fishing with mom and dad can be a great time to spend an afternoon educating your child.
homeschooling disadvantages:
For the homeschool parent, much time and effort is required for preparation of teaching materials, lessons and managing the child’s opportunities in order to cultivate friendships and expand on the child’s interests.
2. Parents who homeschool do not have enough time to spend for themselves when kids are constantly at home. This frequent time of being together can be at times suffocating and, therefore, can not work in certain families.
3. Homeschooled children do not have a lot of opportunities to bond and develop friendships with peers. For many families, this really is not a problem and is supplemented by taking the kids out to play in the park, attend lessons in ballet, jazz, etc. However it takes a lot of effort on the part of parents to insure that their kids have these opportunities.
Whether to homeschool or not, it all depends on you, as a parent, on how much are you willing to give your child. On top of all the learning materials, the field trips, home schooling entails a lot of love, patience and encouragement
2006-12-31 08:27:55
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answer #6
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answered by ????? 7
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The cause if you face the problem like racism.The effects of educating at home-is a good idea when you have a problem like racism-long distance-working -you can teach them your local Mother language as well as English.Children's adopt faster education in home surrounding Family ATMOSPHERE.the ONLY THING THEY REMAIN ISOLATED FROM OTHER CHILDREN.
2006-12-31 06:39:16
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answer #7
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answered by Google P 2
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Causes
education system spending more time teaching politically motivated morality and beliefs than reading, writing and math.
effect
children who are not cloned into what society wants.
more self assured.
most in the eighty percentile of children there own age.
2006-12-31 18:14:55
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answer #8
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answered by Dave 3
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i think of all of us have a sprint ADHD. mum and dad additionally desire in charge the instructor and use them as their scape goat. It takes a village and a nurturing ecosystem for a toddler to prevail instructors can no longer, and could no longer administration the ecosystem at homestead. whilst it comes right down to each little thing mum and dad are the ultimateeducators of their toddler. Do they care?
2016-11-25 03:03:24
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answer #9
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answered by kirk 4
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Need to read to child every evening, and talk to him more as often as you can. Play with child educational games.
2006-12-31 09:47:08
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answer #10
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answered by Katerina S 1
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