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16 answers

nah son high school is da bomb

2007-01-23 04:53:49 · answer #1 · answered by Miss Casey 4 · 0 0

I spent 9th grade in regular high school. And the next 2 years home schooling.

Home school is definitely better than high school. But it depends on who you are. I got incredibly bored academically. I also could not stand high school students, the immaturity, the lack of intelligence, the whole social system. It all drove me nuts and caused me a lot of problems.

So I home schooled and got everything done early. I had time to work. An 8 hour day became 4-6 hour days and getting more work done. I didn't have to waste time at study hall or deal with idiots at lunch. Running from class to class didn't happen anymore. Everything was just better. Oh yeah, I also go to sleep late everyday and go to bed whenever I wanted. I did not have to wake up at 6 am to get to school anymore!

I did not miss the social aspect, it is a big reason as to why I left. Getting yourself involved in activities outside school is a ton smarter because no one will be there to distract you when you are doing school work. You can also then meet people with similar interests. There also almost always groups in every area full of home schooled students that get together a lot so you could look into that.

As someone else mentioned, home schooled kids are more stable and not subjected to peer pressure. I have never smoked, done drugs, not gotten knocked up, and I don't know any home schoolers who go and shoot up schools either. I was depressed in public school, I was not when I was home schooled. I needed no prozac. :)

And being home schooled has helped me get GOOD jobs. I do not work in retail or in food service. Prospective employers find that home schooled students are often more independent and tend to be able to manage their schedule a lot better than those who are told what to do at a public school all the time.

2007-01-24 09:42:20 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

There's less of a social aspect, but maybe that's a good thing. High school hierarchy tends to get out of control by default. Home school is more peaceful but it also requires more willpower than simply going to school and taking the tests and having the teacher jurisdict your schedule throughout the course. You'll probably be fine if you're honest and never afraid at school. Because then you can stand up to your peers and your teachers and have things work for you. But if you're not good at that, then simply do the homeschooling, although colleges do tend to crackdown more on the homeschooling, it's still possible to get into them with homeschooling. The path of least resistance seems to be high school, if you can simply keep a level head when distractions come from your peers, and simply turn in all of your assignments as best you can.

2007-01-23 05:02:03 · answer #3 · answered by Answerer 7 · 0 0

It's going to depend on a lot of factors: the school, the students at the school, the personality of the individual student and potential career/education goals. There is NO ONE SCHOOL that is "better" for everybody than another.

If you want to focus on academics and don't mind not being surrounded by people all the time (or don't WANT to be around people all the time), homeschool.

If you want to be surrounded by people all the time or participate in certain social things that are more easily available in school, go to high school.

2007-01-23 05:42:52 · answer #4 · answered by glurpy 7 · 1 0

It depends on who is teaching you. If you have a teacher that doesn't understand math, for example, you will do bad in math when you get to college. On the other hand if the person teaching you is a real genius then you can get a great education with the right curriculum. You need to take into consideration if it would bother you to not be around all the people too. It is all a matter of opinion.

2007-01-24 02:31:30 · answer #5 · answered by Adriane 2 · 0 0

I've been to both. I had a really small public high school and liked it, but when I moved to a big school I opted to be homeschool. I liked homeschooling better than high school, but then again I finished a year early. That's always a plus.

2007-01-23 15:19:34 · answer #6 · answered by ♥Catherine♥ 4 · 0 0

I would think regular school would be better than home high school.

2007-01-23 06:04:53 · answer #7 · answered by neicy j 2 · 0 0

I would not say one is better that the other.They both have advantages. It depends on a lot of things though, the student, the school, the needs of the student and which the student prefers regular school or home school.

2007-01-23 11:13:42 · answer #8 · answered by gigischildcare 6 · 0 0

As a homeschooling mom who has had 3 kids graduate at 16, I can definitely attest to the superior opportunities available to homeschoolers.

I also teach in schools on a regular basis, and I see the general situation in most is one of overworked teachers doing a lot of traffic control rather than actual teaching.

They have 45 minutes for each class (or sometimes 1 hour 30 minutes if on the 2-day schedule), out of which they must do attendance, receive or give passes, collect assignments, return marked papers, give announcements (often not course related) and then, hopefully, teach some aspect of their subject matter. At random moments, their classes are interrupted by announcements from a PA system, for everything from schedule changes to requests for individuals to go to a certain place.

Meanwhile, the class is made up of exhausted kids, nodding off and sleep deprived. They are subjected to a vast range of stupid interactions, from the school bus to the locker to the gym class to the cafeteria, none of which has any positive bearing on academic learning. They are picked at, leered at or praised for a bunch of things that have nothing to do with scholarship. They seek safety in numbers, trying to fit in with a group as a sort of protective camouflage.

You don't hear about homeschooled kids taking refuge in drugs or alcohol, or smoking in the bathrooms or gunning down their fellow students. You don't hear about a huge dropout rate for parent/educators, but you do hear about high turnover for teachers in institutional schools.

So, homeschooling lets kids make their own schedules, sleep as much as they want, focus on whatever subject they feel like, eat or go to the bathroom without asking someone's permission, socialize with whomever they like, and learn more efficiently. Homeschoolers outperform "normal" schoolers by about 30 percentage points.

Also, they develop better choice-making skills, and are reputed to be better in college and career settings, having independent approaches, better self-discipline, and less need for coddling by college staff.

I think students can do well in institutional settings, given a certain number of critical ingredients. However, the best argument for homeschooling is the lamentations and moans and groans of nearly everyone involved in collective school situations. If it worked well, why would everyone be so unhappy with it? Parents, students and faculty all feel thwarted and controlled by the system, and the dysfunction seems to be worsening, not improving.

In contrast, the overwhelming majority of homeschoolers feel in control of their learning, and feel optimistic about their abilities.

Seriously speaking, does anyone not think homeschooling works better?

2007-01-24 08:09:56 · answer #9 · answered by Kate 1 · 0 0

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2016-10-17 02:55:55 · answer #10 · answered by doreen 4 · 0 0

Education is more than books. Public High School is a sampling of your entire community in one place. Everyone needs this exposure to gain a proper perspective on life and work. Home schooling can still occur as additional training, but should not supplant a conventional education.

2007-01-23 04:59:07 · answer #11 · answered by spirus40 4 · 0 1

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