When The Husband and I decided to
homeschool Thing1 in kindergarten, we determined to make a year-by-year
decision instead of committing to 13 years of homeschool when he was five years
old. At the same time, I decided to put my reasons into writing each year. When
my thoughts are recorded in black and white, I can see the foolishness and the wisdom
more clearly. I also hope that writing out why I am homeschooling each year will make me accountable to reality. If the day ever comes when it is not working any more, being committed to giving reasons each year should help me to realize that.
Our decision for first grade in 2012-13
is (obviously) to homeschool. Our favorite reasons are character training, tailored
academics, effective use of time, and selfishness on my part. Before kindergarten,
we perceived the lack of social interaction with his age group and teachers who
are not related to him as a drawback (mainly due to his extreme shyness) and an
advantage (due to parental control over social experiences). Looking back over
the year, the advantages have outweighed the drawbacks. His participation in swim
lessons, t-ball, and co-op classes have shown us that Thing1 has made great strides in overcoming his shyness
and fear of people despite (or maybe because of) homeschooling in kindergarten.
First, homeschooling fits The Husband’s
and my purpose for our family. We feel that the most important training is character
training. If we do not impart good moral and ethical values to our children,
the most advanced academic plan will be meaningless. I know it is possible to “train
up a child” who is schooled traditionally, and I have great respect for the
parents who accomplish it. However, when I look at the vast amount of time and
attention that we spend on this task in the early years, I know it would be
difficult – maybe impossible – for me.
Even though I do not expect to see perfection in humans, I pray that our
intense concentration this year on eliminating whining and the recognition of
privileges in relation to responsibilities, to name two, has planted some seeds
for these boys’ futures.
During these first years, we want
to focus on the joy of learning rather than the fear of not measuring up on
benchmark exams. If the kids enjoy learning, I believe they will do well later
on when the tests really matter. I am excited about choosing
our curriculum this year with Thing1 in mind. He is a reader. He advanced from Henryand Mudge to Ralph S. Mouse during his kindergarten year, and he
reads fiction and non-fiction with equal enjoyment. Therefore, we are going with
a literature-intense curriculum. I even bought Life of Fred for math since it
is story-based and applies the math to real life (albeit a tad far-fetched)
situations. He struggled with the monotony of Math-U-See practice sheets, but
we are still going to do those as a supplement to Life of Fred. I know he will
enjoy Story of the World for History because it requires lots of reading. Another
concentration is preparation for writing. The end goal in educating our
children is that they are able to think and communicate their thoughts
effectively. Thing1 might get that in a school setting, but the one-on-one
training in our homeschool definitely will not hurt.
Our third reason for
homeschooling this year is that homeschooling affords us the opportunity to use
our time effectively. I say opportunity because whether or not we actually use the
time wisely varies from day to day, but the opportunity is still there. Yes,
the boys have large chunks of time to play, which is very important for kids. But
as they get older, another important aspect is that they also have large chunks
of time to work. They (and their daddy) would miss the time they get to work on
projects other than school and homework in the classroom school scenario. When
their dad is home, they are by his side working on whatever project he is
working on and thereby learning how to work. They do not work with Dad instead
of doing schoolwork. They are able to work because their schoolwork is concentrated
to a shorter amount of time, which leaves more time afterwards for work…and
play.
Finally, we are homeschooling
this year because I like it. I like the fact that I am forced to work on my own
character while I am helping them with theirs because teaching without example
is worthless. I like the fact that I am building on what I learned and learning
what I did not learn while I was school-aged. Researching in the name of
homeschooling helps me develop an understanding of the way we learn, which helps
me deal with myself and even others outside my family. I love that I get to see
the kids’ daily progress and get to witness their light bulb moments. I love
that I can spend so much time with my boys during the short, short time that
they are with me.
5 comments:
This is very well said. I like reading why others choose to homeschool.
Love that you are being purposeful and not just going with the flow (even though homeschooling is generally against the flow...I suppose it's got a flow of its own =) Thanks for sharing this with us at Trivium Tuesdays!
So, I'm guessing right about now you are thinking to yourself that "Home Is Real Sweet."
Anna, that was a really good post! I enjoyed it.
Adam
Enjoyed reading your post Anna.. way to go!
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