Ready…Set…Homeschool!
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
It's
that time of year again. Parents are worrying and debating, "Should
we let the children return to public school for just one more year?"
Parents are refiguring budgets and wondering, "Could we drive the
old car another year and put the kids in private school?" Parents
are reevaluating long-range financial goals to determine which might
be put on the back burner until later; so as to homeschool children
who are growing up quickly now. Many parents arrive at the decision
to homeschool, but then fail to act upon their decision, fearful
of taking 'The Giant Step,' as we called it in our home. Do not
be fearful. Act. Your children will be all the better for it, and
you will never regret your decision.
Too
often parents have believed the official state slogan, "You need
to be a certified teacher in order to teach." That is nonsense,
and one need only look at the failure of the public school system
to see how 'well' those thousands of certified, degreed, experienced
administrators and teachers have failed America. That system of
'educated professionals' has hurt the American people so severely
that millions of individuals, and our nation, may never recover.
America now ranks alongside countries long noted for having unskilled
workers, low literacy rates, and the destructive effects of illiteracy:
poverty; crime; welfare; gangs; illegitimacy; large prison populations;
industry and manufacturing moving to countries where literate workers
can read orders, blueprints, and manuals for operating high-tech
production machinery. Mexican workers have a 90% literacy rate;
American workers have about a 70% literacy rate. Eventually, Mexico
may have to close its borders against Americans sneaking in to find
work.
Certainly
loving, committed parents can educate their children better than
the State is doing. Children being homeschooled by parents who are
focused; who willingly sit and learn with their children; who mediate
experiences and information; are far better off than the children
in most public schools in America. However, children who are being
kept home from school by parents who lack plans, goals, and a commitment
to truly educate their children, are better off in school where,
hopefully, they will have a few good teachers and come away with
something.
Parents
do not need to "know everything" in order to homeschool. I have
a master's degree and I certainly could not begin to teach my son
everything that he needs, and I want for him, to know. Luckily the
world is full of books, videos, and websites on every topic. Help
is available for those who honestly seek it. Bring your children
home, but do it with forethought, planning, and a commitment to
provide the best education possible. Homeschooling is hard work,
but it is most rewarding.
There
are some things that you do need to know as you begin homeschooling:
Know Your State Homeschooling Laws; Know Yourself; Know Your Child;
Know What you Want Your Child to Learn; Know Your Timeframe; Know
That the First Two Years Will Be the Roughest; Know that Reading
must be the Number One focus; Know That It Is OK To Be Flexible.
Know
the homeschooling laws in your state, and learn as much as possible
about homeschooling. As a first step, visit the Home
School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA) website and learn the
laws for your state. If you must file paperwork with the state,
call the homeschooling office at your state department of education,
and ask to be sent a homeschooling packet. Read it carefully for
some states, like Michigan, require that you check a certain box
stating that you sincerely believe that your children do not need
certified teachers. Otherwise, the state expects that a certified
teacher be involved in your homeschooling. Also, do not forget to
tap into resources within your circle of family and friends. Maybe
a relative is a retired certified teacher and would enjoy teaching
some French lessons; a neighbor might be willing to act as consultant
and advise on materials and lesson plans. Be innovative in finding
help and support. Check for a homeschooling group in your area to
join. Some of those groups are so large that they have orchestras
and offer courses for the more difficult high school classes.
While at HSLDA, read a variety of articles so you can better understand
the rights, and the responsibilities, of homeschooling. When you
decide to homeschool, consider joining that association. The knowledge
that you have immediate access to lawyers and advice is invaluable
and especially reassuring to families as they begin this new venture.
As protection against a day when the state might decide to interfere
with our homeschooling, we keep every paper; every workbook that
David completes. At the end of each school year, I bundle everything
into a brown expanding file, label with grade level and year, and
store. If I am ever questioned about whether I 'really' provide
him with schooling, I can rent a hand truck and wheel the tall stack
out for all to see.
Know
yourself and your spouse. Communicate with your spouse
to assess the commitment, skills and goals of your team. If the
mother is strong in language and reading, but feels shaky with the
math and science, plan educational schedules so that both parents
can participate. No bus will pick your child up at 7:30 AM, and
you don't have to run your homeschool as a typical public school
day. You may choose to, as an aid to developing structure and accomplishment
of goals, but you do not have to 'be in session' from 8:003:30.
We homeschool four long days, then David has Friday off because
he and his father have jobs in the meat department of a small town
general store. Sometimes we have English classes on the weekends
when I am more available to work with writing assignments. Flexibility
is important, even in choosing or discarding materials. If you chose
something that simply is not working, chuck it and find something
that does; change the schedule; cut or increase the workload. YOU
are the teacher, the principal, the superintendent and the school
board. You make the decisions. Be flexible as you meet the needs
of your children, yourselves and your household.
Know
your child, and understand that you know your child better than
any other educator. For example, if you know that your child hates
early mornings, you adapt for that, plan schooling around it, and
maintain an environment conducive to learning. David gets up just
about the time that the bus he used to ride passes the house. With
book in hand, he eats a leisurely breakfast while reading his literature
assignment. After a relaxed beginning to his day, he feels more
ready for pencil and paper assignments. You can be flexible and
still complete the lessons plans that you wish to accomplish.
Know
what you want your child to learn. For those beginning with
elementary children, I would encourage you to look at the What
Your 1st Grader Needs to Know series by E.D.
Hirsch. There is a book for each grade, K6th, and
your library probably has them. Go through the books to see what
you should be sure that your child knows at the end of those grades,
and then begin searching for materials that will achieve those goals.
Explore the books available at your public library before investing
money in your own supply. Look at the books published by Eyewitness,
Usbourne, Kingfisher, and the Readers' Digest series about 'how
science works.' Visit the Rainbow
Resources website and request a catalog, which is an unbelievable
wealth of information, just in itself. Visit the Saxon
Math website and print off the free placement tests. Test your
children to see which skills they have or lack, then choose appropriate
books to meet their needs and challenge their minds.
If
you hope to eventually offer your child a more classical education,
including the study of languages, philosophy and more, check out
The Well-Trained Mind:
A Guide to Classical Education at Home by Jessie
Wise and Susan Wise Bauer, and The
Trivium by Sister Miriam Joseph. The Wise book contains
some very good lists of books to support each subject, organizes
learning so that subjects, people, historical occurrences, and all
are coordinated within their chronological placement, and structures
learning for the three stages of the mind's development. We use
it as our overall guide, but do not follow it 'to the letter' for
the workload that it suggests is often heavy and was proving to
be counterproductive and frustrating to everyone in our family.
We learned to be flexible and accomplish the same learning goals
through other materials and methods of instruction. Both books help
the reader understand the mental development and learning needs
of students. But remember to be flexible.
Know
your timeframe. For instance, if you decide to complete your
academic goals within a 36-week school year, divide your science
materials into 36 parts so that you can see how many pages need
to be studied, learned, completed, each week. Do that with every
subject. If you do not do this, you will find happening to you what
happens in public school the teaching lags and drags, and when
June comes around you realize that you are only halfway through
the materials. I know a school district where many of the math teachers
never teach more than 45% of the material in each book prior to
the end of the school year. The students leave for the summer, never
having learned the other 55% of the math concepts. In the fall the
students are placed into the next math class, which then
only completes the first 45% of that book, and so on through the
years. With such poor planning, and such a lackadaisical attitude
toward passing important information on to children, it is no wonder
that American education is backsliding. This is one point upon which
I am never flexible. We do every lesson in every math
book, and leave the flexibility to other academic areas. (This also
serves as a good way to encourage children who want to dawdle "Summer
vacation begins when the last math lesson is completed.")
Buy
a plan book at an office supply store, and arrange your 1/36, or
1/30, or whatever amount of work, in each subject, into the days
of one week. You may want to work on spelling a few minutes every
day; have thinking skills twice a week; science as four days of
book reading and discussing with parent followed by one day for
a hands-on lab experience. Work with the spaces in order to accomplish
what you wish, in the number of weeks that you want to have school
in session. The decisions are yours to make.
Know
that Reading is the all-important beginning, and if your children
do not learn to read, then attempting to teach them much of anything
else, especially from books, is futile. Readers learn 70%80%
of their vocabulary from reading; vocabulary that they then use
for thinking and processing new knowledge. Nonreaders are at an
extreme disadvantage for their minds are losing, rather than gaining,
from the moment they leave 1st grade without learning
to read. Stop that draining of intellectual capacity. Find curriculum
with which you can teach your child to read. Research the reading
programs developed by Phyllis
Schlafly, Regna Lee Wood,
Romalda Spaldng, and any
others that are firmly based on methodical, systematic phonetic
instruction. Reading is the foundation upon which an education can
develop, then rise to unbelievable heights.
Know
that the first two years will be the roughest. You will learn
that your child, while attending public school, developed far more
bad habits, and moved farther from your family's value system, than
you ever expected, so you will have that to undo. You will find
that you like a certain book and workbook, but when you go to buy
a new workbook for the second child, the company has revised everything
and you can't get the book you need. (The next time you will know
to buy for all of your children with your original purchase so that
you don't get caught like that, again.) Your child will miss some
of the things about school friends, recess and you will need
to arrange scheduling to allow for romps in the yard, and gatherings
of friends. You will find that your child knows everything that
the two of you read and discuss, but is fearful of paper tests and
does poorly on them, so you learn to give oral tests and score those.
You will get tired and crabby about having to let your housekeeping
go, then realize that children grow quickly and housework is never
ever really finished, anyway. Hang in there. By the third year,
you will feel like a pro, and everything will seem to fall into
place with little effort on your part.
No,
you don't need to be a certified teacher in order to homeschool.
However, you do need to value learning and to model for your children
an eagerness to read and discover new and interesting things about
the world. If you are intellectually curious, you will find hundreds
of sources for ideas for your homeschool, and that will serve as
a model for your children. When you have a question about homeschooling,
you will learn to turn to books; when your children have questions
about life, they will learn to turn to books. Give them the gifts
of literacy and intellectual curiosity and they will become scholars.
Ready?
Set? Go Homeschool!
August
27, 2003
Linda Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] lives in Michigan.
She is a free-lance writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic,"
where real reading, and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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