Great
Ideas of Homeschooling
by
Linda
Schrock Taylor
by Linda Schrock Taylor
My
son and I are currently studying a 50-lecture course from The
Teaching Company entitled The
Great Ideas of Philosophy, with the very excellent
Professor Daniel N. Robinson, of Oxford University and Georgetown
University. Soon we will begin the course, Argumentation:
The Study of Effective Reasoning. Last year, the guys did
a lengthy, 84 lecture course, with all of the assigned readings,
in Classics
of American Literature. The year before that they
studied The
Iliad, The
Odyssey, and Classical
Mythology using video courses taught by their favorite teacher,
Dr. Elizabeth Vandiver of Whitman College. When David took the ACT
as a 10th grader, he scored at the 99th percentile
in the literary area.
To
those who wish to homeschool but are not making the decision; nor
devising a plan; nor taking action to do so all because you
feel that you are not up to the job; that you lack knowledge and
instruction in certain subjects; please carefully note my wording:
"My son and I are currently studying…The Great Ideas of Philosophy."
I
did not say, "I am teaching my son the great ideas
of philosophy."
In
our homeschool we study with our son so that his education
will not be restricted or delayed due to our inadequacies, or the
inadequacies of our public school educations. If we do not know
something, we say, "I don't know. Let's read further; let's seek
other books on the topic."
We
have spent the years at the table with David, heads
together as we share one book. We have made time for the many interruptions
that occur when one or the other of us wishes to comment upon, or
question statements made by authors and textbook writers. We have
paused so that David could teach us a concept that he was able to
understand before we could get it. In all ways, this confidence
in the ability of at least one of the three of us to
discover a truth, see a concept, learn a procedure, then
proceed to teach it to the other two persons, has made our homeschooling
experience more valuable with each passing year. David has become
a stronger thinker and scholar for having had the opportunities
to teach others, even if those others have been Mom and Dad.
I love to hear him…"Well, you see Mom, it's like this... What the
guy is trying to say is… If you try the problem this way it will
help you understand the process…"
Are
we fully knowledgeable in all of the subjects that we have wanted
this child to study? Of course not! Are we able to serve as team
leaders in the seeking of knowledge? Of course! In the early grades,
we were several steps ahead of our pupil. In middle school we managed
to stay a couple steps ahead in most classes. In high school, as
his knowledge and skills developed to such extraordinary levels,
he "left us in his dust."
We
have applauded this outcome and have never felt that we should stop
homeschooling simply because we were not able to teach certain lessons
or subjects. Some classes helped us recall information that we had
once learned in school. In other classes we learned information
that we had known about, but did not actually know. In classes
like calculus and physics, we had to stay totally out of the loop.
We bought the D.I.V.E.
CDs to go with his Saxon Math books, led our son to the computer,
and said, "Meet your new math instructor, Dr. David Shormann." We
bought wonderful video sets with great instructors and joined him
on the couch for classes. We joined him in gaining new knowledge
and so David is not the only recipient of the benefits of the years
spent at our homeschooling table. We are better-educated parents
for having brought him home to learn from us.
Ignore
the individuals who claim that parents need to be certified in order
to teach their children at home. What arrogance on the part of any
schoolteachers and administrators who speak such nonsense. Are any
of those people certified to teach every subject, K-12?
How many of them are even certified and qualified to teach the classes
to which they are assigned? That last question is the only part
of the No Child Left Behind legislation that I find interesting,
even comical. Schools are having to report how many teachers are,
and have been, teaching classes in subjects they have never studied;
never attended training; hold no certification. Sur-prise, Sur-prise!
Then
there are teachers like myself: I completed an undergraduate minor
in English; an M.A. in English; and have been teaching English in
one form or the other, for most of every day, for twenty-five years
working in special education classes. Yet, I have been denied, by
a state teacher certification agency, certification to teach English,
simply because I do not have an undergraduate major in English.
I have never not been certified to teach English until
I came here. Three other states have deemed me certifiable, but
not this one. The ludicrousness of such decisions is astounding.
The fact that such thinking is paid for by our tax monies
is offensive to the nth degree.
If
you have the desire to homeschool, do it! Parents, you have
the responsibility for educating your children, not the State. If
you even suspect that the public education system is short-changing
your child (which in all probability, it is), act to change
that! Every day of your child's life is of vital importance,
and you will never be able to call back lost hours; lost days; lost
years. Act now to provide an excellent education for your children.
The odds are extremely high that loving, nurturing parents will
be wise enough to homeschool: intelligent enough to discover which
subjects they can teach; astute enough to realize for which subjects
they may need help; and motivated enough to find such help.
If
you don't know, ASK! Ask neighbors who homeschool. Seek a homeschooling
support group in your community. Contact the Home
School Legal Defense Association. Do a search on the Internet
and you will find that there is help for homeschooling parents everywhere.
Seek and you will find, thus serving as a fine role model for your
children. Seek information is step one. Make a decision
is step two. Take action is step three. Ready…Set…Homeschool!
December
3, 2004
Linda
Schrock Taylor [send
her mail] is a free-lance
writer and the owner of "The Learning Clinic," where real reading,
and real math, are taught effectively and efficiently.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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