Homeschooling Overview
What is homeschooling?
Homeschooling is one choice for military family members among various
educational opportunities. Other opportunities are American public schools,
DoDD schools operated by the U.S. government, local national schools overseas,
and private schools such as parochial schools, Montessori, Waldorf and
International schools.
The big
difference between homeschooling and the other options is that the family
chooses the type of educational experience it desires. That choice can range
from a purchased curriculum to an apprenticeship to correspondence courses in
specialized areas. The choice depends upon the family’s interests and
abilities and can be tailored to fit any unique needs, areas of expertise or
special situations such as living overseas.
Homeschooling can be
school-at-home
but it isn’t limited to this particular style. Sometimes
school-at-home is
perfect for a family while other times a different approach works better. The
family can choose a highly-structured purchased curriculum or design their
own. Less structured purchased curriculums are also available as well as
distance-learning schools that allow the family to custom tailor the leaning
situation to fulfill specified credit areas. How a family approaches home
education is decided at the most basic level, by the individuals in a family.
Not
only can schooling be tailored to specific interests, but family tradition or
religion can be fully integrated into the education.
What
about socialization?
There seems to be an idea that
children who are educated outside a school building are doing nothing but
sitting at home, sheltered, secluded and all but sequestered from “society.”
This notion, which has almost mythical stature, is just that, a myth.
Homeschooled children join scout troops, take classes through local youth
services, attend classes at DoDD schools, are active in church groups,
volunteer in the community, work summer hire, and, very often, live in a
housing area. These children are surrounded by people and they interact with
them just as anyone else would.
Homeschooled children also have a valuable opportunity to regularly
interact with people other than their peers thus allowing them to develop
social skills that cut across the artificial boundaries imposed by age-graded
classes.
'Homeschooled' is not synonymous with 'cloistered.'
Who
are these homeschoolers?
Aren’t they mostly religious nuts or back-to-the-earth treehuggers?
The people homeschooling their
children are any kind of people you care to think of. Yes, some people
homeschool for religious reasons. Yes, some people homeschool because they
believe that our future is dependent upon doing as little harm to our planet
as possible. Homeschooling takes place in cities or in the country, in trailer
parks or in ranch-style homes, in military housing or on the economy, and is
practiced by parents of diverse occupations. There are homeschoolers in all
fifty states as well as Switzerland, England, France, Saudi Arabia, Canada and
Australia.
The stereotypical image of a homeschooling family is just that, a stereotype.
Each family homeschools in its own fashion. If they wish, they may take
philosophical direction from an outside source just as anyone in the general
population may. The same is true for those people who choose to follow their
hearts.
Guidance and advice on homeschooling is abundant; support groups dedicated
to a specific philosophy are also easily found. However, as long as freedom of
choice exists, there can be no mandatory, “one-right-way,” technique. Each
family chooses according to its collective conscience.
As far as demographics go, there
are probably similar numbers of “religious nuts” and “environmental
tree-huggers” in the general population as there are among homeschoolers. What
is a “religious nut?” What is a “tree-hugger?” Your point of view probably
determines much of what you see.
Where do you get textbooks?
If you choose to use a purchased curriculum there are many companies that
supply packages combining the curriculum, textbooks that fit the curriculum,
and teacher support services. Some companies may supply the services
separately. Be aware that even though you are the paying customer, curriculums
are usually, within each company, one-size-fits-all; there is no picking and
choosing concerning the books used. There are, also, schools that prescribe
the areas to be covered and allow the family to choose the materials with
which they will fulfill the requirements (from libraries, catalogs, specialty
stores, videos, computer programs, tutoring, apprenticing, etc.). Writing to
schools that advertise in homeschooling magazines can be a first step in the
decision process.
If you choose not to use a purchased curriculum, you can buy materials,
which can be anything from a book on the subject to tools used in that field.
An example of this may be a geologist’s pick, mineral and gem field guides, a
rock tumbler and display cases for polished specimens for someone who is
interested in being a rock hound (the 'subject' would be Geology).
Specialty magazines and catalogs are an excellent starting point. Look
over the information presented, make your choice and write for more
information. Good sources besides specialty magazines are catalogs, the
library, and, of course, websites. Many times 'real' books are superior
to textbooks because they are the product of a single person who does not need
to write books to meet the requirements of the major school textbook markets.
Which
curriculum is best?
In considering homeschooling forget
the stereotypes. Some religiously oriented families use the unschooling style,
some secularly oriented families find that a highly structured program works
best for them. And even if religious families are school-at-homers or the
unschoolers are back-to-the-earth hippie types, so what? There are niches in
society for everyone. The entire population can’t all be only soldiers, or
business people or farmers or artists or truck drivers or opinionated,
compulsive packrats who write lists; we need the diversity. This diversity is
the warp and woof that makes up the tapestry of the world.
Remember that, like most things in life, homeschooling is complex. Think
of the differences between answers if you asked Galileo to explain “science,”
and then asked Newton, and then Einstein, and then Hawking. Think of the
contrast between Beethoven’s opinion of “music” and Mick Jagger’s. Who is
“right” about “art,” Michelangelo, Picasso or Norman Rockwell? The same is
true of homeschooling. Any opinion you get from a homeschooler is that
person’s opinion and there are as many opinions as there are homeschoolers. It
is like the old story of the blind men and the elephant: one man thought the
elephant was like a wall (the elephant’s side), one was convinced it was like
a spear (the tusk), the next one perceived a snake (the trunk), his neighbor
divined a tree ( the knee); one felt a fan (the ear), the last, a rope (the
tail). We all have different experiences and hence, different opinions.
The 'curriculum' that is 'best' is the
one that works for you.
How
can parents teach subjects with which they are unfamiliar?
Why would they have to? Tutors can
be found, books are available, audio and video tapes can be ordered or checked
out of the library and schools may allow homeschooled children to enroll in
single courses. In the past few years there has been an explosion of
information available in learner-friendly form. The range extends from math
texts to foreign language tapes to interactive physics CD-ROM programs to
history videos.
Even though some sources are intellectually light-weight, they provide a
foot-in-the-door for novices and give them a starting point. This allows the
person, child or adult, to gain a basic understanding of an area and then
proceed to more technical instruction. Oftentimes parents learn about an area
of which they were ignorant and so the homeschooling benefits not only the
child but the parent too. This can provide even more common ground for family
interaction and discussion.
What about
grade level?
Consider an infant learning to
speak or walk. Parents are told to allow the child to proceed at its own pace,
not to rush, not to worry about a child being either “behind” or “ahead” of
its peers. The same is true for other areas of development. We are all
individuals and do not grow, physically or intellectually, according to any
written plan. We each grow according to our internal clock, and
sometimes we go faster, other times slower.
For those people who are just plain uncomfortable allowing their children
to continue learning in the fashion the children did before they were of
school age, one source of information planning is the series of books by
Rebecca Rupp titled, Home Learning Year by Year. By using
books such as Ms. Rupp's as guides you can present what is considered by many
people to be “basic knowledge,” while supplementing with outside materials to
cover areas of special interest to either the parent or child. These books are
available in the library, from catalogs, bookstores, and online.
A caveat is that if you plan on
re-enrolling your children in a public school, perhaps sticking to a boxed
curriculum with documentation would ease the transition later on.
What about
testing?
Like grade level, testing is a device used by institutions in order to
keep tabs on large numbers of children. It is useful to them in quantifying,
classifying and labeling since numbers and grades are more easily compared
than subjective descriptions of educational progress.
A parent who is closely involved
with a child can tell if a child is having a problem in a particular area and
can devote time to solving the problem, if indeed it needs solving at that
point. Time and maturity can often be the solution needed for mastery of some
concepts. If, however, testing sets your minds at ease, basic skills tests are
available. As with other areas, check out the ads in the homeschooling
magazines.
I’ve seen homeschooled kids out in the community during school hours. It
looks as if they are truant. Why aren’t they busy with school work?
What makes you think they
aren’t? Perhaps on the day you saw them they were on a “field trip” to the
commissary. Many homeschooling families use real-world situations for
instructional purposes. A trip to the commissary during an uncrowded time
might be hands-on training in handling a budget, nutritional instruction or
making food purchase decisions. The same could be said of a trip to the PX,
substituting clothing budget for food budget. A short hike to the Shopette can
combine needed exercise and a breath of fresh air with an experience in
handling money. In this way a child uses real money instead of plastic coins
and handles real transactions instead of pretend ones.
Homeschooled children playing on the playground during “school hours”
might be having recess or PE and are probably socializing with the other
children and not just their age-graded peers. Then again they might just be
playing because “school” is held at different hours in their home than is
necessary for large groups that need to show up at the same place at the same
time in order for teachers to do their jobs.
Homeschoolers aren’t bound by the usual times and places any more than any
other free-lance person. Writers don’t keep the same hours as a office
workers, musicians aren’t bound to the same schedule as teachers,
photographers have different schedules than commanding officers. Homeschoolers
can be equated to free-lance students; they control their schedules, their
schedules don’t control them.
Can homeschooled students
get into college?
Not only can homeschooled students
get into college, many of them are actively sought out by colleges themselves.
Colleges also advertise in homeschooling magazines
In 1983 California homeschooler Grant Colfax was admitted to Harvard
University. Two of his brothers subsequently followed in his footsteps. His
parents tell the story in their books Homeschooling for Excellence and Hard
Times in Paradise.
Alexandra Swann homeschooled her way through elementary school, high
school and college all the way to a masters degree by the age of sixteen.
Alexandra tells her own story in her book, No Regrets.
Since these homeschoolers made a noticeable splash in the higher education
pool, other home educated students have been accepted around the country. I
guess they don’t make the paper anymore because, with their numbers and
success, they’re no longer “news;” homeschoolers going to college is no longer
remarkable.
Burnout
One of the most passionately held
dreams of many new homeschoolers is that of giving their child or children the
best and most comprehensive education possible. The parents see the child
studying art and music, going to museums, reading all the classics, mastering
math, and having important discussions. The child will grow up to be Albert
Einstein, Marie Curie, Albert Schweitzer, Pablo Picasso and Beverly Sills all
rolled into one; a true Renaissance Child.
As parents we need to keep in mind that Einstein, Curie, Schweitzer, Picasso and
Sills were all separate people - nobody was Albert-Marie-Pablo-Beverly
Einstein-Curie-Schweitzer-Picasso-Sills. Our kids are new people and they’re
their own people. They are themselves, not a composite of others who have gone
before. Yes, it is important that they’re given a wide variety of opportunities,
but let’s remember not to force unwanted opportunities on them “for their own
good.”
There is an educational fable about all the wild animals getting together
to form a school for their children. It was well-intentioned but the curriculum
was difficult to devise because of all the competing interests of the different
groups. The eagles wanted flying to be paramount but the ducks wanted swimming.
The squirrels favored tree climbing while the moles insisted on advanced
digging. Running was the choice of the deer but snakes held out for slithering.
To address the needs of each group the curriculum covered all these areas.
Needless to say the ducks were terrible runners, the squirrels kept sinking, the
snakes dug poorly and the moles couldn’t get off the ground. The eagles played
hooky on slithering day and just flew away.
The lesson is that we all have different gifts and we should all be able to
develop our gifts as we see fit. Parents should guide, support and advise but
the vicarious living-through-our-children should be held in check. Like the rest
of parenting, its a juggling act while balancing on a moving tightrope.
Parental burnout occurs when parents try to do too much. Some parents
focus on a purchased curriculum that “hits all the milestones” (or benchmarks,
depending on your buzzword preference), and “gets it all in.” Many of these
programs require strict record keeping, no deviation from the syllabus - at
least not if the testing concerns you - and deadlines. This, combined with
running a household, meeting the emotional needs of your spouse, meeting the
emotional needs of the children, and trying to maintain social obligations all
culminates in meltdown. The parent has no more energy to use in getting through
the day, they’re wasted. This is when many people quit homeschooling because
it’s too much work and they’re right, that kind of homeschooling is too much
work.
Before you get yourself into this predicament, do some homeschooling
research. Get the advice, through books and magazines, from those who have been
through it. Don’t buy the first program that looks good. Do talk to people at
homeschool groups or through networking lists in magazines who have used the
program. Be wary of those programs that don’t allow for individual variation,
anecdotally they have the worst track record.
Do explore the various materials available and perhaps put together your
own “program.” The benefits here are that you won’t have spent a lot of money so
if a certain purchase doesn’t meet your expectations you can stop using it
without the guilt associated with not completing a thousand dollar program -
another source of burnout. Many people are compelled to complete a program just
because they’ve spent the money but does this get them their money “back?” Are
they any better off for having completed the program or are they frustrated and
angry both at themselves and their children? Do they feel more competent for
having disciplined themselves and their kids to do things they didn’t want to?
(How do their kids feel about this?) Or do they feel incompetent for not being
able to conform to a “nationally known curriculum” that’s obviously been
successfully used by “thousands of satisfied customers?” Come on. Don’t believe
all the advertising you read. Get some catalogs, talk to people, make up your
own mind about what fits your family best. Just as your aren’t raising
Albert-Marie-Pablo-Beverly Einstein-Curie-Schweitzer-Picasso-Sills, neither are
you raising a Generic Child. One size never fits all so don’t burn yourself out
trying to perform an impossibility.
