VMI77 wrote:n5wd wrote:Keith B wrote:While I think distance learning and computer based courses have their place, school is not all about curriculum. I learned a lot of things like social interaction, friendship, how to fight, how to love, etc. While there have always been bad things at school, playing sports, being in teh band, school clubs, and other activities are a part of my life that I would not want to have missed.
My "classroom" is a distance learning computer lab - and I can agree with you that distance learning has it's place. And, I agree 100% about the social aspects of school, and don't forget all of the folks you've met who might continue to play a big part in your life.
I get it...you're a teacher, so you're biased against homeschooling, and have only seen it from the outside.
If you're going to assign my beliefs for me, then the least you should do is to have some basis for those beliefs that you assign me. Reading my previous posts, completely, and not just taking little bits out of context would be a good start.
I have said many times before that I am a teacher in a public high school. I work in a public school system that is legislatively mandated by the State of Texas. It is required to take all comers. White, black, Asian, Indian, Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Wiccan and the kids without religion. We take the jocks and the nerds, guys, girls, and those that aren't quite sure. Straight, gay, etc. The really smart and the not-really smart. Those that have money and two-parent families, and those that are being raised by a single parent who works 20 hours a day. So many of our kids are profoundly disadvantaged through socio-economic, familial, or geographic situations. We don't turn anyone away except for those that violate the laws of the state and are removed from our school system by law.
All that said, a parent or guardian that has the desire and ability to home school should make the decision that they think is best for their family. I have absolutely no problem with someone wanting to home school their child, as long as they do it with a good program that will provide adequate opportunities for the child to learn those things that he/she will need when she/he becomes an adult. I espouse no particular brand or method - I like parochial schools (I even attended a couple while I was growing up in my travels as an Air Force brat), and charter schools give parents a lot of choice, while still being funded by the state, at least in part.
Let me say that again - I think there are some great homeschooling packages or programs out there, and I think there are some that do families and children a disservice. Right now, I've got some kiddohs who were previously homeschooled, and for one reason or another, the parents chose to put them back into the public schools. Some of the kids make the transfer without acquiring any academic deficiencies... others don't. Usually, it's because a kiddoh hasn't taken a course that they should have by their current level, or the course or courses that they did take were not judged acceptably equivalent by the Texas Education Agency, and the kiddoh will take credit recovery courses to earn the credit back. The same thing happens when a kiddoh transfers in from out-of-state - they might not have something they need right now. That's where I come in. Over the last two years of doing this assignment, I've had probably 20 ex-home schoolers and a whole buncha out-of-state or out-of-country transfers in my labs (along with the kids who didn't pass their courses in the first place).
My wife and I also have friends who are homeschooling, and we've both been "visiting teachers" for classes with some of the kids on the occasion that we could help with some special info we had that the parents didn't.
Back to the original point - I am only biased against bad or inadequate homeschooling, just as I am biased against bad or inadequate charter schools, parochial schools, or even public schools! There - do what you will with that, ok?
VMI77 wrote:Because they were homeschooled, both boys got to travel with me on work trips, so they got to see places all over the country, as well as visit numerous museums and historical locations. They got to travel in Europe, Latin America, Mexico, and the Caribbean. They've been to the Louvre and the Antikensammlungen in Munich (along with other museums). They've seen the real Oktoberfest. They saw Nuremberg and the home town of Ablrecht Durer. They've seen endemic poverty in Columbia, cruised Alaskan waters, and passed through the Panama Canal. They've walked the Tower Bridge and seen the Crown Jewels in London, visited the Royal castle in Edinburgh, and walked the streets of Dublin. None of this would have been possible if they had attended public school.
It sounds like you've got some great kids, well rounded and well adjusted. It's obvious that they had some parents that had the resources to be able to give them things that many families couldn't. That's the point that, I think, is missing in a lot of the public school versus charter school versus homeschooling debates (arguments). It takes a family with resources (not just money, but time, space, and careers that allow the parents to be involved on a full-time basis, and not everyone has that ability or resources.