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Category Archives: Encouragement

Carnival of Homeschooling at the NerdFamily Blog

Carnival of HomeschoolingPay a visit to a pro-nerd family of pro-family nerds at the NerdFamily Blog, and check out all the posts about homeschooling the news, as well as the nuts-and-bolts of home education.

If you are considering homeschooling, or getting ready to plan next year, a homeschool carnival is a great way to explore a wide variety of homeschool related subjects, as well as the tremendous diversity of homeschool families.

The Carnival of Homeschooling is a weekly homeschooling blog carnival, an opportunity to learn from and be encouraged by fellow homeschoolers. Would you like to participate in the Carnival? Check out the submission instruction page at Why Homeschool.

 

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For some fresh air in your homeschool, open the windows

The role of teacher often seems to be distant, and even adversarial to the average student. The teacher makesspring tree sky the Top Secret Lesson Plans using the mysterious Teacher’s Editions which are always kept out of reach. Teachers exercise unquestioned authority over the student’s education – awarding grades with either an indelible red pen or the more merciful bell curve – but either way, the student’s fate is in their hands. Assignments are etched in stone, and deadlines carry with them all the dread the term implies.

A parent who spent 12 years in the traditional classroom may be conditioned to act in this way in their role as homeschool teacher. There are the same sort of clearly drawn lines between teacher/parent and student/child – the same authority and actions on the part of the parent, the same passive compliance in the student.

And then the parent gets frustrated because their child doesn’t seem to be motivated. Can I just say, “Duh?”

Breathe some fresh air into your homeschool by getting your kids involved in planning their own education. Open up those Teacher’s Editions and give them the lesson plan books. Ask them what they’d like to learn, and how they’d like to learn it. Let them set their own goals and stand back in a supportive role while they find the pace that is right for them. Give them the answer key and scoring rubrics, and have them grade their own papers and give reports of their progress.

And how about that classroom? Does your child spend most of their learning time inside? Is there a defined education space in your home where notebooks, school books, and supplies are kept in neatly labeled rows? Do the kids immediately put their books away when ‘school hours’ are over?

Nothing wrong with being organized, but have you looked out the window lately? Let the sunshine in to your homeschool by taking the books outside and enjoying the warmer weather. Sit in the swing or spread a blanket on the grass and read together, or just look at the clouds, trees, birds, and other assorted critters, and talk about whatever.

Instead of your home using you, why not use your home as an educational tool? The kitchen is a place where physics and chemistry come alive at every meal. The living room can become the family library, where kids and parents can curl up in comfy chairs to read and discuss literature and history. Why not use the walls for maps, timelines, and the children’s artwork? Who are we trying to impress anyway with our decorating skill? Let your kids know how important their education is to you by making their efforts and goals the centerpieces of your home.

Many of us have spent many years in the rigidity of the classroom, and it takes time to shake some of those ingrained habits off and learn to enjoy the education process. We’ve kept home and school separate for so long that we still tend to try to find ways to separate the messy learning stuff from the neat-as-a-pin homey stuff.

Any attempt to divide learning from the rest of life is an artificial one that causes frustration and confusion. Open the doors and windows and books, and reunite the elements of school and family in your homeschool.

 

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When support groups ARE supportive, and how you can help

peach collage completeOur May homeschool support group meeting was organized by one of our PEACH dads, and with the help of a few other  tech-savvy fathers, parents who attended learned about how to use digital technology in their homeschools.

That is what homeschool support groups should be about- families sharing their experience and expertise with others.

In spite of how much we talk about homeschoolers being social creatures, the challenge of homeschooling can become isolating. We are focused on many educational tasks- choosing, borrowing, and purchasing the best materials, organizing lesson plans, helping our kids with their questions and checking their progress, traveling on field trips, extracurricular activities, and volunteer opportunities. We often look to support groups to help us with these needs, but we need to occasionally ask ourselves- are we supporting our support group?

Support groups work best when all members view it as a collaborative effort. There are usually a few people ‘out front’- a leadership team, committee heads, officers. . . but they can’t make the group work to its fullest potential without the cooperation and combined effort of the membership.

“But I don’t have anything to offer!” you might think, “And I don’t have time to do more than I am doing!” Perhaps you are new to homeschooling, or you have a special needs child, or your family has health issues, or you care for an elderly relative.

The fact is that we all have challenges in our lives. The responsibilities of family, friends, church,and job. Every family occasionally finds themselves stretched with too much work and too little time and energy, or too many expenses and not enough income. But we still make room for other things that are important to us, like hobbies, a social life, television, reading.

So when we seek support from a support group, we may find ourselves soaking up the fellowship and encouragement and information without thinking about what we can give back, or feeling as if we have anything to give back.

There are literally dozens of ways that each person can give a little to a support group. The simplest things are a help. Just staying informed about group events by checking your email regularly, and reading the website updates or the newsletter is HUGE. If you have an online forum or message board, post encouragement and information, and answer questions when you can.

Come to meetings a few minutes early to help set up, or to act as a greeter. Stay a few minutes late to close things down and clean up if needed. Oversee a sign up table, be a hall monitor, or ask a leader if they need someone to make a few phone calls or pick up supplies for a meeting or activity. Look for new faces at meetings and on field trips and introduce yourself. If you don’t know the answer to a question, help folks find someone who can.

Part of home education is teaching our kids good character, and how to overcome obstacles. We want them to be strong, generous, resourceful, and compassionate. A support group can give us a chance to model these virtues to our children.

For those who think, “I’ve been there, done that, and I don’t need a support group”, let me encourage you to think about how you can share what you’ve learned over the years, or offer yourself as a sounding board to someone who needs a friendly ear. Both men and women have a tremendous opportunity to mentor younger/less experienced parents, as well as the young people in the group. Our children need to see us living up to our expectations of them, and we have an obligation to help others as we ourselves have been helped.

“But no one helped me- I had to figure out everything by myself. If I can do it, they can do it.” OK, fine- but is that the attitude of a compassionate, generous heart? Is this the example you have decided to set for those around you?

We saw shining examples of caring and sharing on display at our May meeting, with dads who are involved in technical careers sharing how they got started and what they’ve learned over the years. These dads work hard at their jobs. They have family, kids, yards that need mowed, washing machines that need fixed, and trash that needs to go to the curb, but they found time to be a benefit to others.

It reminds us that homeschooling is more than academics, and support groups are about more than receiving support. Take some time to think about your local support group, and what helpful and unique contributions you can make.

 

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Carnival of Homeschooling at Corn and Oil

Corn and Oil presents this CoH as the First Teacher” Appreciation Edition of Carnival of Homeschooling.

Carnival of HomeschoolingParents are children’s first teachers and that important reminder should always prevail.  Our little ones gain contact with grandparents, siblings and other family and friends to help teach communication and socializing skills. Many youngsters now go into an institutional school environment at ages as early as three. Today is Teacher Appreciation Day and with no disrespect to the people working hard in the school classrooms, this 384th Carnival of Homeschooling will celebrate the first and most important teachers.

 

The Carnival of Homeschooling is a weekly homeschooling blog carnival, an opportunity to learn from and be encouraged by fellow homeschoolers. Would you like to participate in the Carnival? Check out the submission instruction page at Why Homeschool.

 

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End of the school year? No way!

Flowers and trees-008

The beginning of summer is often seen as the end of the school year, but it shouldn’t be. You may be setting aside textbooks and workbooks, getting ready for testing and assessments, looking forward to going to bed a little later and sleeping in a bit more – but summer is not an end to learning, it’s a new beginning.

Picnic at pond

Warmer weather gives the kids more opportunities for outside activities energized by sunshine and fresh air. It brings up the plants and brings out the critters for observation and experimentation.

cloudy sunset by simon howden

Thunderstormy days were made for curling up in a comfy chair next to a window with a thrilling story, and then watching the sky for rainbows.

Playing on tree fort-008

The trees in the back yard long for rope swings, bird houses, and tree houses to give them purpose.

Kemp Rd Park Aug 2012-012

The ground is covered with mysteries that can be revealed to the curious mind with a simple magnifying glass.

carpenter ant arvind balaraman

You can lay off the lesson plans, but don’t take a break from your child’s continuing education. Give your kids the tools of learning and plenty of freedom, and odds are, they will take it from there.

 
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Posted by on May 1, 2013 in Encouragement

 

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