I like the approach of school thru 5th grade...and then make the switch before junior high
coolerguy12 said:
I know when I look for advice on how to raise kids I go to the guy with no kids and a very limited moral compass.
Quote:
And reduce the risk of his exposure to social media, porn, child predators, gangs, drugs, shootings, prison-like atmosphere, bad teachers, unhinged psychopaths, rampant gender dysphoria, etc… none of these are development areas for a kid
coolerguy12 said:
I know when I look for advice on how to raise kids I go to the guy with no kids and a very limited moral compass.
McInnis 03 said:
No better way to be prepared than to have a fantastic education that can put you in the competitive drivers seat. That's definitely available at home.
I think we get the point, you're adamantly against it. I don't think you'll steer this family away from this decision on your own. They can weigh the pros and cons with several opinions.
Teslag said:Quote:
And reduce the risk of his exposure to social media, porn, child predators, gangs, drugs, shootings, prison-like atmosphere, bad teachers, unhinged psychopaths, rampant gender dysphoria, etc… none of these are development areas for a kid
What the **** kind of school district are you living in?
I have a friend who's son is autistic and they teach him nothing in "Homeschooling". Same thing of "He learns what he is interested in". He is only interested in watching brain rot on YT. I honestly think they are dooming their child.jopatura said:
The ones that shouldn't be allowed to homeschool are the "unschooling" type. I had an acquaintance brag that her 12 year old didn't know how to read because he wasn't interested in it yet.
Now that she's through Elementary school, it's really going to depend on what she wants to do when she's an adult & what type of college she needs to get there. The biggest problem I see with homeschooling is that most parents can get them through 7-8th grade TEKS with their own basic knowledge, but they fail at setting the foundation needed for the critical thinking skills needed for high school AP & college. Then once the kid matriculates back, they flame out and flounder as an adult, especially if they were pulled because of undiagnosed learning difficulties.
So it's doable, but you need to be honest with yourself when it's not working anymore and you need to make sure it's in the best interest of your daughter, not because of gymnastics or your beliefs.
Pretty much what I was going to say. We are not dealing with a normal situation here where the OP is trying to decide what is better academically/socially/morally for their child. Seems like we are trying to find an easier schooling option so daughter has more time to strive towards being an elite athlete with enough energy left over in everyone's tank to have some family time that is meaningful. It's only going to get harder as daughter gets older - schooling will be more rigorous and keeping up with the other elites will take more than 18 hours a week.fightingfarmer09 said:AggieKatie2 said:evestor1 said:
I have heard of many folks that do school via gymnastics. is that a real thing?
School had been PERFECT for us until 5th grade. The school we are in split the GT program kids into equal parts of each class ... and there is almost no time during any day that my kid is learning.
We were unsure if it was the age level where puberty starts or if it was the classes being shuffled from previous years. Recently, we had the exact same conversations about homeschooling.
In my area, it is very common for mormons to take kids out of public school at 6th grade and return them to public school in 9th. Maybe we are finding out why.
I think it's a good bit stressful right now for current setup with us.
Up at 630
School by 745
School til 4
Gymnastics 4-8/830 (MTTrF)
Eat/Relax for hour
Bed by 930
We don't get a ton of time with her during week and on weekends we are usually all exhausted and time isn't always quality (if no gym meets)
Disclaimer: my wife teaches at a public high school and we are blessed to be in a great rural ISD.
Been around a lot of select and elite baseball and soccer kids and parents in my life. If you are concerned about your kids schooling and having no time with her there is one place I would start, but you probably won't like it.
And you think becoming your kids teacher in your "flexible" time will make things less stressful?
You are engaging with a professional troll who has been allowed on texags for like two decades.fixer said:
Are you one of those people who think your school district is pure as the driven snow?
That's a very antiquated idea of homeschooling (not your fault; I used to think the same).schwabbin said:
Home schooling sounds very isolating to me. I enjoyed public school as a kid and you meet people from all walks of life.
Not really. In the end, whether traditional school or homeschool it's going to be up to the kid and the work they put in. Test scores do matter. But transcripts aren't pointless. Most (maybe all) homeschool graduates I've known in the last 5 years have some amount of dual credit (another benefit). Off the top of my head I know homeschoolers right now with full rides at UTD, Alabama, OU. Another that had offers from South Carolina and Arkansas. And a family friend who got a 1500 on the SAT last fall.pollo hermanos said:
I think it also hurts for preparedness for college. I dont know this for a fact but i get the sense that good colleges are not going to respect home school transcripts because they are meaningless so probably going off of test scores only?
fightingfarmer09 said:Tanya 93 said:aTmAg said:I am not sure what you mean. Are you saying:Tanya 93 said:I don't know about the age difference between our kids, but you weren't finding poor kids in weekend soccer or little league. These families, outside of possibly what is spoken at home, were extremely the same.aTmAg said:Sign them up for team sports. That's what several on my kids' soccer teams did. They seemed quite normal.schwabbin said:
Home schooling sounds very isolating to me. I enjoyed public school as a kid and you meet people from all walks of life.
1) This is a problem because your kids won't interact with poor kids.
2) This is a problem because soccer is expensive
3) Something else
And BTW, mine are all graduated from college and one has kids. Also, the older two played on several teams at once. One was a Hispanic team where everybody other than my kids spoke Spanish as their primary language. They were poor AF (but damn good at soccer).
That is why I asked
The only kids speaking Spanish on the teams had professional parents
I am not telling someone not to homeschool, but I found more variety in kids in TRYPS and programming than sports.
Come to Texas Tanya! Only the poor kids play rec soccer and most teams are 80% Spanish speaking. Trust me they are good people but not in the "professional" class. Most are nurses and mechanics. All the rich kids play in select baseball.
This is a fair point. I've toned it down in this thread but I can be very critical of the public school system. Not that kids aren't learning. More so because I think it's extremely inefficient, bloated with high-salaried bureaucrats, and wasteful of tax dollars.MasonB said:
Be just as wary of public school critics who don't have direct recent experience.
And finally, keep in mind you can find good and bad examples from either route.
Like everything there are tradeoffs and you get out in proportion to what you put into it.
The homeschool community has evolved a ton to address the classic concerns. The public schools are evolving, too - you can decide if your local schools are evolving in good way or not.
fixer said:Teslag said:Quote:
And reduce the risk of his exposure to social media, porn, child predators, gangs, drugs, shootings, prison-like atmosphere, bad teachers, unhinged psychopaths, rampant gender dysphoria, etc… none of these are development areas for a kid
What the **** kind of school district are you living in?
Are you one of those people who think your school district is pure as the driven snow?
I still don't understand what you mean. Professional parents? You mean like a nanny? If you are asking about my case, they were just normal parents raising their kids like everybody else. There was nothing special about them (except most of them being illegal, I'm sure).Tanya 93 said:That is why I askedaTmAg said:I am not sure what you mean. Are you saying:Tanya 93 said:I don't know about the age difference between our kids, but you weren't finding poor kids in weekend soccer or little league. These families, outside of possibly what is spoken at home, were extremely the same.aTmAg said:Sign them up for team sports. That's what several on my kids' soccer teams did. They seemed quite normal.schwabbin said:
Home schooling sounds very isolating to me. I enjoyed public school as a kid and you meet people from all walks of life.
1) This is a problem because your kids won't interact with poor kids.
2) This is a problem because soccer is expensive
3) Something else
And BTW, mine are all graduated from college and one has kids. Also, the older two played on several teams at once. One was a Hispanic team where everybody other than my kids spoke Spanish as their primary language. They were poor AF (but damn good at soccer).
The only kids speaking Spanish on the teams had professional parents
In my experience, kids who play team sports are much more well rounded than theater kids.Quote:
I am not telling someone not to homeschool, but I found more variety in kids in TRYPS and programming than sports.
aTmAg said:I still don't understand what you mean. Professional parents? You mean like a nanny? If you are asking about my case, they were just normal parents raising their kids like everybody else. There was nothing special about them (except most of them being illegal, I'm sure).Tanya 93 said:That is why I askedaTmAg said:I am not sure what you mean. Are you saying:Tanya 93 said:I don't know about the age difference between our kids, but you weren't finding poor kids in weekend soccer or little league. These families, outside of possibly what is spoken at home, were extremely the same.aTmAg said:Sign them up for team sports. That's what several on my kids' soccer teams did. They seemed quite normal.schwabbin said:
Home schooling sounds very isolating to me. I enjoyed public school as a kid and you meet people from all walks of life.
1) This is a problem because your kids won't interact with poor kids.
2) This is a problem because soccer is expensive
3) Something else
And BTW, mine are all graduated from college and one has kids. Also, the older two played on several teams at once. One was a Hispanic team where everybody other than my kids spoke Spanish as their primary language. They were poor AF (but damn good at soccer).
The only kids speaking Spanish on the teams had professional parents
Profs teaching at MU, programmers, and doctors.In my experience, kids who play team sports are much more well rounded than theater kids.Quote:
I am not telling someone not to homeschool, but I found more variety in kids in TRYPS and programming than sports.
Sports in general make kids more physically active and healthy, teaches them to try hard, to work towards a goal, to properly interact with adults, to accept criticism, to properly deal with winning and losing. Team sports adds the additional aspect of interacting and working together with others towards a common goal.