TX Home Schooling

21,517 Views | 292 Replies | Last: 19 hrs ago by MasonB
fixer
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Teslag said:

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?

Pure? Lol no. But Brock ISD is fantastic for 99% of children, including yours.


So "salute the ISDs" then?
Ag In Ok
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Let's talk outcomes
Sister homeschooled all of her kids and they are successful. From a master tradesman, one operating a 503C, and three masters degrees. They aren't isolated / socially awkward. Quite the opposite actually
Brother homeschooled and both are in college and doing well.
I have friends who grew up homeschooled - one is a leader in a large corporation in a top middle management level. Not socially awkward or isolated. Others are professionals or tradesman.
If the outcomes are the "same", they did it without the crap that comes with public school. That is nothing compared to the true enjoyment we had in actually being involved in their intellectual and spiritual growth.
The trite comments about social circles are just that. Outcomes don't match the perception often thrown by those who have not done it from start to finish to those considering it. I've seen the outcomes and we are quite pleased with our decision as are our teen / college student
Just ask them about it - they actually feel bad for kids that weren't home schooled. Though they have a lot in common, our kids just see the world more as it is having stressed intellectual honesty and critical thinking. They are not ones to buy into the social narrative of the day.
whytho987654
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Tanya 93 said:

aTmAg said:

Tanya 93 said:

aTmAg said:

Tanya 93 said:

aTmAg said:

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.
Sign them up for team sports. That's what several on my kids' soccer teams did. They seemed quite normal.
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.
I am not sure what you mean. Are you saying:

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 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).

Profs teaching at MU, programmers, and doctors.
Quote:

I am not telling someone not to homeschool, but I found more variety in kids in TRYPS and programming than sports.
In my experience, kids who play team sports are much more well rounded than theater kids.

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.


I enrolled my son in sports for years.
I was just explaining my experience
And I don't need to be told again how your mom taught 50 kids of varying ages in a single classroom by herself.


I explained my experience of a mom in a college town with a precocious child.
No reason to be a c-word. I didn't say anything about my mom. I was talking about what I did with my kids (which also happens to be what she did with us).

I raised 3 kids. All played sports. All graduated college with legit degrees and now have good jobs. Unlike my neighbors who didn't play sports, none were or are socially awkward, had kids as teenagers, any drug problems, or any of that.
aTmAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
whytho987654
How long do you want to ignore this user?
aTmAg said:

whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period
4the_Record
How long do you want to ignore this user?

Quote:

Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period

This is unhelpful and untrue.
All three of my kids were homeschooled until adulthood.
I can tell they are at least as socially adept as many of the homeschool critics represented in this thread.

While, speaking/interacting at Coop, Church, Debate competitions, Mock Trials or even at work, they all do very well.

Just as with Public/Private school, the results depend on the location, method and the support system as well as the individual person involved.

RED AG 98
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
My 3 are all graduated now but we homeschooled all until middle school. My only regret is that we stopped.

ETA: We were/are heavily involved in other organizations such as church, sports, etc. so social interaction wasn't even a slightest concern for us.
Tanya 93
How long do you want to ignore this user?
aTmAg said:

Tanya 93 said:

aTmAg said:

Tanya 93 said:

aTmAg said:

Tanya 93 said:

aTmAg said:

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.
Sign them up for team sports. That's what several on my kids' soccer teams did. They seemed quite normal.
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.
I am not sure what you mean. Are you saying:

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 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).

Profs teaching at MU, programmers, and doctors.
Quote:

I am not telling someone not to homeschool, but I found more variety in kids in TRYPS and programming than sports.
In my experience, kids who play team sports are much more well rounded than theater kids.

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.


I enrolled my son in sports for years.
I was just explaining my experience
And I don't need to be told again how your mom taught 50 kids of varying ages in a single classroom by herself.


I explained my experience of a mom in a college town with a precocious child.
No reason to be a c-word. I didn't say anything about my mom. I was talking about what I did with my kids (which also happens to be what she did with us).

I raised 3 kids. All played sports. All graduated college with legit degrees and now have good jobs. Unlike my neighbors who didn't play sports, none were or are socially awkward, had kids as teenagers, any drug problems, or any of that.



Not being a c word.
Just finished another damn procedure and not putting up with someone telling me my experiences aren't real.

We lived in a specific area when moved here specifically for these reasons

We aren't Texas. Nannies and kitchen workers aren't putting their kids in organized sports here. It is simply different from Texas. We have more Asians in the schools than Hispanics. It is something like 75% white and often rated as one of the best public HS in Mizzou.

MrWonderful
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
whytho987654 said:

aTmAg said:

whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period
You have likely met far more people who were homeschooled than you know. The ones that stand out are the exception, not the rule.

Your anecdotal experience does not represent reality.
agsalaska
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
MrWonderful said:

whytho987654 said:

aTmAg said:

whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period
You have likely met far more people who were homeschooled than you know. The ones that stand out are the exception, not the rule.

Your anecdotal experience does not represent reality.
It is all pretty much anecdotal. And I tend to agree with him. And I have met, coached, and taught dozens of them.

It is certainly not an absolute. But for every home school student that is successful there is another being educated by TicToc and a mom day drinking.

The trouble with quotes on the internet is that you never know if they are genuine. -- Abraham Lincoln.



NoahAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whytho987654 said:

aTmAg said:

whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period
You have a very, very limited view, and clearly have never interacted with a homeschool family. I understand. You can't know what you don't know. Again, your perception of homeschooling is just wrong. You assume that it means the child sits at the kitchen table with mom all day every day and has zero interaction with anyone outside the house. Of the 100s of HS families I've personally known (and 1,000s yes 1,000s) that I've observed, this is just not what homeschooling is. Every HS family I've know is involved in some type of co-op or community group.

When my kids were very young I actually felt sad for traditional school students b/c my kids had so many opportunities for interaction and exploration of the real world. While neighbors' kids were locked in a classroom all day, our kids were out DOING things, learning and seeing, not just being lectured to. Through our co-op they started learning early on how to speak publicly and present to a group. Honestly, the kids I've known that struggle the most with conversing with adults were all traditional schooled.

ALL of that to say...
whoever said family support/health is the most important factor is correct. If home life is crap it doesn't matter which route kids take. And I'll say that of all of the high achieving HS kids I've known, most of them probably would have been successful in the traditional route. One of my kids likely would have excelled in public school as well. He's very much go with the flow and easily adapts to situations. But it would have been tough for my other kid. He would not fit in the public school box. Public school is about memorization and regurgitation. It doesn't have much room for debate, challenging, and critical thinking.

agsalaska
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

ALL of that to say...
whoever said family support/health is the most important factor is correct. If home life is crap it doesn't matter which route kids take
This I completely disagree with. If home life is crap they are FAR better off in school. Not even close.
The trouble with quotes on the internet is that you never know if they are genuine. -- Abraham Lincoln.



MrWonderful
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
agsalaska said:

MrWonderful said:


You have likely met far more people who were homeschooled than you know. The ones that stand out are the exception, not the rule.

Your anecdotal experience does not represent reality.
It is all pretty much anecdotal. And I tend to agree with him. And I have met, coached, and taught dozens of them.

It is certainly not an absolute. But for every home school student that is successful there is another being educated by TicToc and a mom day drinking.


Those same kids are in public schools too. Or are the bad students in public schools the product of involved parenting?

The recipe for a successful student is always going to involve parents that give a damn. If that's not present, there's low likelihood of a good outcome regardless of setting. That has nothing to do with homeschooling as a method, anymore than a drunk driver makes all cars bad.
infinity ag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
MrWonderful said:

agsalaska said:

MrWonderful said:


You have likely met far more people who were homeschooled than you know. The ones that stand out are the exception, not the rule.

Your anecdotal experience does not represent reality.
It is all pretty much anecdotal. And I tend to agree with him. And I have met, coached, and taught dozens of them.

It is certainly not an absolute. But for every home school student that is successful there is another being educated by TicToc and a mom day drinking.


Those same kids are in public schools too. Or are the bad students in public schools the product of involved parenting?

The recipe for a successful student is always going to involve parents that give a damn. If that's not present, there's low likelihood of a good outcome regardless of setting.
That has nothing to do with homeschooling as a method, anymore than a drunk driver makes all cars bad.

Truer words have never be told before.
agsalaska
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Sure. Well mostly. I would argue that school gives kids from bad homes a better chance.

Point is that this is all anecdotal. My personal experience with homeschooled kids is anecdotal. So is yours.
The trouble with quotes on the internet is that you never know if they are genuine. -- Abraham Lincoln.



Muktheduck
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Teslag said:

I can't imagine not having the daily social circle I had every day growing up in school. Academics is important but there's also a social element to school that's hard to replicate on a daily basis.


That daily social circle is actually the #1 reason to homeschool.

Teens/pre-teens are great at ignoring adults. What a 13 year old girl won't and cannot ignore are the opinions of her peers. She's not going to start thinking she's trans because of the freak teacher pushing it, she's going to consider it because half of her friend group believe they are and the other half encourage them.

The most difficult but also most important task of a parent with children entering puberty is curating their peer group. That's very difficult/expensive (private school) to do these days without homeschooling
Tanya 93
How long do you want to ignore this user?
MrWonderful said:

agsalaska said:

MrWonderful said:


You have likely met far more people who were homeschooled than you know. The ones that stand out are the exception, not the rule.

Your anecdotal experience does not represent reality.
It is all pretty much anecdotal. And I tend to agree with him. And I have met, coached, and taught dozens of them.

It is certainly not an absolute. But for every home school student that is successful there is another being educated by TicToc and a mom day drinking.


Those same kids are in public schools too. Or are the bad students in public schools the product of involved parenting?

The recipe for a successful student is always going to involve parents that give a damn. If that's not present, there's low likelihood of a good outcome regardless of setting. That has nothing to do with homeschooling as a method, anymore than a drunk driver makes all cars bad.


Yes on the second paragraph

I had Demon Spawn sent to the principal in elementary because when a teacher told them during Halloween to draw a pic of Frankenstein, he drew the doctor because he had been read that book every Halloween for years and knew their names. He explained he did what was asked because he wasn't asked to draw the monster or the demon.
NoahAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
agsalaska said:

Quote:

ALL of that to say...
whoever said family support/health is the most important factor is correct. If home life is crap it doesn't matter which route kids take
This I completely disagree with. If home life is crap they are FAR better off in school. Not even close.

Fair enough. Some homes are so bad that a full time gov't babysitter is a better alternative than at home in an abusive situation.
Bert315
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
We do a university classical model school with 2 days in class and 2 days homeschool each week. Goes to 3 days in school once in 5th grade. Our kids absolutely love it and the education is better. 2 years ahead of public in all subjects and no issues with behavior like we saw in public. Great option as we couldn't quite do full homeschooling.

Plenty of socialization between school sports, music, and church.
Ag-Yoakum95
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Jeeper79 said:

AggieKatie2 said:

Martin Q. Blank said:

Who is going to be teaching her? Biggest concern with transitioning to home schooling is discipline to actually do the work.

How does your daughter feel about it? That age she has developed "best friends" that she will not see every day anymore.


It's likely to be me. I have a bit of flexibility with schedule.

Definitely agree DISCIPLINE is my concern number one for all parties involved.

My daughter LOVES the idea at the moment and is begging me to do it, but I also think it's a "grass is greener" thing with her. She comments she doesn't have friends in her class, but from what I see I think that's preteen angst.


Ive never home schooled, but if your kid is ADHD or neurodivergent, I'd think long and hard before removing them from a structured environment. If they're none of that then disregard.
If that structured environment is a large class of students, that becomes an issue with an ADHD student. That definitely makes it more difficult for them to focus on what the teacher is trying to teach, especially if you get some knuckleheads acting up during class time.
TxAG#2011
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Every kid I met that was homeschooled was off. Varying from a little off to a lot.

Feel sad for any kid that is homeschooled as those memories in school growing up and activities were the best.
4the_Record
How long do you want to ignore this user?

I think the thing that most amazes me about this thread is the number of folks criticizing Home Schooling without even reading the examples and anecdotes offered in response.

All my kids were home schooled.
All of them were in sports, went to class, went to social events (Dances, proms, etc...)

My eldest was the captain of his football team... a team with 80+ other homeschool kids and 40+ cheerleaders.
...From all walks of life and from extremely diverse ethnic, racial and socio-economic backgrounds.

My youngest spoke several times to hundreds of people, primarily public school kids, as a leader in her Church youth program.

You are picturing the worst kind of isolated home school families.
That would be similar to arguing with an example of the kids from the worst public schools.

Teslag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
fixer said:

Teslag said:

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?

Pure? Lol no. But Brock ISD is fantastic for 99% of children, including yours.


So "salute the ISDs" then?


Depends on the ISD. Some are better than many private schools.
Teslag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
whytho987654 said:

aTmAg said:

whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period


That's because you probably weren't a socially awkward nerd.
MrWonderful
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
agsalaska said:

Sure. Well mostly. I would argue that school gives kids from bad homes a better chance.

Point is that this is all anecdotal. My personal experience with homeschooled kids is anecdotal. So is yours.
Agreed on your first point. Public school dilutes the parental impact in a lot of ways. So if you have great parents who are equipped to ensure you are learning, you may see a huge benefit in homeschooling, the opposite is also true, that public schools can help dilute the impact of poor parents (often at the expense of other children who are there).

It is all anecdotal, I agree. I would ask a question though for anyone who has not homeschooled and is weighing in on it based on their experience with homeschool kids vs private / public. Do you actually know where every kid you interacted with was educated, or do you just know about the ones that volunteer that information? If someone who is homechooled, but is doing a co-op and taking dual credit in college is asked where they go to school, they may just say "a small private school" rather than launch into the 5 minute explanation. My point is, you only know about the people who tell you they are homeschooled. That is not representative of the total body of homeschoolers.

The anecdotal experience of someone that hasn't actually done it, just witnessed it, is going to be biased because they are missing pieces of the picture.
Jt1220
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Like with most things you get out of homeschooling what you put into it. It's a big sacrifice for parents, but if home life is stable, and parents are willing to heavily invest, it holds a lot of advantages. Socialization is just not an issue for homeschoolers anymore if you prioritize social interaction - there are tons of options now. If you choose to keep them home 24/7 you will have issues, but that's a choice the parent makes …it's not due to lack of opportunities.

In terms of advantages: You know your kids better than anyone else. As such, you know how they learn, when they are "getting something", when they aren't, when they need a break, when they need a push, etc. HS allows you deep visibility into how your child works - where are they gifted, where do they struggle, what do they enjoy, how do they respond to different teaching techniques, how do they handle not getting something, how do they handle getting something quickly - at a level you just can't get in a traditional model. It provides invaluable intel to you as a parent and pays dividends more broadly in your parent/child relationship. Lastly, you have the ability to customize the curriculum your child uses to ensure they get the best available and remain challenged.

With homeschooling these days you basically have three options:

1. Do it completely on your own: lots of great curriculum out there bob jones, Abeka, sunlight, Saxon math. They come with lesson plans, all the materials, digital resources…truly out of the box, ready to go. In this model you have to lean heavily on church, clubs, sports, etc for social engagement. This is the most time intensive for parents.

2. Co-op driven: co-ops offer parents some leverage so the burden of instruction and socialization isn't fully on the parent. These typically meet once a week or twice a month. something like classical conversations is a great starting point. These provide outside instruction so your child is accustom to different teaching styles, can engage with peers, and they offer a more comprehensive solution to curriculum so you aren't selecting everything for every subject, which can require a lot of time and research.

3. University model (classical): kids go 2-3 days a week, have a pretty typical school day, curriculum is carefully curated, class size is smaller, schools are typically accredited and handle all the administration (report cards, transcripts, etc). Typically student advancement is flexible in areas your child excels…eg if they are in 5th grade but excel in math they can go to 7th grade math, or 5th grade math but excel at reading, so 7th grade orthography. They also typically have relationships with colleges for dual credit and admissions. They typically offer electives and sports (eg robotics club, computer science, chemistry club, music, arts, all the typical sports). Parents do instruction on home days and supplement curriculum where they choose to. Society for classical learning (SLC) is an organization that can help you find local options.
agsalaska
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
NoahAg said:

agsalaska said:

Quote:

ALL of that to say...
whoever said family support/health is the most important factor is correct. If home life is crap it doesn't matter which route kids take
This I completely disagree with. If home life is crap they are FAR better off in school. Not even close.

Fair enough. Some homes are so bad that a full time gov't babysitter is a better alternative than at home in an abusive situation.
Have you spent any time in a public school recently? Personally. First hand experience.

Public schools are far short of perfect but they give kids from all kinds of backgrounds amazing opportunities. Calling them government babysitters is ignorant. Outside of some inner city issues, most, the vast majority, of kids do just fine in public high schools. For most kids from tough households school gives them all kinds of chances to be successful, from football to band to ffa to robotics.

Yes they need reform.

The trouble with quotes on the internet is that you never know if they are genuine. -- Abraham Lincoln.



whytho987654
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Teslag said:

whytho987654 said:

aTmAg said:

whytho987654 said:

AggielandPoultry said:

Best decision we ever made. 100%
Well your kid well end up socially awkward, congrats on stunting them
I've seen plenty of home schooled kids who turned out better socially than those in public schools.
Ive never met a socially adept person who was homeschooled. I would've hated being homeschooled, you need those interactions with different kids during that crucial development period


That's because you probably weren't a socially awkward nerd.
Yep, the experiences I had at public school were awesome, life long friends, lots of girls (many here would GASP and be like "my kid wont do those things!" when they themselves did it back in the day....), great time playing sports, and great college opportunites
agsalaska
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
MrWonderful said:

agsalaska said:

Sure. Well mostly. I would argue that school gives kids from bad homes a better chance.

Point is that this is all anecdotal. My personal experience with homeschooled kids is anecdotal. So is yours.
Agreed on your first point. Public school dilutes the parental impact in a lot of ways. So if you have great parents who are equipped to ensure you are learning, you may see a huge benefit in homeschooling, the opposite is also true, that public schools can help dilute the impact of poor parents (often at the expense of other children who are there).

It is all anecdotal, I agree. I would ask a question though for anyone who has not homeschooled and is weighing in on it based on their experience with homeschool kids vs private / public. Do you actually know where every kid you interacted with was educated, or do you just know about the ones that volunteer that information? If someone who is homechooled, but is doing a co-op and taking dual credit in college is asked where they go to school, they may just say "a small private school" rather than launch into the 5 minute explanation. My point is, you only know about the people who tell you they are homeschooled. That is not representative of the total body of homeschoolers.

The anecdotal experience of someone that hasn't actually done it, just witnessed it, is going to be biased because they are missing pieces of the picture.
Good post. I couldnt have worded the first paragraph any better. That's right on.
The trouble with quotes on the internet is that you never know if they are genuine. -- Abraham Lincoln.



TxAG#2011
How long do you want to ignore this user?
4the_Record said:


I think the thing that most amazes me about this thread is the number of folks criticizing Home Schooling without even reading the examples and anecdotes offered in response.

All my kids were home schooled.
All of them were in sports, went to class, went to social events (Dances, proms, etc...)

My eldest was the captain of his football team... a team with 80+ other homeschool kids and 40+ cheerleaders.
...From all walks of life and from extremely diverse ethnic, racial and socio-economic backgrounds.

My youngest spoke several times to hundreds of people, primarily public school kids, as a leader in her Church youth program.

You are picturing the worst kind of isolated home school families.
That would be similar to arguing with an example of the kids from the worst public schools.


That's because you are heavily biased bro. Nobody who homeschools their kids would ever admit they made a mistake and the kids themselves would not know what they are missing out on.
4the_Record
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Quote:

That's because you are heavily biased bro. Nobody who homeschools their kids would ever admit they made a mistake and the kids themselves would not know what they are missing out on.


I and my wife were Public Schooled. I know exactly what they missed and so does my wife.

My kids have interacted with hundreds of public and private school kids.
My oldest graduated from A&M and works in Houston in O&G
He married a public school kid from Round Rock, they're expecting their first kid whom, spoiler, they plan to home school.

All three of my kids plan to home school due to the extremely positive experience they had.... especially when compared to their many many public school relatives, friends, church members, co-workers, etc..

In fact, they are very vocal home school advocates.

I am biased... but not without reason.
pollo hermanos
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
There is a lot of talk how home schooled kids are socially awkward. I said earlier that I was home schooled through 7th grade. My brother through sophomore year and my sister all the way through. My wife was home schooled in high school.

We were all pretty socially adept (my brother and i were both popular/home coming kings, etc). My sister probably lacked some of the social skills she wanted when she went to college.

The reality is, i think, that people who are home schooled often are socially awkward because they are raised by parents who are very weird. Kids are just going to be who they are.

I think going to school helps with other development, though. Learning about life. Critical thinking is a must regardless of where you go to school.

I believe studies show that it really doesnt matter where you go to school once a basic threshold has been met. There isnt a big difference between Memorial, Kinkaid and Spring high for outcomes of success. the kids who are super successful in all of them likely would have been regardless of the school (or home school).
evestor1
How long do you want to ignore this user?
i am surprised how many home schooled posters we have here. I dont know if i've ever met a person in adult life that was home schooled.


i learned everything bad that i know in this world from kids i was friends with in 6-7th grade and then drinking in 12th grade. i would much rather teach those things to my kids than manipulative classmates...including the drinking if we're being honest!


we'll see how it goes for us, but 5th grade has been pretty pathetic as far as ANY skills being learned.
TheMasterplan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Could you not say the same about bragging about public schools?

The mainstream propaganda is that public schools are good while homeschools are bad. I wouldn't say that's a true statement anymore.

There are lots of reasonable takes addressing pros and cons of each. There are a lot of ba skids coming out of public schools…is that to be blamed on public schools or some other factor?
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.