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I didn't read the entire thread, but what does the typical day look like when you homeschool? Do you have a set schedule with "classes" every hour with lessons where you teach in front of a white board? Do you ever just watch lessons on YouTube? If they are assigned to read something, do you just leave the room and have them sit there and read? I'm just genuinely curious as to the day to day details.
This answer is long and I apologize...but cracking through misperceptions is tough, as evidenced by this thread.
Alex is in 5th grade and for us it has been different every year.
In first grade we were enrolled in an online charter school (public school at home). He had a mix of science, English, math, and social studies lessons through a few different software platforms. We did weeks of road schooling camping from Oklahoma to the San Juan Islands and back. On the day he was studying volcanos in science, we hiked Capulin. He stood in dinosaur tracks in the Oklahoma panhandle. He learned about glaciers in Glacier National Park. I could go on and on.
Second grade, we had our feet under us a little better and still did some road schooling, but we also did more exploring close to home. He learned about preg checking cows, dairy farming, mushroom farming, robotics and controls design, and much more.
Third grade, we broke away from the charter school - the assessment testing had gotten to be 5 times a year, plus state testing and all of the curriculum was aimed at those tests (which he did great on). But we had become confident in other alternatives that gave him a better broader education and - importantly - fueled his natural love of learning and curiosity. He visited civil war battlefields, spent a day making cheese at a factory in Maryland, learned about lobsters on boat in Maine, visited capitol buildings in the New England states, and followed the Harriet Tubman trail. All the while doing an online 3rd grade curriculum.
Fourth grade, we felt that his years of occupational and speech therapy had equipped him with skills to handle a classroom, but we were in love with homeschooling at that point, so we joined a coop for one class. He picked history and loved it. so at semester break we added a science class, too. The adventures continued. He harvested wheat, cotton, and corn. He has been to multiple gins. He has stocked fish with the wildlife department. He camped in the giant redwoods, explored tide pools in La Jolla, and saw how campers were manufactured in Colorado - among many other adventures. Subjects not done at coop were done online.
Fifth grade - he takes English, Math, and History at coop. The rest of the subjects are done online. He visits a construction site once a month to see how a children's hospital is being built and had to complete a safety course to be onsite. Visiting the hospital he wanted to do something for the kids who live there, so he has raised over $7,000 to hold a fishing event. He has friendships with the wildlife department and CAST for Kids and the event will set up tanks on site at the hospital to let patients there experience catching a fish.
Coop is on Wednesday, Thursday we look at the assignments he has for the week and our calendar and make a plan for getting his work done. Sunday is his only day off from school work. M, T, R, F, S he also does supplemental lessons for other subjects on Miacademy and extra math work on Synthesis. Some of his work is done completely independently, some he comes to me on the things he needs help with, and some we do together.
Every night we read together. We mix between classics and topics he is interested in at the time. Our last book was about Greenland in World War 2 (not my favorite, but he liked it) and now we are reading Lord of the Flies (neither of us are big fans). Plenty of fun adventure books get mixed in, too. He particularly likes camping and survival stories.
Is he socially awkward? Yes, of course. He is level 2 autistic, after all.
But he is polite, can converse with adults, shop on his own, be a guest on a podcast, play with the neighbor kids, work in groups at 4-H, help kids younger than him, hang with his sister's college friends, meet with legislators to advocate on issues, and more.
Last year at this time he was at a Mike Rowe event and in an event center filled with everything from billionaires to CEOs to politicians to models trying to get Mike's attention, not only did Mike Rowe meet Alex, he sent an assistant to bring Alex back to talk to him some more. A multi-billionaire was standing in line like a fanboy while Alex was telling Mike about all the places he has been camping.
So I'm sorry if my 11 year old isn't slaying P and shotgunning beers*, but I'm doing the best I can.
*He did tour an Anheuser-Busch rice mill in Arkansas - any bro points for that?