I wanna know the answer to the dollar question
Should I wait for your YouTube?
Should I wait for your YouTube?
Its 100% the case that the majority of homeschool parents think their kids are so smart that they are being held back being in a group setting or that they need sheltering from world. They spout out test scores and do apples to oranges comparisons to try and justify why traditional schooling is so terrible. I get that there are circumstances where it works better for some kids and that is fine.zooguy96 said:Gone Camping said:Random experiments led by the student, that weren't planned in the curriculum, happen in "real" schools?1939 said:Being completely serious here, this doesn't impress me. It's the exact type of thing that goes on every day in real schools.MasonB said:
Better day to day example:
He just finished his math lesson on his own and came in to tell me one of the questions asked him the best unit to measure the weight of a dollar bill.
I told him I think a five dollar bill weighs 5 times as much as a single dollar bill and he told me my hypothesis was crazy, listing the reasons why.
I told him to prove it.
Which led to the picture.
And now he is collecting data on 10 different dollar bills and drawing conclusions about whether their weight changes the longer they are in circulation.
We are discussing sample size, unknown variables, and measurement error.
It's his curiosity and interest that is leading him, so he is having fun doing it (and fun proving me wrong).
But don't worry, TeslaAg - we will sneak some cigarettes in the bathroom later and I'll teach him how to hide the evidence from his mom.
I'm gonna have to disagree.
Yeah, they don't. 99.9% of assignments are teacher-led, not student led.
1939 said:Its 100% the case that the majority of homeschool parents think their kids are so smart that they are being held back being in a group setting or that they need sheltering from world. They spout out test scores and do apples to oranges comparisons to try and justify why traditional schooling is so terrible. I get that there are circumstances where it works better for some kids and that is fine.zooguy96 said:Gone Camping said:Random experiments led by the student, that weren't planned in the curriculum, happen in "real" schools?1939 said:Being completely serious here, this doesn't impress me. It's the exact type of thing that goes on every day in real schools.MasonB said:
Better day to day example:
He just finished his math lesson on his own and came in to tell me one of the questions asked him the best unit to measure the weight of a dollar bill.
I told him I think a five dollar bill weighs 5 times as much as a single dollar bill and he told me my hypothesis was crazy, listing the reasons why.
I told him to prove it.
Which led to the picture.
And now he is collecting data on 10 different dollar bills and drawing conclusions about whether their weight changes the longer they are in circulation.
We are discussing sample size, unknown variables, and measurement error.
It's his curiosity and interest that is leading him, so he is having fun doing it (and fun proving me wrong).
But don't worry, TeslaAg - we will sneak some cigarettes in the bathroom later and I'll teach him how to hide the evidence from his mom.
I'm gonna have to disagree.
Yeah, they don't. 99.9% of assignments are teacher-led, not student led.
The fact of the matter is that most schools provide a quality education as well as non-educational experiences that are just as good if not better than what you can provide through home schooling. Showing that your kid weighed a dollar bill is not some gotchya moment, that happens every day in schools all across America whether you have been brainwashed to believe it can't be true or not.
As with anything, the biggest factor in a child's development and educational success is parental involvement and socioeconomic status. Those that come from good households and/or money are the ones that are going to excel educationally. Unfortunately, public schools don't get to reject the bad kids and you see mass differences in educational outcomes amongst students within the same class. Because many of these kids from broken homes and don't put in any effort don't succeed people claim the schools are failing. If you can afford to have one parent stay home and put that much effort into your child's education, your kids will succeed in traditional school.
It should come as no surprise that the "good schools" are almost always in affluent communities and those in poor areas are often labeled as failing. A good case study here is rural districts that have mix of affluent and poor students with a diverse backgounds. The more affluent and often white kids succeed in school while the poor minorities don't. Does that mean it's a bad or failing school? Why are some students succeeding, going off to good colleges and having great careers while others are dropouts? Would your white affluent homeschooled kids succeed here? I bet they would.
I would love to see a long term study, and I'm sure they have been done, that compares home schooled vs. traditional schools students educational and life achievements controls the things I mentioned above. How does your average kid at A&M that was home schooled compare to a traditional schooled student at age 28? I'm sure all of you home school people are convinced that surely the home school kids are higher achievers, but I highly doubt it.
It really seems like most you who are so pro homeschool here are citing examples of elementary age kids. I am more interested in the high school age. Its a totally different animal.MasonB said:Quote:
Being completely serious here, this doesn't impress me. It's the exact type of thing that goes on every day in real schools.
What we do is "real school".
And if you meant public schools - then great! Glad to hear it.
It hasn't been my experience that math class would stop down for an impromptu science investigation based on one child's interest, but if that is happening I'm all for it. Most of the teachers I know would love the opportunity and freedom to do those things, but are hamstrung by teaching to the test, schedules, teaching to the struggling, aiming to to middle, and/or managing behavioral issues.
You can say that all you want, but this thread is full of homeschool parents bashing public schools. And I shouldn't say public schools but any traditional school, public or private.MasonB said:
It wasn't a gotcha moment. Someone asked what day to day looked like and I wanted to show a real time example.
Your experience with homeschoolers does not jive with mine.
And no small part of taking my son out of public school was the impact on his classmates and the teacher. We did it for others as much as us.
And for the OP, this is something to be prepared for. Lots of bitterness and misunderstanding about homeschooling that you will just have to learn to live with.
I've never criticized someone's individual choice to homeschool or any other school (except maybe t.u.).
But for some reason every Tom, Dick, and Jane feel the need to question what we do and ask us to justify it.
Total strangers will find out your kid is homeschooled and start quizzing them on math, science, math, or English right on the spot.
They are desperate to show what you do is inferior.
Strange phenomenon.
1939 said:Its 100% the case that the majority of homeschool parents think their kids are so smart that they are being held back being in a group setting or that they need sheltering from world. They spout out test scores and do apples to oranges comparisons to try and justify why traditional schooling is so terrible. I get that there are circumstances where it works better for some kids and that is fine.zooguy96 said:Gone Camping said:Random experiments led by the student, that weren't planned in the curriculum, happen in "real" schools?1939 said:Being completely serious here, this doesn't impress me. It's the exact type of thing that goes on every day in real schools.MasonB said:
Better day to day example:
He just finished his math lesson on his own and came in to tell me one of the questions asked him the best unit to measure the weight of a dollar bill.
I told him I think a five dollar bill weighs 5 times as much as a single dollar bill and he told me my hypothesis was crazy, listing the reasons why.
I told him to prove it.
Which led to the picture.
And now he is collecting data on 10 different dollar bills and drawing conclusions about whether their weight changes the longer they are in circulation.
We are discussing sample size, unknown variables, and measurement error.
It's his curiosity and interest that is leading him, so he is having fun doing it (and fun proving me wrong).
But don't worry, TeslaAg - we will sneak some cigarettes in the bathroom later and I'll teach him how to hide the evidence from his mom.
I'm gonna have to disagree.
Yeah, they don't. 99.9% of assignments are teacher-led, not student led.
The fact of the matter is that most schools provide a quality education as well as non-educational experiences that are just as good if not better than what you can provide through home schooling. Showing that your kid weighed a dollar bill is not some gotchya moment, that happens every day in schools all across America whether you have been brainwashed to believe it can't be true or not.
As with anything, the biggest factor in a child's development and educational success is parental involvement and socioeconomic status. Those that come from good households and/or money are the ones that are going to excel educationally. Unfortunately, public schools don't get to reject the bad kids and you see mass differences in educational outcomes amongst students within the same class. Because many of these kids from broken homes and don't put in any effort don't succeed people claim the schools are failing. If you can afford to have one parent stay home and put that much effort into your child's education, your kids will succeed in traditional school.
It should come as no surprise that the "good schools" are almost always in affluent communities and those in poor areas are often labeled as failing. A good case study here is rural districts that have mix of affluent and poor students with a diverse backgounds. The more affluent and often white kids succeed in school while the poor minorities don't. Does that mean it's a bad or failing school? Why are some students succeeding, going off to good colleges and having great careers while others are dropouts? Would your white affluent homeschooled kids succeed here? I bet they would.
I would love to see a long term study, and I'm sure they have been done, that compares home schooled vs. traditional schools students educational and life achievements controls the things I mentioned above. How does your average kid at A&M that was home schooled compare to a traditional schooled student at age 28? I'm sure all of you home school people are convinced that surely the home school kids are higher achievers, but I highly doubt it.
1939 said:Its 100% the case that the majority of homeschool parents think their kids are so smart that they are being held back being in a group setting or that they need sheltering from world. They spout out test scores and do apples to oranges comparisons to try and justify why traditional schooling is so terrible. I get that there are circumstances where it works better for some kids and that is fine.zooguy96 said:Gone Camping said:Random experiments led by the student, that weren't planned in the curriculum, happen in "real" schools?1939 said:Being completely serious here, this doesn't impress me. It's the exact type of thing that goes on every day in real schools.MasonB said:
Better day to day example:
He just finished his math lesson on his own and came in to tell me one of the questions asked him the best unit to measure the weight of a dollar bill.
I told him I think a five dollar bill weighs 5 times as much as a single dollar bill and he told me my hypothesis was crazy, listing the reasons why.
I told him to prove it.
Which led to the picture.
And now he is collecting data on 10 different dollar bills and drawing conclusions about whether their weight changes the longer they are in circulation.
We are discussing sample size, unknown variables, and measurement error.
It's his curiosity and interest that is leading him, so he is having fun doing it (and fun proving me wrong).
But don't worry, TeslaAg - we will sneak some cigarettes in the bathroom later and I'll teach him how to hide the evidence from his mom.
I'm gonna have to disagree.
Yeah, they don't. 99.9% of assignments are teacher-led, not student led.
The fact of the matter is that most schools provide a quality education as well as non-educational experiences that are just as good if not better than what you can provide through home schooling. Showing that your kid weighed a dollar bill is not some gotchya moment, that happens every day in schools all across America whether you have been brainwashed to believe it can't be true or not.
As with anything, the biggest factor in a child's development and educational success is parental involvement and socioeconomic status. Those that come from good households and/or money are the ones that are going to excel educationally. Unfortunately, public schools don't get to reject the bad kids and you see mass differences in educational outcomes amongst students within the same class. Because many of these kids from broken homes and don't put in any effort don't succeed people claim the schools are failing. If you can afford to have one parent stay home and put that much effort into your child's education, your kids will succeed in traditional school.
It should come as no surprise that the "good schools" are almost always in affluent communities and those in poor areas are often labeled as failing. A good case study here is rural districts that have mix of affluent and poor students with a diverse backgounds. The more affluent and often white kids succeed in school while the poor minorities don't. Does that mean it's a bad or failing school? Why are some students succeeding, going off to good colleges and having great careers while others are dropouts? Would your white affluent homeschooled kids succeed here? I bet they would.
I would love to see a long term study, and I'm sure they have been done, that compares home schooled vs. traditional schools students educational and life achievements controls the things I mentioned above. How does your average kid at A&M that was home schooled compare to a traditional schooled student at age 28? I'm sure all of you home school people are convinced that surely the home school kids are higher achievers, but I highly doubt it.
1939 said:
because that's the reality. Sure some teachers are better than others, but to act like a kids home life is just some minor indicator of student achievement is putting your head in the sand. It's not the only factor, but its the biggest one. I don't care if you're a damn good teacher, public school scores in South Dallas are not going to be better than Highland Park ISD.
Again, I'm not saying that home schooling doesn't or can't educate a child as good as a traditional school, or that there aren't some advantages. Homeschool parents don't seem to believe there is any scenario where a public school can provide a better or equal education and life experience than home schooling does, and they seem to want to ignore specifics regarding school demographics and claim all public schools are bad because some of them have low average standardized test scores.
It's actually kind of funny, most anti-public school people rail against standardized tests yet they use them to to prove to everyone why public schools are bad.
Well there you have it, there is no reasoning with you, you believe that homeschooling is better than traditional school in every aspect no matter the school and specifics of the child's situation. Nothing is going to change your mind.AGC said:1939 said:
because that's the reality. Sure some teachers are better than others, but to act like a kids home life is just some minor indicator of student achievement is putting your head in the sand. It's not the only factor, but its the biggest one. I don't care if you're a damn good teacher, public school scores in South Dallas are not going to be better than Highland Park ISD.
Again, I'm not saying that home schooling doesn't or can't educate a child as good as a traditional school, or that there aren't some advantages. Homeschool parents don't seem to believe there is any scenario where a public school can provide a better or equal education and life experience than home schooling does, and they seem to want to ignore specifics regarding school demographics and claim all public schools are bad because some of them have low average standardized test scores.
It's actually kind of funny, most anti-public school people rail against standardized tests yet they use them to to prove to everyone why public schools are bad.
They're right, though. There's a culture element to homeschooling that will never be replicated in public school. That ranges from technology to family life, to peer groups, to visiting historical sites and interests.
The comeback is always that they miss out on the upper 1% of educational possibilities. An average student with the family culture you prefer is still the best outcome. There's no winning argument. Public schools are not good culture setters and the responses such as, 'you have to learn to deal with all types of people', 'do you just want your daughters to be breeders', or whatever else there is aren't compelling. Good parents care about their children's outcomes beyond college and their 20s. It starts with family culture. None of the defenders here are the enabling screen handing type.
I and my wife went to public schools. My parents and some grandparents taught there. It's not an argument in a vacuum. We're at a private that overlaps more with homeschool or co-op/university than traditional private and I'd do homeschool before I did traditional private.
1939 said:Well there you have it, there is no reasoning with you, you believe that homeschooling is better than traditional school in every aspect no matter the school and specifics of the child's situation. Nothing is going to change your mind.AGC said:1939 said:
because that's the reality. Sure some teachers are better than others, but to act like a kids home life is just some minor indicator of student achievement is putting your head in the sand. It's not the only factor, but its the biggest one. I don't care if you're a damn good teacher, public school scores in South Dallas are not going to be better than Highland Park ISD.
Again, I'm not saying that home schooling doesn't or can't educate a child as good as a traditional school, or that there aren't some advantages. Homeschool parents don't seem to believe there is any scenario where a public school can provide a better or equal education and life experience than home schooling does, and they seem to want to ignore specifics regarding school demographics and claim all public schools are bad because some of them have low average standardized test scores.
It's actually kind of funny, most anti-public school people rail against standardized tests yet they use them to to prove to everyone why public schools are bad.
They're right, though. There's a culture element to homeschooling that will never be replicated in public school. That ranges from technology to family life, to peer groups, to visiting historical sites and interests.
The comeback is always that they miss out on the upper 1% of educational possibilities. An average student with the family culture you prefer is still the best outcome. There's no winning argument. Public schools are not good culture setters and the responses such as, 'you have to learn to deal with all types of people', 'do you just want your daughters to be breeders', or whatever else there is aren't compelling. Good parents care about their children's outcomes beyond college and their 20s. It starts with family culture. None of the defenders here are the enabling screen handing type.
I and my wife went to public schools. My parents and some grandparents taught there. It's not an argument in a vacuum. We're at a private that overlaps more with homeschool or co-op/university than traditional private and I'd do homeschool before I did traditional private.
1939 said:
I don't know why you are saying the product I offer. I don't work in education.
1939 said:
Not a great post. Many of the things you listed were not settled by any stretch.