Just in Case You Needed More Incentive to Homeschool…

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People choose to homeschool for a variety of reasons. I began homeschooling in the fall of 2012 when after a year in public kindergarten, it became apparent my intelligent but immature son was going to have problems. He did very well at home, as did my daughter and younger son.  

We lived in the Houston area when we began homeschooling, and most of the other homeschoolers we knew couldn’t afford private school. We knew a few people that homeschooled for religious reasons. (I have not found the stereotype of ultra-religious, sheltered homeschooled kids to be particularly accurate.) Living in Colorado, it’s often just more practical to homeschool in the more rural areas since the children might spend an hour or more on the bus each way. 

Due to COVID, the majority of us are homeschooling now anyway

Teachers provide remote education, but the real truth is that the overwhelming majority of kids need in-person supervision to get any actual work done. My oldest child was supposed to attend public high school this year, but it has been online. And he needed tech support from me the first few weeks. My other two are homeschooling, and I have been regularly babysitting a fourth child, a little girl whose mom is a single parent. 

Remote schooling for elementary-aged children does not work for many families. Children that age cannot be left alone for extended periods. Even if the teachers are on the screen six hours a day, a parent or babysitter needs to be in the house for safety purposes. 

Ultimately, parents are paying twice

We’re all either taking career hits to stay home or paying for childcare so we can work. Yet, we’re still paying property taxes so that teachers can collect their paychecks. Something needs to change.

People have come up with some interesting innovations. Some families have gotten together to form learning pods, hiring a teacher to handle small groups of kids. They’re re-creating the one-room schoolhouse. People seem pretty happy with them. Parents can focus on their jobs and kids receive an in-person education. This may be a great option for dual-career families with a moderately high-income level. 

However, many parents out there are not in that situation

There are a lot of single parents out there. In many lower-income households, both parents work and still have no extra money. Many people have to work outside the home. My single mom friend, whose child I babysit, can’t work from home, and she can not take her six-year-old to the warehouse where she works. 

Many parents believe homeschooling is not an option for them. Most of them don’t even know where to start. If you can read and do basic math, you can homeschool through elementary school. For lower-income parents, I would like to offer some food for thought.  

Elementary school-age children do not need more than one to two hours a day of directed instruction to become proficient in reading, writing, and arithmetic. Rather than spend the day trying to work from home, and supervise children learning online, set aside an hour first thing in the morning. During this hour, work intensively with the children. Then send them outside to play, or have them watch nature programs while you work. 

An extra 30 minutes to an hour around lunchtime would be good to reinforce what they learned in the morning. Then they can spend the afternoon pursuing their interests while you work. 

To homeschool three children, first, fifth, and seventh graders, I usually spend between three and four hours a day. However, I get to choose when those hours are, and I can get some of my more mindless chores done while homeschooling.

Children do amazingly well with one-on-one instruction

When you teach a child to read and write correctly, they learn far more quickly if you can correct them as they go. If you dedicate time to working through a reading and writing program with your child, you will be surprised at how well they do. Once your children become capable readers, they can do a lot more schoolwork with only minimal involvement on the part of the parents.  

A lot of great homeschooling programs exist. I use Susan Wise Bauer’s Well Trained Mind, and my sister uses Seton. I typically spend about $500 to $700 a year on school supplies. (Although I could have lowered that if I’d joined a co-op. Also, I know that Christian Home Educators of Colorado (CHEC) will sometimes assist in finding low-cost supplies for single-parent homeschoolers. I am willing to bet there are similar programs in other states.

Now, there are more reasons to consider homeschooling than ever

Recently the US Food and Drug Administration approved the following emergency vaccines (developed in less than a year.):

If you aren’t yet prepared for your child to be injected with this particular vaccine, homeschooling will buy you some time before it becomes mandated. It is extremely difficult in Colorado to get a vaccine exemption if you want your children to participate in anything. I’m not an anti-vaxxer in general. My kids have always gotten their shots, except for the flu shot. It is not particularly effective. For many years it has been less than 10%. 

Personally, I prefer to give it a good five to ten years, the standard development time, before considering my children or myself to receive the vaccine. 

In the meantime, our children need to receive an education

Homeschooling will also give you a chance to teach your children your values and your worldview. Between this year’s riots and the continually changing medical nonsense spouted, I want my children to know what’s going on. The schools in my area are teaching the “1619” project as history. I prefer my children to read the Founding Fathers themselves. And since we homeschool, I can make that happen.

This year has been unbelievably stressful. The crime has been terrifying. Watching my friends’ businesses tank has been so disheartening. I have only been able to function so far by attempting to think philosophically about everything. My children and I have spent the last few months reading through the ancient Greek classics. Homer, Euripides, and Thucydides did not expect everyone to be happy and prosperous all the time. My children and I have had many discussions about this, but again, because we homeschool, we can do that.

There is not always “next year” in the development of a child’s mind

The early years are precious, and the window to learn verbal skills is not open for long. I have teacher friends that are incredibly anti-lockdown because they are deeply concerned about children missing crucial time developing verbal skills. I keep hearing people saying that there’s always next year and younger people need to stop thinking only about themselves. 

We need to fix the school situation now. My feeling is the only way parents can make themselves heard is to withdraw from the school system whenever possible. Many parents have withdrawn their kids from public school. Some of those parents have former teachers calling them demanding to know what program they are using. Then the teachers try to convince the parents the program is inadequate. The more seasoned homeschoolers tell the new parents that this is illegal, and parents do not have to answer the teachers. 

Most parents are more capable than they think they are

I offer encouragement to people that want to homeschool, even if you think you aren’t qualified. Children need stability, which they cannot have when schools are open, then closed, then open two days a week, then closed again. Parents should consider taking matters into their own hands and providing that stability themselves.  

If you are interested in learning more, here is an excellent website with state-by-state regulations regarding homeschooling: https://hslda.org/legal

If you are already a seasoned homeschooler, keep your eyes open for people in your community considering making the switch and offer your support as much as possible. With all the new rules and mandates, I feel like I’m being swallowed alive by forces outside my control. I’m convinced the only way to fight back is to form support networks to help each other stay off the radar for as long as possible. 

If like-minded parents work together, we can help our children grow more educated and more resilient.

What are your concerns about your children and their education?

Have you withdrawn your kids from school or considered doing so? Do you believe you can’t homeschool your children, and why? Let us know in the comments below.

 

Picture of Joanna Miller

Joanna Miller

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  • I have a few random thoughts. I’m not a parent & this COVID1984 era is making me increasingly grateful for this fact. I’m nearly 50, and increasingly wonder WTF these kids are being taught today. I’ve yet to encounter a Millenial who has any knowledge of ENIAC-the world’s 1sst computer that was the size of a warehouse! You’d think these techno nerds would be interested in something like that. You should see the looks I get when I tell youngsters I have zero interest in ANY vaccines-COVID1984 or otherwise (I wasn’t an anti-vaxxer until I learned about DARPA & other scary things), because I have an Immune System. It’s as if they didn’t know we had 1!

    Lastly, something Orwell said, “the more you separate the child from the family the more control the state can have of their mind”, something to that effect has been reverberating through my mind as these lockdowns continue-I’m in CA. We know the Gov loves these lockdowns, but having kids away from schools, or the programing of the “STATE”, undermines the previous programming. I have to think on some level the Gov wants it’s “pupils” back in the classroom to better resume their PROGRAMMING. The state can’t have it both ways in this instance. Not without the DARPA/Microchip implant anyways! Thanks Daisy & all contributors I really look forward to my daily Organic Prepper NL content!

    • The public school system in the US teach out children the bare minimum and most of the content simply confuses them with commoncore standards and the majority of it teaches them to hate their own country and heritage by constantly teaching lessons about how terrible slavery was and why we as Americans should be shameful for what our terrible country has done in the past. Most of the content is filled with subversive propaganda that produces adults who constantly feel guilty for things which happened in the past and the result now shines brightly in our degrading society. Home school is the best solution.

  • I say, let the home education begin!!!
    Best thing I ever did for my sons! And I’ve been advocating for public education revamping for years since its mostly crap.
    Perhaps homeschooling will rise up and become the springboard for the change our country needs!!! We can wager much leverage in many areas with this as a grassroots foundation. I am a champion of homeschooling. Thanks Daisy! As always great articles and ideas and insights for answers we need.

  • I would not let the warmongering corrupt corporatist state educate my kids.

    We have homeschooled our four kids since summer 2016, and I wish we could’ve started earlier. Our youngest two have never stepped foot in a public school and I’m so glad about that.

    Our older two never learned basic math despite getting through 6th and 4th grades respectively, and I’ve been able to teach them. They were confused by Common Core (which is designed to confuse, not to teach anything).

    One of the final straws that made us finally homeschool was when Barack Obama insisted on forcing high schools to allow boys into girls’ locker rooms who are biologically male but identify as female.

    Leftists have a religion that says they must force it upon everyone else or kill those who resist, just like jihadists. No freedom can be allowed whatsoever to disagree or do anything differently than how they demand.

    And neither major party in the USA cares at all that the federal government is not supposed to have anything to do with education per the Constitution. That document has proven mostly ineffective at stopping Marxism – which has many evil goals, just one of which is to have the state educate children and remove that freedom from families and parents.

  • These lines resonated with me: “With all the new rules and mandates, I feel like I’m being swallowed alive by forces outside my control. I’m convinced the only way to fight back is to form support networks to help each other stay off the radar for as long as possible.” Yes, yes, and yes.

    We homeschooled K-12 and my children are now in college, so while I don’t have any students at home right now, I have been trying to help other new homeschooling parents whenever I can. I strongly recommend parents focus on the 3Rs (Reading, writing, and arithmetic) from K-8th grade. Don’t worry about too much else. If your student likes science or history or geography, great, let them study it on their own or do some of it in your homeschool, but don’t feel as though you MUST cover every other subject. A student who can read, write, and compute well will be well-prepared for any academic pursuit.

    My only caveat is for those parents of high schoolers. If you choose to homeschool, be prepared to homeschool through graduation because public schools do NOT need to accept credit for work done at home toward a diploma which means your student may end up having to repeat a year’s worth of work. Homeschooling through high school is wonderful, but you need to be prepared and think ahead to what your student plans to do post high school (e.g., college or work) and plan accordingly.

  • This is an excellent article, and I wholeheartedly agree. I don’t have small children now, and am thankful. I wanted to homeschool my child, but being a single mom working in a factory, I did not. I regret it immensely. Indoctrination is real, and crazy. I am glad people are pulling out of the public school system!!

  • Homeschooling was an eye opener. My daughter didn’t have the basic skills and was lost as she has ASD and is often quiet or hides at school. I and her speech therapist addressed dyslexia and the teacher never responded, and ingored when she was being bullied. I have removed her from school . I am trying to find the right fit for her , we will try one more school before I homeschool. As a solo mum. I need to finish a teaching placement. After that time I’ll hopefully be able to work from home if she needs me too. School is not how I remember it.

    • Best of luck to you! There are other single parent homeschoolers out there, it is really hard, but worthwhile. I hope you find a good fit for your daughter.

  • Here are some statements made by school psychologist organizations of which I am a member (full disclosure). When considering home schooling, remember these are school staff members who are generally highly respected and trusted with the mental health care and educational programming needs of your children. Just about every school has one or at least has access to one on an as need basis.

    Legislative priorities of the AASP
    https://www.aasp-az.org/resources/Documents/AASP%20Legislative%20Priorities%202021.pdf

    NASP statement on anti-racism
    https://www.aasp-az.org/resources/Documents/AASP%20Legislative%20Priorities%202021.pdf

    NASP statement on gender in schools
    file:///C:/Users/stafjim/AppData/Local/Temp/LGBTQ_Youth-1.pdf

    NASP legislative priorities
    https://www.nasponline.org/research-and-policy/policy-priorities/nasp-policy-platform

    Take care

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