Saturday, January 5, 2013

Decision Made: Homeschooling Next Year

We finally decided. We are going to do it. Next year, I'm going to homeschool the children. No Kindergarten registration for us.


Why homeschool?


Do you know that feeling you get when you find the perfect gift and you just know it is the right one? How about when you're five minutes into a conversation with a person you just met and you know they're going to become a good friend? Think about redecorating a room and finding just the right color for the walls - a color you know will make you happy every time you enter the room. My husband and I have a shorthand phrase we use for that feeling of finding a perfect fit. We say, "It speaks to us."

That is how I feel about the idea of homeschooling. It speaks to me. It calls to me. It just feels right. At a fundamental level, I just know I want to do it. I need to do it. I would regret it if I didn't at least try it.

I have two inquisitive, enthusiastic, bright, cheerful, interactive preschool-aged children. They are only a little over a year apart in age, get along extremely well, and genuinely enjoy each other's company. I am certified to teach Pre-K through 8th grade and I am a certified Speech-Language Pathologist. Because we knew I wanted to stay home with the children when they were babies, we bought our house and structured our budget with a single income in mind. I have also fallen into personally rewarding and professionally stimulating side work managing and writing this blog and creating therapy materials here from home. It is as if the stars are aligning in favor of homeschooling.

I can be more analytical about it. There are many specific, concrete reasons I like the idea of teaching my children at home: (in no particular order)
  1. Flexibility: I get to set our daily, weekly, monthly, and annual schedule. If it isn't working, we can try something new. As the children grow and their rhythms and needs change, our schedule can change with them. We can visit family as we desire within seasons and to take advantage of special events (like weddings) without worrying about missing school.
  2. Customization: I can teach to the skills and learning styles of my children. If Michael is ready to do math at a two lesson per day pace, but needs to take handwriting slowly we can do that. If he's getting frustrated and self-critical about a certain skill we can take a break altogether and revisit it in 6-8 weeks when a little more maturity, fine-motor, and cognitive skills have kicked in. We can easily take a topic and do a curriculum lesson with it, an art project, watch a related television program, look up related resources online, take a "field trip" to observe it in "real-life", etc. If they particularly like a topic, we can linger on it and study it in-depth spending a couple of extra weeks on it.
  3. Efficiency: Working in small groups eliminates the time necessary in large group management. We don't have to wait for lines to form. We don't have to walk to another room and wait for 25 children to get settled to begin a new lesson. We are only dealing with behavior management for two children (and hopefully not too much of that). Behavior and large-group management can eat up a lot of instruction time in schools. Inattention and distraction during instructional time eat up more. At home, we don't lose the get ready for school time, the travel to and from school time, the communicate effectively with the teacher time, or the school administration tasks(filling out forms, records, etc.) time necessary in traditional schooling. We don't have to do homework that is too hard or too easy for the children (which is inevitable in schools because typically assignments are assigned to a whole class). I can cover content in four hours here at home that would take twice that in a school setting.
  4. Avoiding the Testing: The current climate in schools involves a heavy emphasis on accountability and testing. Without going into this rather controversial topic, let's just say that I look forward to not having days and days of their instructional time taken up with learning how to take standardized tests and then taking those tests.
  5. Maintaining and Strengthening Family Bonds: Family is lifelong. Parents and siblings are with you as children, adolescents, young adults, when you become parents yourselves, and beyond. You lean on family, laugh with family, learn with family, and give love and companionship to family through your entire lifespan. Strong bonds with family are a gift to be treasured. I feel like keeping my children at home will provide a unique opportunity to maintain and strengthen the strong bonds we've already formed through the transition from early-childhood to childhood.
  6. Breadth: Homeschooling can encompass the traditional subjects taught in school. I am looking forward to reading, writing, math, science, social studies, and history (core subjects) as well as the enrichment areas such as art, music, and physical education (extra-curriculars) typically offered in the schools. However, teaching at home allows me to also focus on non-traditional subjects as part of our homeschooling. I want to teach the children age-appropriate information about nutrition, meal-planning, and cooking. I want to teach them about all of the tasks necessary to keeping a household running. I want to teach fundamental personal finance skills, again, age-appropriately. I want to think of ways to fold development of some core character traits into our homeschooling. Things like persistence and tenacity, kindness and generosity, conflict resolution, attention to detail, and pride in a job well done are so important.
  7. School/Life Balance: Even now, when the children have a school day that is only 2.5 hours long, we are prevented from doing other things from when we wake up all the way through 11:30 am when I get home from picking them up from school. Once they are in school for a full day, they would not be home until more like 3-4pm. Then we would need to do dinner, homework, and a bath. Where, in that schedule, is there substantive, uninterrupted time for play, spending time with family, music or dance lessons, or just quiet moments to read or snuggle with a family pet?
  8. Individualism/Avoiding Peer Pressure: Right from the beginning, children are such unique individuals - each so different from the other. I observed it in early childhood classrooms, while doing speech therapy, and in my own two, very different from each other, children. As they get older, both from my own experience growing up and from my observations of children as they reach upper-grade school and middle school, there is such pressure to conform and not stand out as different or noticeable in any way. In my opinion, children in large-group settings offer opportunities for both positive and negative socialization experiences. I believe homeschooling offers the opportunity to avoid the negative experiences so common in traditional schooling (peer-pressure to conform, teasing, learning negative behaviors, etc.) while still offering the opportunity through networking with other families in our neighborhood and in the homeschooling community to have positive and meaningful social relationships.
  9. Protecting Childhood: Just as I was not worried that my children would still be waking me up 4 times a night when they are in high school, and I was not worried that they will still be potty-training in high school, I am also not worried that they will be socially immature in high school. I think children naturally, and due to environmental factors (like the television programs they watch, or language they hear at home), mature at different rates. In a classroom setting, children often gravitate towards the children that are doing something slightly taboo - using words that are "grown-up" words, or mimicking "grown-up behavior. It is natural that in a large-group setting the entire group will move along the scale from innocent childhood to "experienced" teenager more quickly than children who aren't. I feel like keeping my children at home will allow them to be children a little longer and I believe that is a good thing. They'll grow up soon enough. I want to let them enjoy the simplicity and innocence of just being their age as long as possible.

These are just my own, deeply personal reasons for homeschooling. My feelings on these issues are just that - my feelings. They are right for my life and my family. I do not believe that what is right, and possible, for my family should necessarily be right for anyone else's family. I feel like it is important to say that explicitly because my decision to homeschool in no way implies that I believe people who send their children to school are making a lesser decision in any way.

There are two main disadvantages for me. First, I am wholly, completely, and fundamentally an introvert. I have great interpersonal skills, love my children wholeheartedly, and thoroughly enjoy teaching; however, I need a not-insignificant amount of quiet recharge time during the day to stay happy and fully functional. I will have to find a way to build that quiet recharge time into our daily and weekly routines in order to make this work.

Second, I am choosing a course, that if it goes well, will last many wonderful years - years that I will be unable to return to working at my chosen profession outside of the home. I love doing therapy with children. While I also love working on the blog and helping parents and therapists with my words and materials, it isn't the same as working directly with children who need me. I will miss that. However, I hope that once we get into the swing of homeschooling and the children get a little older and more independent, that I may be able to pick up some private clients. Doing even a little therapy would satisfy my desire to work directly with children (other than my own) in a professional capacity and keep my skills fresh at the same time.

Wow. Somehow this has turned into a huge post. If you're still reading down here at the bottom, I'll assume it is because you found following along with my thoughts at least somewhat interesting. I find writing things out to be helpful in organizing and clarifying my own thoughts. I also wanted to share it with all of you because you'll probably be reading more posts on homeschooling over the coming days and months and at least now you'll know why.

Optional supplementary reading: A dad explains one reason his family decided to homeschool their daughter. It is beautifully and eloquently written.

5 comments:

  1. Hello Dala,
    I love how you have put into words some very important reasons you are homeschooling. I too am a Speech Language Pathologist. My children are a bit older. Twin girls who are 13 and a 9 year old boy. Fortunately, we did not have any difficulties with Speech and Language Development. I was a full time stay at home mom for about 5 years and then began working part time again. I cherish those years homeschooling my children. Our elementary school has some of the best and most compassionate teachers around. Yet, I have regrets of not following my intellectual and intuitive feelings that some things were not right. One of my daughters struggled with transitions, sensory difficulties and behavior. She has a congenital radial-ulnar dislocation and a documented visual impairment that the public schools would not recognize because she had one good eye. There was not one professional in this area that would support what I knew about physical impairments and the impact they have on behavior. I did get plenty of perscriptions though to amend her behavior! (So wrong when core problem is not addressed!) There are so many other parts to this story, but the short story is that I finally at the end of 6th grade withdrew her from the brick and mortar school and enrolled her in an online school until I could find a suitable placement for her. I have her off of all medications. You are right on target about the difficulties that are present for older students and the influences they are surrounded by. Some students can continue to develop in the present system, like my other daughter (twin). I do think though that for more and more students, the large class sizes, the lack of support for teachers, the lack of appropriate support for students etc., is just too difficult to expect a positive development. I applaud you for the decisions your family has made and for you putting your thoughts out to the public. "I am this close" to starting a blog of my own!:)

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  2. Your decision is so clearly based on love for your children. I home-schooled my son for similar reasons. Due to birthdate cut-off dates at that time, my son would have begun kindergarten when he was still four years old. He was simply not ready for kindergarten. Whether you call it immaturity or innocence, he would have been dumbfounded by the bullying I remember in my kindergarten class. Sure, we could have waited a year, and sent him to kindergarten when he was five, but even at five he was still very innocent, and broke into tears at even a disapproving word. Some will say he needed to go to school in order to toughen up. I disagree. He had a right to have his innocence protected.
    Because his desire to please was so strong, I didn't need to resort to the types of harsh punishments that often set up hostile relationships between parents and children. We didn't have battles of wills, instead, if he disagreed with me, he learned to present logical arguments, and because we were not fighting, it was easy for me to listen to his arguments, and concede when he made a good point. I strongly believe that patterns of behavior set up by school can make relationships between parents and children more difficult, as children learn inappropriate ways of getting what they want from peers (sneaking, lying, tantruming, defiance) This doesn't mean that I think school is always bad, a parent does need to way the costs and benefits of the decision.
    When my son did enter school in fourth grade, he was ready. He could handle rebuke without breakdown, he could effectively stand up for himself with peers, and even with adults. He went to school with confidence, and became somewhat of a leader in class.
    Anyway, I hadn't meant to turn this comment into a rant about my own son, I simply want to offer support in a decision that will probably be met with lack of understanding by some. You are going against the norm, but the norm isn't always best. You have the ability to analyze your children's needs, and consider both positive and negative impact of your decision on your children. Decisions like this aren't without sacrifice, as you noted in your blog, but when the benefits are greater than the sacrifice, it is admirable that you go against tradition to do what is best for your family.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous SLP here again! Were there blogs like this 10 years ago? If there were, I really missed out! Why do we have to say these things anonymously? I think many moms have these intuitions and we somehow feel bullied when we try to communicate these things in our community. To the second anonymous reply, thank you too for what I think is some really smart parenting and observations about what is really going on in school sometimes. I have to say that after the last two years of IEPS, I feel really damaged self-esteem wise. I have always respected other professionals and their opinions in their areas of expertise. I became very confused when I was met with disrespect as a mother and an SLP in the meetings. I just really did not know how bad the lack of professionalism could get in our public schools. There are some really great teachers, specialists and administrators out there in the world. I have worked in quite a few schools as SLP from California to Virginia and in the middle too. I worked hard for the kids and made a lot of observations in the schools about teachers, specialists and administrative attitudes. Again, there are some wonderful teachers out there. The problem is that when there is a teacher/specialist/administrator in a school that is a bully(disrespectful, inflexible, close-minded and ignorant) it can taint a portion of the rest of the staff. This is no place for citizen of the future!
      This is so theraputic to me! Sorry, I have gotten way off of Apraxia! I'm pretty new to getting involved in blogging. I ended up here the other day because a previous EI client of mine contacted me to work with her child again privately after her son was diagnosed with Apraxia from a specialized clinic. Their current public school SLP got snippy when told about it and told the family the diagnosis was a blanket term and it would not change therapy techniques! Arrgh! None of us are perfect, but we can do better than this!
      So, thank you everyone for expressing opinions that we may get bullied for. Maybe one day , we will all be able to find each other in our communities and stand up and make some changes for the better. Actually, I think it is already happening in the growing homeschool communities around the country.
      Looking forward to hearing about your progress Dala!

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  3. I was able to overcome senile dementia via a complete naturopathic process.

    About two years ago, when I was 56, I started feeling foggy and had occasional memory lapses. My wife, Mary, started to notice it, too, but I also have hearing issues so she thought that was the problem. My memory problems worsened very gradually over the years, and we lived with it, compensating as needed. I became less social. After some months thereafter, it got to the point where we couldn’t keep making excuses or ignoring it. I had gone from doing our grocery shopping without a list to going with a list, to having the list but not buying what was on it.

    Mary went online to do some research, and it was during this process we had been fortunate enough to come across Dr. Utu Herbal Cure: an African herbalist and witch doctor whose professional works had majored on the eradication of certain viral conditions, especially dementia, ( improving the memory capacity positively), via a traditional, naturopathic process and distinguished diet plan. It was by the administration of this herbal specialist that I had been able to improve my condition for better. So to say, the encounter with the above-mentioned herbal practitioner was the first time we ever heard there was something that possibly can be done to improve my memory functionality.

    By the existence of such an encounter, I was able to learn of the new approach by which this herbalist successfully treated dementia conditions, which included a distinguished herbal therapy and lifestyle changes of which I had undergone to a tremendous, positive effect.
    It was after the completion of the herbal therapy I had started to experience a great deal of cognitive improvement when it came to rational decision making.

    In brief, I was able to go through the dreadful hollows of senile dementia without any further hazardous damage to my health condition, and within a short period. Had it not been for the support of my wife, of whom had encouraged me to undergo the above-mentioned therapy and that of the herbal practitioner of whom now happens to be benefactor - I would have been long exposed to the further perils of this condition and of which had been apt to result to a calamitous end.

    I would also wish for the same positiveness upon patients who may happen to be suffering from this debilitating disease, and would warmly implore them to find a confidant like this herbal specialist with whose professional services I was able to attain a divine recovery.

    For further information concerning this African traditional solution for Alzheimer's illness; feel free to contact Dr. Utu directly via email: drutuherbalcure@gmail.com

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  4. Hi, there. I am Tom Neil and I wish to describe how life had been for my younger brother living with schizophrenia and how he had been permanently able to overcome this debilitating disease via a naturopathic, herbal method.

    Maicon - my kid brother was twenty years old when he was brought to the emergency room by the campus police of the college from which he had been suspended several months ago. A professor had called and reported that he had walked into his classroom, accused him of taking his tuition money, and refused to leave.

    Although he had much academic accomplishment as a teenager, his behavior had become increasingly odd during the past year. He quit seeing his friends and no longer looked like to care about his appearance or social quests. He began wearing the same clothes each day and seldom bathed. He lived with several family members but rarely spoke to any of them. When he did talk to them, he said he had found clues that his college was just a front for an organized crime operation. He had been suspended from college because of missing many classes. My sister said that she had often seen him mumbling quietly to himself and at times he seemed to be talking to people who were not there. He would emerge from my room and ask my family to be quiet even when they were not making any noise.

    My father and sister told the staff that Maicon's great-grandmother had had a serious illness and had lived for 30 years in a state hospital, which they believed was a mental hospital. Our mother left the family when Maicon was very young. She has been out of touch with us, and they thought she might have been treated for mental health problems.

    Maicon agreed to sign himself into the psychiatric unit for treatment. The whole family except I had agreed to have Maicon transferred to a mental asylum. I knew inwardly there was still some plausible means by which my kid brother could overcome this condition. I knew botanical means of treatment will be more favorable than any other type of treatment, and as such, I had taken a keen interest in the research of naturopathic alternative measures suitable for the treatment of schizophrenia. I had pleaded for some little patience from the family in the delay of the transfer, I was looking forward to proving a point to the entire family, of a positive botanical remedy for this condition.

    It was during my ceaseless search on the internet I had been fortunate enough to come across Dr. Utu Herbal Cure: an African herbalist and witch doctor whose professional works had majored on the eradication of certain viral conditions, especially schizophrenia, ( improving the memory capacity positively), via a traditional, naturopathic process and distinguished diet plan. It was by the administration of this herbal specialist that my brother had been able to improve his condition for better.

    Before the naturopathic remedy - Maicon's story had reflected a common case, in which a high-functioning young adult goes through a major decline in day-to-day skills. Although family and friends may feel this is a loss of the person they knew, the illness can be treated and a good outcome is possible.

    My brother Maicon is just like many other patients out there suffering from this disease. Although he was able to overcome this condition via a naturopathic herbal remedy administered by this African herbal physician and saved completely thus, rekindling the lost joy which had been experienced by the family members.

    I wish to use this opportunity to reach across to anyone who may happen to be diagnosed with this disastrous condition to spread the hope of an everlasting herbal remedy that is capable of imposing a permanent end to this disease.

    For more information concerning this naturopathic herbal remedy, feel free to contact this African herbal practitioner via email:
    drutuherbalcure@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete