To homeschool or not?
Any advice about how to start and what curriculum to purchase would be appreciated .
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The things you can be doing with your children now are things like reading Bible stories and other books, doing puzzles, drawing pictures, nature walks, nature journals (with you doing the writing for now), simple kitchen science, math with cheerios or other inexpensive manipulatives, and other simple things like that. I can’t imagine why anyone would purchase a curriculum for Kindergarten or Preschool, when the most important things at that age are the things a good mom is going to teach her child anyway (like the love of books, and the love of learning for its own sake, and the intrinsic reward that comes from figuring stuff out on their own!).
Also, there are as many ways to homeschool as there are homeschoolers, and you have plenty of time (like as in years and years) to find the ways that fit you and each one of your individual children.
As to your fear of “getting it all done,” first of all, may I please be the first (and certainly not the last) to tell you that no homeschool mom “gets it all done,” and anyone who says they do is lying! Also, with regard to the actual time you need to put in, it will, of course, vary depending on what you’re doing with your children, but keep in mind that a homeschool family can most often get done from around 9-12 what it takes public schools from around 8-4 to accomplish. With that in mind, what would a half-day Kindergarten program really take in terms of actual time spent?
I have three children, age 10, 6 and 4, and I run two small businesses from home, so I don’t have a spare minute. I am not organized, nor am I supermom. What I do have, though, is such a strong love for my children that I am not willing to allow the State to raise them. The other, and most important thing I have, is the power of prayer. Use it, and He will help you daily, hourly and minute by minute.
I hope this was helpful.
Regarding affordable curriculum, Christian Liberty Press has some very good curriculum for the price. Also, you don’t have to order everything for a particular grade; you can order what you need. The link is below:
http://ebiz.netopia.com/clpress
Also, you don’t have to buy a curriculum. Most people I know don’t buy a full curriculum, just things here and there.
Getting started is the most difficult part. Preparing a lesson plan for 3 kids is not overwhelming once you understand what is required.
The amazing part to home schooling is how little time it actually takes. One-on-one, you can teach much more than what your children will learn in publc school. You also will find you do not need to spend all the time from 8am-3pm teaching. You will cover the lesson plans in a fraction of the time.
If there is a subject you are not especially fond of teaching. Another home schooler might be willing to tutor your children in exchange for you tutoring theirs.
You need to find someone already home schooling to show you the ropes. Your church is a great resource.
Your spouse needs to be active in their education as well. Make some lessons taught when everyone is home together.
This is the stuff I use they also have a lot of support and do not let you hang.
I understand that it can often be overwhelming since there is so much available.
Your work of an hour a day will have no bearing on you being able to home school your children.
Curriculum’s can be very expensive when you buy a complete set.
Remember that often these were originally developed for private Christian schools, and therefore have a very prescriptive schedule.
True home schooling gives you the freedom to set you own schedule, and adjust it to fit your familys’ schedule, that’s why these “school” schedules should only be used as a guide not gospel.
We take a very relaxed and unschooling type approach; this gives us a lot of flexibility, and it is important to remember that you can accomplish in about two hours a day at home what would take an average of 5 to 6 hours in a regular school setting.
That gives you a lot of time to do whatever your family would like to do.
http://www.unschooling.com/
We use Christian Liberty Press as our basic foundation, but we do not follow their whole schedule, or buy a complete curriculum; although by now we probably own most of their books. ^_^
They do get our vote for solid academics, and affordability.
If you’d rather choose to have their Academy do the paper work for you, and have on line support they provide that service, as well as testing.
http://ebiz.netopia.com/clpress/
http://www.homeschools.org/
Depending on the ages of the children there are so many free web sites that provide all kinds of great educational games, and printable work sheets, you can almost home school for free.
One of these web sites is http://www.enchantedlearning.com/
A large list of these web site that I have posted several time can be found at this link;
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AiA6OXFILBX9B22t5qCHz9zAxQt.;_ylv=3?qid=20070912064314AALDC9M
Good Luck.
First of all, you don’t really need to buy one of the pre-packaged curriculums!! Take a look at
http://www.cindyrushton.com and
http://www.donnayoung.org
Then take a deep breath!!
First find out what the minimum paperwork requirements are for your state. You can find that if you go to http://homeschooling.gomilpitas.com/
You shouldn’t need the hundreds to thousands of dollars for the pre-packaged curriculums!! There should be educational material stores near you. For me, they are 30 – 50 miles away, but I go every so often anyway! When you go, ask if you can sign up for a teacher discount card if you are a homeschooler. In most you can. Some you need the state form showing that you are a homeschooler, others, just your say-so is good enough.
There are so many books out there, not to mention the LIBRARY!! you don’t really need textbooks for at LEAST the first 3 years of homeschool. The library children’s section should have everything you need as far as books. You should be able to find workbooks at Wal-Mart or Office Max for the early years. I don’t recommend that that is all you use, but it does cover the basics and then you can make up your own or get worksheets off of http://www.edhelper.com or http://www.enchantedlearning.com for math and science.
One or 2 good science experiment books and you should be set. If you want to get a good workbook for math, phonics, spelling, reading, and geography (they may have more, but these I’m sure of!) Spectrum workbooks by McGraw-Hill are available in most teacher/homeschool supply stores at about $10 or less per book. Each book covers one class for one grade. They are no-nonsense books that cover the basics.
Also look at Christian Light Education books. They are from the mennonite tradition, so some of the teaching doesn’t apply to me (I’m not mennonite, but I am Christian). They have books on every subject. They seem pretty cheap, too. I get their things from http://www.anabaptistbooks.com/ They are very helpful and honest.
I also went to http://www.rainbowresource.com and requested a free catalog. WOW!!! It is thick!! When I ordered from them, I got my package REALLY fast!! Their catalog is very helpful. It goes into detail on many of the things they sell, so you can find the best fit for your family.
JOIN YAHOO GROUPS for homeschoolers!
Find a local homeschool group.
Hope all this helps and I didn’t bore you!!
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