Ashley Kees
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2005
- Messages
- 697
OK...here's my situation. DS is 10. We have him in a private school (he's been there since age 3) and we're staring middle school in the face.
His school is unique as they do a lot of outward bound curriculum and that's starting to become a HUGE problem for us as DS's asthma has gotten substantially worse over the past 2 years. I can't see breaking his spirit and forcing him to sit in a public school classroom for the next 3 years with 1 field trip (maybe) per year when he's used to a experiential form of education (with field trips at a whim!). At the same time...because of his asthma, I'm scared to death to have him gone camping and backpacking for a week or two at a stretch roughing it with no electricity and being several hours away from home and medical help! I've looked at other private schools in the area and I just don't like them....reputation for most of them is either a) kids in school all day and then 4+ hours of homework per nightOR b) extraordinarily snobby with tuition at $22,000+ per year
!
I had a long conversation with a friend of mine who homeschools her 2 kids WHILE she works full time (her parents are VERY supportive and help her during the days) and she assures me that I can do it too. Quitting my job is NOT an option...where I work, my DS will have free college tuition or 1/2 of my University's tuition to use at ANY other accredited institution in the world! Yeah...no quitting there!
DS has always been a self-directed learner. Socially, he's very much an extrovert and we've addressed to his satisfaction how we will keep him in touch with his friends and help him expand his social circle through enrichment activities (art, drama, foreign language, PE, etc.).
Hubby is very supportive and so are grandparents. So, what are my worries...well (and please forgive me for saying this...I mean no harm or insult to anyone and I apologize for the judgementalism) I always thought that homeschooled kids were from "Christian Fundamentalist" homes and that's just not us! I honestly don't want a Christian focused curriculum and was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. Also, I'm worried about transition to high school. Have any of you ever faced the "judgement" of teachers/administrators when your child transitions to high school? How were you able to substantiate that your child was achieving grade level expectations?
Sorry, I never thought I would lean toward this and am surprising myself for even considering it. But the options seem so limitless that I'm kicking myself for judging others who have/are homeschooling and for never having a more open mind.
Hmmm...and I thought I was progressive. Ah well....as you can see this is very much a new process for me and I'd sincerely appreciate hearing why others have selected this option, how your children have benefitted and how they have also maybe "lost" somethings in the eyes of others.
I appreciate your patience and again (kicking self here) apologize for my previous attitude. Let's just say that this mom has A LOT to learn!
K
Hi Tink. First off, this...

I can help some. Let me tell you my story...
When DD5 was born, we started looking at private schools for her. We grew up in this town ourselves, and went through the public school system, no way are we sending our kids there. Private schools tended to be A) too expensive, B) too snobby, C) too religious, or D) all of the above. We decided by her first birthday that we would homeschool. She is Kindergarten aged now, her sister is 4 and her brother is 1. The two girls are homeschooled, and we LOVE it! I understand our situations are different, you are facing pulling DS out of school and a change of lifestyle for him as well as you, my babies know no different. But what I can help with is secular homeschool materials.
We are pretty religious, but we make it a point to only use secular educational materials. Why? That's what we learned with, and that's what we are comfortable using. You MUST be comfortable with the curriculum you use, period. Get online and find homeschool coalitions in your area, and find out when they do their curriculum fairs, then make sure you go. Out here, every publisher of homeschool materials within a 500 mile radius shows up, it's insane. Luckily, if you are looking for secualr materials, it cuts the search down A LOT! Take a peek at them, get a feel for them.
I don't know where you live, but here in Texas, we are VERY homeschool friendly. So much so that Texas Tech University and University of Texas have online K-12 available if you so choose. You can do the whole thing from home, online, on your own time (more or less) and everything is graded and the curriculum set by a licensed Texas teacher. At Tech it's called the Texas Tech U Independent School District, and at graduation they even recieve an official TTUISD high school diploma. I don't use them, BUT, I went on their website and took a look at the book requirements for the grades and classes I was interested in, and used that as a jumping off point. Because it is essentially a public school, they are only allowed to use secular materials.
Mardel is a Christian bookstore, but if there is one in your area, they carry some secular curriculums, like Saxon Math (which is the math curriculum used by TTUISD). They also have an excellent selection of school things like math manipulatives, science equipment (microscopes, slides, etc.) and anything else you find in a regular classroom. They also are online at www.Mardel.com (no, I don't work there, just like them a lot).
Type in "secular homeschool" on Yahoo groups and see if you can find one n your area, and start asking questions. They are great support if you need it.
Finally, ask your son what he feels about it. Let him guide you, he'll be the best judge (at his age) of what curriculums will help him learn.
If you get lip from someone about how homeschooling is bad (and you will, trust me) refer them to this...
http://www.nhen.org/dads/default.asp?id=383
and then hop on here and vent. We have all been through it.
As far as transitioning back into High School, it is possible to homeschool through high school, almost every college in America (including Ivy League) accepts homeschoolers, some even seek them out now. If you want to send him back, he may have to take a placement test, but homeschooled kids are SMART so that shouldn't be a problem. Keep excellent records of what he does, curriculum and activity-wise and you may not even need a placement test.
Good luck!
