
Today, I got an e-mail from this subscription and thought I'd check it out again. It's been a while for me. After some rather unpleasant happenings, I was scared
. Honestly, quite scared of posting again.
. When I discovered this thread, I was way thankful. Me thanking God!
Today, I got an e-mail from this subscription and thought I'd check it out again. It's been a while for me. After some rather unpleasant happenings, I was scared
. Honestly, quite scared of posting again.
I'm glad I came back, though. When I discovered this thread, I was way thankful. Me thanking God!
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My family's lives had been turned upside down by "Katrina" and making an abrupt and untimely move up North, we had lost our homeschool support network. It was reassuring and comforting to hear the thoughts of others who have made the decision to homeschool, unschool or whatever one chooses to call it. We are still in the rebuilding mode, but we have made many powerful strides and decisions to help our family appreciate the meaning of the word "home".
We are currently homeschooling 4. We wouldn't change our minds about our decision for the world.
I'm sorry about everything that has happened to your family. Hopefully you are on your way back to normal. Homeschooling is a blessing for us as well. And "home" is a place to be cherished. I am in my 16th year of homeschooling and still have 10 more to go.


graygables--I feel for you. Men can be such different creatures sometimes. Honestly it sounds to me like your DH might be depresed. Was his job loss expected, hard to take or what was the deal there? I know when my DH was laid off for sometime he was very hard to deal with and I had days when I wondered why I was staying with him. Good luck with it!
I just don't get how someone who is SO "Pleasantville" can NOT go out and look for work.
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douglisa..... With out knowing more its hard to say, but my first reaction is that your DS just lacks the maturity to sit through 7.5 hrs of school, a long boring scout meeting etc.
Some of the answers on the thread you started just have me shaking my head. Your DS doesn't have to "conform" at age 7 to grow into a well adjusted "socialized" (I hate that word LOL) adult.
Slow and easy wins the race IMHO. Pushing when they aren't ready just leads to them hating school, social situations, life in general etc.
VENT WARNING!![]()
I'm about ready to send them to public school. If it weren't for the fact that we travel so much, I probably would. Here's the situation...I've started back to school for my Master's degree. Hubby hasn't worked since Thanksgiving and doesn't look like he's going to anytime soon. I'm also self-employed and have 22 shows to do this year, so my getting a "real job" isn't happening, either. I've been working my hiney off, sleeping about 4 hours a night. I have my schoolwork to do, housework, cooking, shopping, run my business (including hand-dying shirts), phone calls, any type of business-related work, run DDs to lessons, I coordinate an American Girls Friendship Club within our homeschool group, plus trying to homeschool DDs. Hubby takes out the trash. Seriously. I've been having him do more and more as far as housework/cooking, but he GRIPES and complains at every step. He's also a total grouch dealing with the kids.
They are now 33 lessons (6 days) behind in their schoolwork (we use Switched On Schoolhouse), a lot of which has happened b/c I left him in charge of it last week when I had a show to do. I simply cannot do it all anymore, it's killing me. My stomach is a wreck from the stress of what I have to do combined with the lack of income. I turned off the internet and told them NO MORE until they get caught up. What do I find this afternoon??? Hubby, sitting at HIS computer letting them watch him play Webkinz.![]()
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How on earth do I get him more involved? (is it possible?) He is SO mid-century and thinks that it's all "woman's work", but HE won't go get a job so I don't have to work so hard. I simply do not have the time to hover over DDs to make sure they are getting it all done and I don't think there is anything wrong with him taking some responsibility. They are HIS kids, too, and HE was more adamant about homeschooling than I was.
Even if you don't have advice, I'd sure appreciate some pixies.
I received the following e-mail today along with a list of state officials to e-mail asking them not to vote on this bill. If this bill was to pass it would be the end of homeschooling in Tennessee. Can some of you give me advice on what to say in an e-mail to these state officials?
TN House Bill 2795:
House Bill 2795 would subject non-public school students, including homeschool students, to additional state testing. It would require them to take subject matter tests based upon state-approved textbooks. It would also require them to pass the Tennessee comprehensive assessment program tests before receiving a high school diploma. These new testing requirements would also apply to students being taught at home through extension or satellite programs of church-related schools. Your calls to state representatives are needed to stop this dangerous legislation!
If House Bill 2795 passes, it will essentially mean the end of homeschooling in Tennessee. Parents deciding to teach their children at home would have to conform their curriculum to the material taught in public school in order for their children to be able to pass the state tests. The Tennessee Department of Education, not parents, would determine whether a student taught at home was eligible to receive a high school diploma.
Sponsored by Representative G.A. Hardaway (92nd District), this horrendous bill is now in the House Education Committee. It is scheduled to be heard by the Special Initiatives Subcommittee of the House Education Committee this coming Wednesday, February 27. Representative Hardaway and members of the House Education Committee need to hear from you today!
This E-Alert originated from the offices of:
Home School Legal Defense Association
P.O. Box 3000
Purcellville, Virginia 20134
Phone: (540) 338-5600
Fax: (540) 338-2733
Email: info@hslda.org
Web: http://www.hslda.org
Yikes! That's scary! I would just forward the recommended "blurb" from HSLDA. I think in most cases it's not the wording that convinces the politicians but the amount of mail/calls they get on a subject. Good luck!
Yikes! That's scary! I would just forward the recommended "blurb" from HSLDA. I think in most cases it's not the wording that convinces the politicians but the amount of mail/calls they get on a subject. Good luck!