why do you homeschool?

None of my siblings or I did any of that, nor did four out of the five in hubby's family, and we were all in public schools. ;) Not everyone cares about team sports.

Well, it is not just sports. There is marching band, academic teams, beta club, national honor society, Future Farmers of America, etc.
 
Half of which my kids are already involved in WITH other children.

Well, it is not just sports. There is marching band, academic teams, beta club, national honor society, Future Farmers of America, etc.
 
The options that you can choose in life are astronomical. HS is one of those options. You can make an argument for or against any of them. Why do you send your children to private school? Why are you a Republican? Why are you a vegetarian? Why did you buy your children a mobile phone? Why do you have cable and not a satellite dish? Why do you play piano instead of guitar? Every choice is not for every person.

With every decision you make someone will argue against it and will only be able to see their side. Making assumptions that are PS students are mass murderers because of a school shooting is the same as all HS students live in a bubble and can't function without their parents because "you", not a particular you, know someone like that.

I might question why someone would send their children to boarding school but it is their decision to make. I may question why you would enter your child in a beauty pageant or why you would attend a country church when others think a mega church is the answer. The point is everyone has the right to choose what is best for their family.

To the OP - my four oldest children went to PS and I also taught in PS and the experience worked at the time for us. Our youngest is now being HS. The decision came about due to a series of events that had nothing to do with my satisfaction at our school but just to complete the year. We found it to be a very rewarding experience for our daughter as well as ourselves so we decided to continue.

I hope the OP makes a decision that works for them. You can always give it a try and see how you like it. Best of luck with your decision. Make a choice that is best for you at this time.
 

Homeschoolers pay for public schools whether they want to or not, so their kids should have access to school activities. Seems simple... ;)

Its a SCHOOL team, just like a student can't attend a private school and play sports for their public high school, they shouldn't be able to show up for baseball practice after sitting at home all day..

What I see a lot of is this... Kid doesn't mix well at school, rather than work on improving that, kids are homeschooled so the awkward social expierence can be avoided.. is that really helping the problem?

Through all kinds of sports, whether youth football, travel softball/baseball, park district activities, basically the only time where I come in contact with homeschool kids, seems like most of those kids are socially awkward to the point that I feel bad for them..
 
Its a SCHOOL team, just like a student can't attend a private school and play sports for their public high school, they shouldn't be able to show up for baseball practice after sitting at home all day..

What I see a lot of is this... Kid doesn't mix well at school, rather than work on improving that, kids are homeschooled so the awkward social expierence can be avoided.. is that really helping the problem?

Through all kinds of sports, whether youth football, travel softball/baseball, park district activities, basically the only time where I come in contact with homeschool kids, seems like most of those kids are socially awkward to the point that I feel bad for them..

Who said their kid was socially awkward??? I have NEVER met a hs child that could not hold their own.... I grew up in ps, my husband went to ps and my dd9 went to ps (k-2) and my ds2 will go to private pre-k. We are NOT missing out..... As I said before you have not been around enough hs kids to draw this harsh of opinion. Why are you on this thread??? You obviously can't stand us so why join in the coversation? pirate:... My child would never get the same education at ps as she is getting at home. There is no comparison! That is what I focus on the EDUCATION. (She already has friends, hs and non-hs.) She is in the 4th grade and on a 7th grade math/english level and 9th grade reading level. Why would I hold her back??? So she can see the same 35 kids everyday. No, thanks I will pass. :)
 
basically the only time where I come in contact with homeschool kids, seems like most of those kids are socially awkward to the point that I feel bad for them..

well,then perhaps you should get out more.:thumbsup2 kidding,but your personal experience is not everyone's personal experience.... IMHO, the ps'ed kids I'm meeting at DS's summer camp program are just as awkward and grimy as the hs'ed kids we come into contact with...:rotfl2: I've seen good and bad in both populations to tell you the truth.... going to school does NOT dictate socially acceptable young people.:teacher: That isn't something to argue,it's the proven truth.
There are pros and cons to both choices. Simple as that.
 
My son has never felt deprived when it comes to extra-curricular activities. But he's not a big sports nut as far as participating and I never forced him to. Where I live there are so many activities, sports and otherwise that we couldn't do everything. As far as the educational side of it there's also tons of resources with coops, classes offered by the county, courses offered on TV by the local colleges, etc. He has never felt deprived and we've been reading this thread together :goodvibes.
 
Who said their kid was socially awkward??? I have NEVER met a hs child that could not hold their own.... I grew up in ps, my husband went to ps and my dd9 went to ps (k-2) and my ds2 will go to private pre-k. We are NOT missing out..... As I said before you have not been around enough hs kids to draw this harsh of opinion. Why are you on this thread??? You obviously can't stand us so why join in the coversation? pirate:... My child would never get the same education at ps as she is getting at home. There is no comparison! That is what I focus on the EDUCATION. (She already has friends, hs and non-hs.) She is in the 4th grade and on a 7th grade math/english level and 9th grade reading level. Why would I hold her back??? So she can see the same 35 kids everyday. No, thanks I will pass. :)

I don't want our 4th grade daughter to be reading at the 9th grade level, I want her being a KID and having fun, her education is fine... I also want her playing competitive softball and if she so desires, another sport or two, maybe cheerleading if thats her thing..
 
I don't want our 4th grade daughter to be reading at the 9th grade level, I want her being a KID and having fun, her education is fine... I also want her playing competitive softball and if she so desires, another sport or two, maybe cheerleading if thats her thing..

Thats a real sad statement. :sad1:
 
What is? Wanting my kid to be a kid? Or wanting her to excel in athletics?

Why can't they do both?? My dd excels in academics and on the field.... My child is a kid and does all the same kid things any other kid would do except go to a traditional school. It doesnt make her awkward.... Have you been to a tradional school lately? In my years of teaching I have seen awkward kids and most of the hsers I know DO NOT fall in the "different" category.
 
Its a SCHOOL team, just like a student can't attend a private school and play sports for their public high school, they shouldn't be able to show up for baseball practice after sitting at home all day.

Hate to break this to you, but plenty of kids who attend private schools DO play sports for their public high school. Private school parents pay their taxes, too, y'know. In the Quad Cities area, there are kids from different states playing for public school teams (because the Illinois kids are attending a private Iowan school that has an agreement with the school district there, I assume). Which is admittedly unusual, but I guess Iowans are just a little out there. ;)

What I see a lot of is this... Kid doesn't mix well at school, rather than work on improving that, kids are homeschooled so the awkward social expierence can be avoided..

Sounds to me like you're dealing mostly with people who homeschool because they feel they "have" to. That can be a very different population from homeschoolers who chose that route long before the kid went to school.

basically the only time where I come in contact with homeschool kids, seems like most of those kids are socially awkward to the point that I feel bad for them..

In terms of his social skills, all the way through (he's nearly 18), my eldest son has been exactly like my (public schooled) brother at the same age. It's clear that neither one of them has the average aptitude for social interaction, but both of them manage to function in church, office, and other environments just fine. Sending my brother to public school didn't change his native abilities in that department. ;)

I don't want our 4th grade daughter to be reading at the 9th grade level

I don't know any homeschoolers who want that, either, however I've known kids who developed that skill level just because the child wanted it. I was way above grade level in reading myself, even though I went to public school without anything like the "gifted" programs that are all over the place now, so no one was pushing it on me. I liked to read, so I got good at it. Why is that worse than someone who practices to the point they can do killer hook shots?

Personally, all I expect of my kids is that they grow up to be self-supporting financially and kind to others, and I expect them to find their vocation by following their own interests. I'd sure like it if somebody got married and gave me grandkids someday, but if they don't, they don't. :p If one of the kids had wanted to get involved in team sports or band or needed something from public schools in order to accomplish their goals, then we would have made the effort to get that for them. I know homeschoolers who sent their entirely homeschooled child to public school at sixteen, because she wanted to get involved in band. It was the only way at that time to get her the course she wanted, so that's what she did.

Again, whether they send the kid to homeschool or public school, caring parents want to do what's right for the kid. One of my kids wanted to go to public school once, and when I asked him why, it was because he wanted "recess" -- the opportunity to run around in a playground with other kids. He wasn't that interested in the rest of the public school experience, and when he asked around it turns out our local school system has eliminated recess much past kindergarten anyhow :rolleyes:, so we tracked him down a homeschool gym class and he got his regular "free play time with the same group of kids" fix. :)
 
Homeschooled kids can't compete at the same level of athletics in most places..

And let's just say that I have seen enough HS kids to be able to form opinions, which is why we prefer her to socialize and not shelter..
 
Homeschooled kids can't compete at the same level of athletics in most places..

And let's just say that I have seen enough HS kids to be able to form opinions, which is why we prefer her to socialize and not shelter..

Let's see...

Tim Tebow was homeschooled.

Shaun White was homeschooled

Venus and Serena Williams both were homeschooled

Oh these poor athletes who were sheltered under rocks and homeschooled. :rotfl2:
 
Tim Tebow was homeschooled.

Shaun White was homeschooled

Venus and Serena Williams both were homeschooled

:thumbsup2

Exactly. Homeschooled kids who truly have the aptitude and interest, tend to find what they need. For that matter, I know public school parents who have moved to get their kid into a district more oriented toward the child's needs. When a kid has that much aptitude, I'm guessing it's pretty motivating! :p

I've also seen my fair share of public school kids who got the same "you don't measure up" message HHSTigerFan describes when shifting from grade school to jr. high, or jr. high to high school, or from school district to school district. :sad1: There are a lot of "big fish in little ponds" who don't realize how little the pond is until forced to; that's not just a homeschooling problem.
 
Hate to break this to you, but plenty of kids who attend private schools DO play sports for their public high school. Private school parents pay their taxes, too, y'know. In the Quad Cities area, there are kids from different states playing for public school teams (because the Illinois kids are attending a private Iowan school that has an agreement with the school district there, I assume). Which is admittedly unusual, but I guess Iowans are just a little out there. ;)

I don't know where you became so ill informed on this topic, but pretty much everything you stated here is incorrect unless major IHSA violations are occuring..
 
Let's see...

Tim Tebow was homeschooled.

Shaun White was homeschooled

Venus and Serena Williams both were homeschooled

Oh these poor athletes who were sheltered under rocks and homeschooled. :rotfl2:

So you come up with one football player (who is quirky and laughed at by most of the sports world), one person I have never heard of and a set of tennis twins...

How about a kid I tried to get to play high school football several years ago, was our best 8th grade player, but mom didn't want him to go to school with other kids... Of that 8th grade team, 4 kids signed full ride scholarships, the homeschooled kid was better than all of them and he never went to college because his family couldn't afford it..
 
I don't know where you became so ill informed on this topic, but pretty much everything you stated here is incorrect unless major IHSA violations are occuring..

It depends on the state. Here in FL, kids are allowed to play sports and take up to two classes at public schools if they are registered homeschoolers with the county. Some states do not have any laws or legalities for homeschoolers and they are treated like private schools, so students are allowed to participate in sports or classes in private and public schools. It all depends where you live.
 














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