Posted on 06/04/2007 7:50:49 AM PDT by captjanaway
Shortly after our eight-year-old son, Lee, was born, we began planning for his education. We knew the government-run public schools in our home state of Arkansas ranked among the worst in the country, so this was not what we wanted for our son. Further, the United States had not yet begun its War on Terror and, as far as the public knew, the issue of homeland security was benign. Consequently, in that pre 9/11 world, our concerns for our sons teaching revolved around the issues of academics and morality. Post 9/11 our concerns now include safety, security and - for reasons listed below - truth.
(Excerpt) Read more at familysecuritymatters.org ...
But what about socialization?
(just kidding...just thought I would get it out before some idiot says that as if it is a serious insight)
Homeschooling Bumps!
Socialize: to adapt to social needs or uses
Sorry, not my kid.
I've said it before and I'll say it again. If parents love their children they will do whatever is necessary to educated their children themselves.
BTTT
In our area, there seems to be quite a bit of support for home schooling. The local YMCA has a physical fitness program designed especially for kids who are home schooled and there is a local (large) Baptist church that is creating a band/drill team for those kids who go to private schools or who are home schooled.
That sounds like Annapolis Area Christian School. We saw their band last year in a competition and WOW! they were awesome! They did a medley of religious Christmas songs and ended with "Hark the Herald Angels Sing" and unfurled looooooooong wings that the color guard used as they ran through the formation. Breathtaking! They totally blew away everyone in the III-open category!
In 1978, my wife and I came to know a young woman named Patty. She
was a devoutly religious young mother who’d become more devout when her
husband and father of her two small sons aged 2 and 6 informed her that he
was leaving. In dire economic straits, I offered to let her stay in our
former home in Chamblee — which was not rented at the time rent-free until she got back on her feet. She had been clandestinely home schooling the 6 year
old for about 2 years using very well done Christian course materials from
an organization in Texas the name of which escapes me. The lad had recently been tested and had placed at least a year ABOVE his chronological age. As required by the government school authorities at the time, she dutifully apprised the authorities of his scores.
For reasons which would become clear in a moment, Patty had been harassed by the DeKalb County school authorities for about 6 months and, by the time she moved into the Chamblee house, had been — unbeknownst to us — ORDERED to put the 6 year old into the nearest government elementary school or suffer the consequences. Because she wanted the boys to be educated Christians, there was no way she was going to do that and she told them so.
At approximately 2 am one morning, a loud knock on the door announced the
arrival of the aforementioned “consequences.”
Dressed only in a nightgown, she was confronted by several burly police officers who thrust an arrest warrant in her face. With the now awakened 6 year old watching and the 2 year old wailing in the other room, she was handcuffed and led out the door to jail. She was tossed into a large cell with a couple of hookers and a junkie who spent much of the rest of that morning vomiting in the corner. The two young boys for whom the educational authorities professed such great concern were just left AT THE HOUSE — ALONE! Patty was later told that the bureaucrats from Children Services who were SUPPOSED to accompany the cops were late and, in their haste to get this dangerous miscreant behind bars, the cops just missed the fact that the Children Services people were, well, missing. The CS folks showed up an hour later to find two terrified kids, one of whom had just seen his mother hauled off in cuffs.
Patty was ultimately brought to trial under the Georgia Truancy Statutes. Her pro-bono attorney tore the school authorities to shreds and hers has been called THE case that opened the floodgates to home schooling in Georgia. Once they had all the facts, the jury didnt take long to acquit her. Im proud to have played a small part in that.
At Pattys trial, a previously overlooked aspect of the government schools was put into sharp focus for those paying attention: The Director of Instruction for DeKalb County testified that the then current 7 hour school day consisted of an average of approximately 3 hours or less of instruction. At that time, Patty was devoting 4 to 5 hours a day to direct instruction.
He also as much as admitted that the REAL reason they wanted ALL these kids in school was the $3,000.00 per kid per year (Im sure that number is higher in 2001!) they then got from the state and federal government. Empty seats = lost funds. As in most things, follow the money.
Patty home schooled these two boys through high school.
And how did the boys turn out?
One is now a physician and the other a budding journalist.
But that now seems to be the norm for the growing legions of home schooled kids which most likely explains why the NEA and the government school folks feel so threatened. For what its worth, a home schooled kid won the last National Spelling Bee.
Thomas Jefferson believed an EDUCATED PUBLIC to be the cornerstone of the system he and the other Founders TRIED to leave behind. He would NOT, I feel certain, be a big fan of the current government education system. If he returned today, hed home school his children just as he did before.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0lR1KQq2-U
Good for you, but Catholic Schools are more the way to go. We are four generations and you can’t beat it. However good luck with the homeschooling.
Courses range from Gym to Geography, Baton to Biology, etc. Chorus, Band, Debate...lot's of good courses. (Even horsemanship - we are in Colorado Springs, after all)
Thanks for the inspiring story. Homeschooling works and rocks!!!
“While home schooling is not for every family, it is the only choice for those willing to make the financial sacrifice of one parents income and who are willing to ensure the dedication necessary to deliver a quality education for their children.”
You don’t have to totally give up one parent’s income. I home school and work part-time (every other weekend and a few nights here and there).
Many home school moms work part-time, some full time. It is very doable.
I wonder what Hillary will try to about homeschooling if she wins?
With the ways schools put restrictions on our children (and us) Home Schooling is the only way to go. My GD prays to our God the he guides her in her every study, do that in public school and she would get booted.
I am single with no father / child support (i adopted all four) and I homeschool, working part time from home by selling on eBay, craigslist.com, and tutoring.
it can be done....
A 50% success rate.
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