Goto support groups Calendar Header Graphic
 
 
A Catholic Homeschool Treasury: Nurturing Children's Love for Learning
-------------------
Cover
A Reason for Handwriting Homeschool Guidebook: Comprehensive K-6
-------------------
Cover
And What About College? How Homeschooling Can Lead to Admissions to the Best Colleges and Universities
-------------------
Cover
Beyond Survival: A Guide to Abundant-Life Homeschooling
-------------------
Cover
Books to Build on: A Grade-By-Grade Resource Guide for Parents and Teachers
-------------------
Catholic Education: Homeward Bound: A Useful Guide to Catholic Home Schooling
-------------------
Cover
Charlotte Mason Study Guide
-------------------
Choosing Home: Deciding to Homeschool With Asperger's Syndrome
Choosing Home: Deciding to Homeschool With Asperger's Syndrome
-------------------
Cover
Christian Home Educators' Curriculum Manual : Elementary Grades
-------------------
Cover
Complete Home Learning Source Book: the Essential Resource Ghuide for Homeschoolers, Parents, and Educators Covering Every Subject from Arithmetic, Th
-------------------
Cover
Complete Idiot's Guide to Homeschooling
-------------------
Cover
Creative Home Schooling for Gifted Children: A Resource Guide
-------------------
Cover
Creative Home Schooling: A Resource Guide for Smart Families
-------------------
Cover
Deschooling Our Lives
-------------------
Cover
Designing Your Own Classical Curriculum: A Guide to Catholic Home Education
-------------------

 

More Homeschool Stuff
More Starting Homeschooling Stuff
More Why Homeschool Stuff

 

 

 

Why I Homeschool--
Thursday Nights

 

What do Thursday nights have to do with homeschooling? Everything. 

My son was in first grade and wanted to play baseball.  My husband, Scott, and I both worked.  So I would take off early from work to pick up Ethan from daycare and get him to practice by 5:30 or 6:00.  After practice, we would pick up one those healthy and homey meals from a fast food place and eat on the way home.  This allowed us more time for Ethan to study for his spelling test, do any other homework, take his bath, and get to be so that we could all get up at six the next morning and do it again.

We were so caught up in rushing from one place to another that we didn't have time to realize the insanity of it all.  Where was our time together as a family?  If his friends came to the door while we were at dinner, I would let him go out and play since he hardly had any "free" time. Scott and I were both too tired to put up with the yelling and crying that came with doing chores and enforcing other family rules.  It was easier just not to deal with it.

Oh sure, I could have just quit my job and it would have made the chauffeuring less hectic, allowed time for chores in the afternoon and so on but that wasn't the point.  Ethan was barely six years old and spending seven hours a day in school. Surely, that's enough time to learn what's needed to be learned.  But no, six-year-olds also have homework, not to mention needing to study for tests.

Why does a six-year-old have to worry about "time management" skills and being responsible for homework assignments as part of an academic education?  By the way, there aren't any studies that show homework contributes to learning before the high school level.  Anyway, wouldn't the  chores he's not doing count for responsibility and such?  

Ultimately, when we received his first report card, all A's but for one B as I remember, it just struck me how ludicrous the system was.  The grades didn't mean anything to him.  He hadn't suddenly transformed from kindergarten smiley faces to F's and A's in a period of three months. Why should we worry about the one B?  How much time did we need to spend to get nine out ten right rather than eight out of ten?

Now don't get me wrong, I'm all for standards, especially for doctors and nurses and such.  But can you imagine your pediatrician telling you that, "I'm sorry Mr. Smith, but your toddler hasn't mastered 70% of the expected gross motor skills for an 18 month old.  We simply can't let her progress to skipping until she can stand on one foot for 10 seconds."

No, you can't.  

Because everyone knows that children develop at different rates and it's perfectly normal--until you enter school. Then, all of a sudden it's not normal and you get to spend Thursday nights making sure you child is the same as every other child his age, and no matter what the report card says, that will never happen.   
 
Related Resources
 

Homeschool

Articles
Brief Overview of Homeschooling, A
Don't Panic Curriculum
Don't Panic--How to Choose a Curriculum
Dual Credit
Home Schools are Private Schools in Texas-For Now
Homeschooling Gifted Students: An Introductory Guide for Parents
Homeschooling Gifted Students: An Introductory Guide for Parents
Homeschooling Gifted Students: An Introductory Guide for Parents
Homeschooling Teaching Strategies
I've Decided to Homeschool--Now What?
I've Decided to Homeschool--Now What?
Rural Home Schooling and Place-based Education
Science in the Home School
Self-Directed Learning
Self-Directed Learning
Thursday Nights
Top Ten Reasons to Homeschool
Why I Homeschool: Ms. Frizzle
 
San Antonio Area
Alamo Area Christian Educators
Ambleside School of Fredericksburg
F.A.I.T.H.
Family Educators Alliance of South Texas
H.A.V.E.N. Educators
H.E.L.P.U.S. - Home Education Leaders Performing Under Stress!
HCentralSA
Hill Country Christian Homeschoolers
Homeschoolers4Christ
L.I.F.E. Co-op (formally CLEAR)
S.H.A.R.E.
San Antonio Home Education Resources and Opportunities
Smoothing the Way Group
Southeast Area Home Education Network
 
Austin
 
Texas
4texas-homeschoolers egroup
Creative Arts In Action
Gail Withrow's Home Education Site
HomeSchooling TEXAS
Houston Unschoolers Groups
Private Schools Interscholastic Association
TAFFIE
Texas Home Educators
Texas Home Educators Freedom Alliance
Texas Home School Coalition
Texas Homeschool Law Watch
Texas Homeschoolers
Texas Homeschoolers
 
National
A to Z Home's Cool Web Site
American Homeschool Association
Another Path
BestHomeschooling.org
Books4HomeSchool
Charlotte Mason Approach
Christian Homeschool Fellowship on the Web
Education World
Family Unschoolers Network
Growing Without Schooling
Home Education Magazine
Homeschool Learning Network
HomeSchool Reviews
Homeschool Social Register
HomeschoolDads.com
Homeschoolers' Curriculum Reviews
Jon's Homeschool Resource Page
Learning Network
More Infromation About Home School Legal Defence Association
National Home Education Network
The Link
Trivium Pursuit Online
 
 

Starting Homeschooling

Articles
Brief Overview of Homeschooling, A
Don't Panic Curriculum
Don't Panic--How to Choose a Curriculum
Home Schools are Private Schools in Texas-For Now
Homeschooling Gifted Students: An Introductory Guide for Parents
Homeschooling Gifted Students: An Introductory Guide for Parents
I've Decided to Homeschool--Now What?
Multiple Intelligences: Gardner's Theory
Rural Home Schooling and Place-based Education
Self-Directed Learning
Self-Directed Learning
Thursday Nights
Top Ten Reasons to Homeschool
Why I Homeschool: Ms. Frizzle
 
San Antonio Area
 
Austin
 
Texas
 
National
BestHomeschooling.org
Home Education Magazine
More Infromation About Home School Legal Defence Association
The Link
Types of Assessment
 
 

Why Homeschool

Articles
Why I Homeschool: Ms. Frizzle
Eighth Grade American History
Homeschooling Gifted Students: An Introductory Guide for Parents
Multiple Intelligences: Gardner's Theory
Multiple Intelligences: Gardner's Theory
Thursday Nights
Why I Homeschool: Ms. Frizzle
 
San Antonio Area
 
Austin
 
Texas
 
National
Another Path
BestHomeschooling.org
Home Education Magazine
HomeschoolDads.com
The Link