• Doxatek
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    8 days ago

    Yeah for sure. Like I wasn’t trying to bash the individual I commented under. When it’s working it’s working. Only when it doesn’t it’s pretty bad. But then again that is a pretty irrelevant point for me to make since many kids make it through public school and are dumb as bricks. I guess it all just depends

    • Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Yeah, I didn’t take it as you trying to bash, just expanding the convo a bit. I think the outcomes are very dependent on why the decision to homeschool was made and how prepared the parents are to actually educate their children. If you’re doing it because you don’t feel public schools are safe enough, I could get on board with that…my kids are in public school, and it’s scary as shit sometimes. Our 7th grader had to deal with multiple lockdowns last year, and we live in a pretty safe area. If you’re homeschooling because you don’t want your kid’s mind “poisoned” by basic science like geology or biology, or don’t want them exposed to different races or religions, you’re probably gonna end up with a young adult who isn’t prepared to exist on their own in the world when the time comes and that transition into adulthood is going to even harder than it already is.

      • StaySquared@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Interestingly, my wife and I found that the Montessori and eclectic styles of education are the best choice for homeschooling. We mix the two styles. We allow our children to pick which topics (usually 2 per day) they’d like to learn and go from there. The following day they will choose another two topics so on and so forth. This is the Montessori form of education. Whereas eclectic style, that includes things like children’s museums, gardening, farms, wilderness, zoos, arts & crafts and as of recent learning how to type and now my daughter who has heard piano is interested in learning the piano.

        This gives a better idea as to what interests our children have so that we can help guide them with the least amount of friction. All in all, we want our children to have the best possible education and allow them to make their own decisions so that they’re content in learning and growing.

      • Doxatek
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        8 days ago

        This is a really good point. It’s definitely all in the reasons behind it. I’m really scared for my child to go to school but since I work full time there’s no real other option. I would actually be able to teach some courses due to my education but also know I would be inept at others. Plus it’s different to teach biology to people in college than to a 7 year old that’s probably an entirely different ball game I would probably be bad at