nzherald.co.nz

The pros and cons of homeschooling

By Dita De Boni
1:40 PM Friday Oct 2, 2009
To homeschool, or not to homeschool? Photo / Mark Mitchell

To homeschool, or not to homeschool? Photo / Mark Mitchell

I have to say that the day my fairly conservative husband came home and wondered out loud if homeschooling was a good idea made me stop dead in my tracks.

It's one of those options that I have always thought of as extreme. An extreme lifestyle choice, and a total career 180 degree turn for a woman in her most competitive years.

Heck, putting your foot on the pedal for 3-5 years while the kids are little is hard enough. But devoting potentially 12 years to their education at home, having them underfoot 24-7? I couldn't imagine it for my own part - and I swiftly told my dearly beloved this - and wondered aloud back to him if it was in some way detrimental to have the kids cooped up with me for longer than strictly necessary.

Ali had cottoned onto the benefits of homeschooling when he'd done this story about a group of local home-schooled kids who had made an award winning robot and were about to go to America to compete in an extremely prestigious robotics competition.

These guys' families were part of a well established, tight-knit group of home schoolers currently operating outside the New Zealand school system. Then I came across this article from Salon.com written recently by a husband whose unconventional-sounding wife has made the decision to homeschool the couple's twins because they felt it unnecessary for the children to come into line with the regular school day (week and year) at their relatively tender age of 5.

The family in this article are teaching two of some 1.5 million US home-schooled kids, and interestingly, statistics on the matter - such as they are - suggest only a third embark on homeschooling for religious grounds (there are some religious groups that consider state schooling morally bankrupt).

The rest just do it because they think it's better. This is the reason given in the Salon case:

"We're not ready to surrender our kids, and ourselves, to a 10-month-a-year, all-day institution whose primary goal, at least at this age, seems to be teaching kids how to function within a 10-month-a-year, all-day institution. Our kids are learning plenty - not exactly the same things other kindergarteners learn, I suppose, but plenty. They're making friends and having fun. They can go to the beach on gorgeous fall afternoons, or hit zoos and museums on crisp winter mornings, when other kids are sitting at desks doing worksheets about the letter B."

"Hell , I wish I could do it"," writes the father.

The subject always attracts lots of debate where ever it pops up. Hell, this article in Salon got a whopping 538 letters in response. And you can certainly point to many successes of the home schooled, in various competitions that see them pitted against conventionally-schooled pupils (see not just Ali's piece but also this admittedly older piece, also from Salon)

I still can't see myself doing it, although like most people I think the benefits of good home schooling are pretty convincing.

For one, I am not a teacher, certainly not one with much patience. I am the daughter of a teacher who spent many years honing her craft and I find it difficult to see how this skill might simply be aped by the untrained (an ex-teacher would be a different story, of course).

And then there is the issue of socialisation... My children don't have cousins nearby, and are unlikely to be part of a huge family. Already their options for playdates during the day are ever-decreasing as more and more children get sent off to daycare and kindy. I would worry that they would become insular, and not come into contact with the various types of people they need to - I believe - to develop empathy and understanding.

If you could somehow fill your children's minds with wonder, teach them everything they need to know to both pass exams and live informed lives, arrange for them to have lots of stimulation from both friends and other "teachers", then I can see home schooling might work.

But boy it seems like a lot of work - and work that not many of us would really be that well cut out for.

Pictured above: To home school, or not to home school? Photo / Mark Mitchell

Dita De Boni

By Dita De Boni
Sabyn (Auckland Central) | 08:28AM Monday, 05 Oct 2009
I am a NZ registered teacher with over ten years experience. My son is now one year old. Unless I win Lotto or there is a radical change to the public school system in this country, I will home school him.

Hopefully I will be able to do so along with a few other children of different ages at the same time - thereby allowing for social interaction, and enabling another parent to provide more choices for their own kids.

For the most part, teachers in NZ are awesome - but the system just does not allow for kids who don't fit well in their local, zoned school, or who don't learn well with overt structure and artificial deadlines. (Having fun with Maths? Well it's been 45 minutes, so now you have to stop and try to learn something else.)

Would I do it if I wasn't already a teacher? I doubt it, simply because I wouldn't have the money or time to learn beforehand HOW to make my son's education the best experience possible.

There are already 'groups' of homeschoolers in every city in NZ. If you are keen, ask around. Likewise, how many people know school is only compulsory at six years of age? Until then, send your kid for three days a week and homeschool the other two!
Joe Sonneveld (New Zealand) | 08:28AM Monday, 05 Oct 2009
Thanks for the article. The choice for us was not too hard and we thought about homeschooling before we had children. Now almost 16 years later we are grateful to see our children's behavior and attitude. Most children who are homeschooled are socially advanced because they are less peer depended.

Most homeschooled children are well able to relate to people of different ages. Homeschooling is more then just teaching academics although they are an important part it is the character building and attitude training which made us choose homeschooling.
Homeschool mum (Waikato) | 08:28AM Monday, 05 Oct 2009
Homeschooling is alive and well in NZ also. We homeschooled our 3 children up until they were 15, 13, and 9. Due to personal circumstance they have had to go to school. It is very rewarding, the children are close and have no problems with socialising at all. They can interact with all age groups and from what we see of the children their age at school, they are far more mature and self sufficient than their peers.

The 15 year old was working 2 years above her age group but the school didn't want her "socialising" with the the age she was working at so put her back with her own age group! Where in the "real world" ie world outside those school years, do you socialise with just your own age group? The girls can't believe how much time is wasted at school and how disrespectful the students are.

Would thoroughly recommend homeschooling to anyone thinking about it. You grow into appreciating having your children around 24/7 - working as a team and enjoying each other. Lots of resources available for teaching material so don't need to be concerned about not being a teacher. Homeschooling doesn't mean you can't ask for help if you need it! Go for it!
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