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Old 03-10-2008, 01:17 PM   #1
LSPoorEeyorick
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Originally Posted by scaeagles View Post
For the record, NCLB was written by big time liberal Ted Kennedy. Many people try to pin this on Bush, and this is what happens when trying to reach across the aisle. Anyway.....
Yes, I know. I knew this when it was passed, and I didn't like it back then, either. Just because someone is liberal doesn't mean they don't look critically at other liberals. Bush, as president, is the bottom line, though - and if a liberal president had passed it, I would have blamed them, too.

I don't have children so I'm a bit hesitant to really weigh in on home schooling, since I'm not actually in the thick of the reality. Or, at least, I'm not interested in absolutes because, not having a child, I can't really fully imagine what it's like.

I know that the public system is simply not right for every child, so I have no problems with people taking matters into their own hands. At the same time, I do think that the well-roundedness is very important - as is learning to cooperate with children other than your relatives, and learning to work with adults other than your parents. If I were to put my children into home-schooling, I imagine I'd want to use a co-op with many other children taught by many other parents, and I suspect I'd want them to learn all of the standard subjects taught in school, as well as the creative ones that have been all but eliminated.

For kids that work OK within the provided system, I've really appreciated what my sister has done with them outside of school - their homework period has served as a sort of home-schooling session, building on what they've learned at school (teaching higher-level and real-life applications.) I think this gives kids the best of both education processes.
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Old 03-10-2008, 03:23 PM   #2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LSPoorEeyorick View Post
I know that the public system is simply not right for every child, so I have no problems with people taking matters into their own hands. At the same time, I do think that the well-roundedness is very important - as is learning to cooperate with children other than your relatives, and learning to work with adults other than your parents. If I were to put my children into home-schooling, I imagine I'd want to use a co-op with many other children taught by many other parents, and I suspect I'd want them to learn all of the standard subjects taught in school, as well as the creative ones that have been all but eliminated.

I would go a bit farther and say that while most kids survive the public school system, less than half truly thrive under it. Don't get me wrong, I certainly want my kids to have a well rounded education. My statement earlier was that as far as the state is concerned, the only purpose of education, public or otherwise, is to ensure productive citizens.

My experience with homeschool and socialization is that it's much easier to provide a homeschooled kid with a well rounded social life. There are so many groups that do fun things and the kids have friends of all ages. The older teach the younger social skills much more quickly than one would learn when segregated by age.

As far as learning all the standard subjects taught in schools...I want this to a point. I think there is something to be said for knowing what everybody else knows. But there is so much knowledge in the world that you can't be well rounded in every subject known to man. I'm totally ok if my kid is four years ahead in biology and two years behind in math. At some point extra focus on math might be needed to get into college in this hypothetical example, but my point is that as long as my kids have a diverse educational offering and an eagerness to learn then I'm pretty happy. I think that we sacrifice something in order to churn out people that know exactly the same stuff. There is something to be said for really digging into something you are interested in. Yes, you want to cover the basics of other stuff as well, but not to the exclusiong of speciality.
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