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Over the years I have spoken at many
educational seminars and talked to veteran homeschoolers. One
concern that I have heard again and again is how to avoid feeling
overwhelmed and stressed out. Many mothers find themselves feeling
tired with the hours spent on making children do all their work,
setting up academic schedules, and being involved in many extra
curricular activities.
Learning is a lifelong process and as
independent thinkers, we strive to find methods and resources to
help our children learn in ways that best suit them. We understand
the value of education for our children. Often, parents will begin
homeschooling their children with traditional textbooks and all the
accompanying “help.” As a parent’s level of confidence in their own
abilities increases, a strictly traditional textbook schedule can
add stress to a family’s life. Sometime it takes awhile to figure
out what the problem is. How a parent responds varies -- one can
blame the child or one can blame the method and curricula.
Recognizing these overwhelming feelings
is the first key to resolution. The second key is solving them.
After much thought on this, I have come up with a few things that
can be of some help.
1. Take time to
communicate with your children.
If your child has spent time in the
public schools, it is easy to forget how to really listen to them.
They want to tell you what they would like to do, in what areas they
are interested, and where they would like to go with their interest.
Sit down, listen to them, and talk to them. You will learn amazing
things about their thought process as well as what things they are
capable of doing.
2. Focus in on your child’s
learning styles, interests, abilities, maturity level as well as
your learning styles.
Even though education is often defined by
grade levels and then learning assigned according to those levels,
there is no reason to believe it is helpful or needful by your
child. Neither is it a worthwhile goal for your child. Many areas
come into play for a child to “learn,” especially when dealing with
abstract ideas and concepts. If a child is a visual learner yet you
learn with auditory skills, you may naturally choose resources that
appeal to you but quickly become frustrating to your child.
3. Choose curricula/books
carefully, if at all.
You will find that the more money you
spend on books, the more pressure you will feel to complete every
page and chapter. Before investing a lot of money, buy one or two
books and make sure your child is able to use them and likes them. I
have known parents who have bought an entire computer-based
grade-level curriculum only to discover their child hated it because
they could not take books with them on trips or lounge on the bed to
read. Textbooks should be used as references and not as the only
source of information.
4. Grade-level books can be
misleading and detrimental to learning.
There is no such thing as grade-level
information. This is a myth invented and perpetuated by a system
that needs ways to monitor, grade, and label children. Information
is simply information, and giving children access to knowledge will
insure they learn at their own rate rather then being forced to keep
up with or slow down to a rate predetermined by someone else.
5. The actual 12 years of school
can be completed in about 6 years.
If we don’t hurry a child at a young age
but allow them time to mature in all areas, we can be assured that
they will learn everything they need to at the right time. His or
her timetable is different than any other child’s. School does not
need to be broken up in twelve years. Children can do many different
levels at once. So much time is spent in public school as review.
When you remove that element, you have a streamlined method of
learning.
6. Take planned and unplanned
breaks.
A day away from the norm will do wonders
in invigorating a child as well as the parent. Going to a museum, a
park, or even just out to lunch can help a child internalize ideas
and thoughts. Often when a child is struggling with a concept,
taking a break will help them get past stumbling blocks, internalize
new concepts and skills, or give them time to think about what is
being asked of them. Learning is a very personal endeavor, and we
need to give children space to learn. It can also be times of
personal growth for the parent as they learn to trust their
children.
7. There is no magical key to
learning.
No one invented knowledge. It simply is
there for the taking. If one person can learn something, anyone can
with motivation, interest, and maturity. To think that only experts
can teach children is to suggest that information is sacred and not
available to everyone either online or at a library.
8. Catch those windows of
learning.
By listening to our children on a daily
basis, we can take advantage of these learning windows. Knowing what
they are interested in gives us opportunities to find the resources
needed to help our children.
9. Don’t borrow trouble from
tomorrow.
If your child is only five years old,
don’t worry about college. By that time, things will be different
than now. Don’t even worry about next year; concentrate on today.
Tomorrow will be here soon enough.
10. Resist the urge to make book
learning/academic time REAL learning and all of life NOT real
learning.
Book learning is not more important than
non-book learning. If we give the impression that “real” school is
when you are working in books and playtime is all other times, we
rob our children of developing a learning attitude that all of life
is education. All of life is here for us to learn from, both from
our mistakes and our triumphs.
11. Commitment to your child.
Home education is a lifestyle, NOT an
option. If we commit ourselves to educating our children through
thick and thin, through stressful times as well as fun times,
without the option of going to public school, we will finish the
course we set out to do-Raise happy, competent, well-balanced
children. We ourselves will learn how to creatively solve problems
and our children will see how it is done. They themselves will learn
that you don’t throw in the towel at the hint of a tough situation,
but you work with all parties involved to find a solution. Putting
children back into school simply tells them they are not as
important as they should be.
12. Point out your interests.
Allow the child to see what you are
interested in rather than trying to tell a child what they should
like. Letting them see you get excited about life helps them develop
an excitement also.
The bottom line is, “What do we believe
about home education?” If we believe that we, as parents, are
responsible to clothe, feed, and nurture our children, then
educating them must also be on that list. It is not something we
should give to the government to do simply because we are told it is
for the best. The frustrations and stresses we will feel are
parental issues, not educational issues. If you are committed to
home education for you family, you will work through those issues
without resorting to putting the child back into public school or
worse yet, blaming the child for the problems rather than the
materials or our expectations.
Although these ideas won’t promise a
non-stressful, non-foot-stomping, or always-smooth-sailing day of
home schooling, it will help you think through those times when home
education seems akin to teeth pulling. It will help you put into
perspective what is really important and worth your time, energy,
and love.
“Each second we live
in a new and unique moment of the universe, a moment that never
was before and will never be again. And what do we teach
our children in school? We teach them that two and two make
four, and that Paris is the capital of France. When will we
also teach them what they are? You should say to each of
them: Do you know what you are? You are unique. In all the
world there is no other child exactly like you. In the millions
of years that have passed there has never been a child like you.
And look at your body -- what a wonder it is! Your legs,
your arms, your cunning fingers, the way you move! You may be a
Shakespeare, a Michelangelo, a Beethoven. You have the capacity
for anything. Yes, you are a marvel.”
~~ Pablo
Casals ~~
© Donna Mitchell
This article was originally
published in the May/June 2002 issue of HELM (Home
Education Learning Magazine) and subsequently published in
the online e-zine

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