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Homeschooled Kids Seek to Join Activities At Public School

Many homeschool kids and teens are seeking some sports or otherwise activities at public school, and it seems to gaining some momentum. For many parents and kids it is win-win situation, for others it might be not right, you decide.

STRASBURG, Pa., June 16 – Mary Mellinger began home-schooling her eldest sons, Andrew and Abram, on the family’s 80-acre dairy farm five years ago, wanting them to spend more time with their father and receive an education infused with Christian principles. Home schooling could not, however, provide one thing the boys desperately wanted – athletic competition.

But the school district here, about 60 miles west of Philadelphia, does not allow home-schooled children to play on its teams. So Mrs. Mellinger reluctantly gave in and allowed the boys to enroll in public high school, where Andrew, 17, runs track and Abram, 15, plays football and both perform with the marching and concert bands.

“We grieved about losing the time we had with the boys,” Mrs. Mellinger, 41, said outside the 150-year-old red brick house where Mellingers have lived for seven generations. “It seems so unfair. We’re taxpayers, too.”

Mrs. Mellinger’s plaint has become the rallying cry for an increasing number of parents across the country who are pushing more public schools to open their sports teams, clubs, music groups and other extracurricular organizations to the nation’s more than 1 million home-educated students.

This year, bills were introduced in at least 14 state legislatures, including Pennsylvania’s, to require school districts to open extracurricular activities, and sometimes classes, to home-schooled children, say groups that track the issue. Fourteen states already require such access, while most others leave the decision to local school boards.

But many districts strongly resist the idea, citing inadequate resources, liability issues, questions about whether students would be displaced from teams and clubs, and concerns about whether home-schooled children could be held to the same academic and attendance standards. In some states, districts also lose state aid when children leave to be home schooled, although that is not the case in Pennsylvania.

The push for access is in many ways a new chapter for the home-schooling movement, which for years viewed public education as a hostile, overly regulated system that should be avoided at all costs.

But as the movement has gained more acceptance and grown in size and diversity, more parents want their children to be involved in school activities like chess, basketball or Advanced Placement courses, say home-schooling advocates and educators. Even people who do not want the services argue that other families should not be denied them, seeing access as a civil rights issue for people who pay school taxes.

“We found enough activities within the home-school community to satisfy our needs,” said Maryalice Newborn, who runs a support network for home-school families outside Pittsburgh. “But if somebody else wants to participate, shouldn’t they have that right?”

Christopher Klicka, senior counsel for the Home School Legal Defense Association, a nonprofit group based in Virginia, said polls showed that a majority of home-school parents remained wary of letting their children participate in public school activities. But as earlier battles over the right to home schooling fade from memory, that attitude is likely to change, he said.

“The further we get from those early days, when there was real persecution, the more people will forget,” Mr. Klicka said. “And they will want equal access more.”

In Oregon, Colorado and other states that distribute aid based on enrollment, some districts have begun encouraging home-schooled students to take courses, typically in advanced subjects like calculus or foreign languages, said Mike Griffith, a policy analyst with the Education Commission of the States, a nonprofit group.

But most states do not provide per-pupil aid for extracurricular activities, so there is less incentive to allow home-schooled students to participate, Mr. Griffith said.

In Pennsylvania, where the number of home-schooled students has risen steadily in recent years to more than 24,400 children, more districts each year are allowing those students to participate in extracurricular activities, and sometimes classes.

Read more at NY Times article

 

I know a few moms in my knowledge take part in Sports activities with local school and it seemed to be fine for them, I have not tried it myself for my kids yet. Have you tried it? What is your take on it?

Check out:

10 Things to Consider Before you Start Homeschooling

Homeschool Reference Books for Parents

Best early education homeschool curriculum

Best kindergarten curriculum I love! Sing, Spell, Read and Write

Homeschool Curriculum Reviews

Getting Started

Homeschooling poster: Cheap, fun and educational

Homeschooling via DVD Videos

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Homeschool Parenting Tips Homeschooling Resource Homeschooling tips

Getting Started To Homeschooling

Once you  have decided to start homeschooling, you will need step by step guide to get you started off in right foot. Here are some simple steps for your homeschooling guidance that may help you get started in Homeschooling.

Getting Started in Homeschooling

1. Making a Decision:

Choosing to do homeschooling is not for everyone and requires planning. Once you have read up information here, decide if that is something you and your child is ready to take on. Decision to homeschool is not easiest and it does not have to be all or nothing. You can decide to homeschool one year at the time, but give it your best shot if you decide to go for it.
2. Start off on right way:

Starting off right will make you new adventure in homeschooling much smoother as with any new thing you start. Here are some simple steps to get it organized and plan for it.

  • Get your mentally ready as a family
  • Set up area for homeschooling in home
  • Set up a time table and organization so you will stay focus on schooling
  • Decide what type of schooling you will be doing such as setting up school your self, using public school or charter’s school’s homeschool or independent study program.
  • Have school supply list ready and buy record keeping planners and oranizers
  • Keep all kids vaccines, birth certificates in school file cabinet just like local school. You may never need to show it anyone, but have it ready just in case.
  • Find a local support group for you and your child.

3. Legal issues:

Homeschooling is legal in 50 states of US and Canada and other countries but rules are little different everywhere. Find out Local Homeschooling Legal Laws and follow it to stay legal and proper.

4. Find Support:

Once you decide on homeschooling, find support from your child, spouse, friends and relatives as you need. The most important support are from your kids and spouse as they will be facing it daily. In addition to this, you may want to find local homschool support group of other like minded homeschooling families to meet for park days, play dates or field trips together. When you are starting out, this support is very crucial and helpful.

5. Learning Style:

Find out what is your child’s learning style is, some kids learn better verbally, while some do better by visual approach by seeing things and there are others who learn best by actually trying it out. You may find that your child may fall in to 2 or more categories of learning style and that is okay too. This will help you as a teacher to teach best way for your child.

  1. Visual Learner
  2. Auditary or Voice learner
  3. Tele Kinestic Learner

Find more about different learning style: Here

6. Decide if de-schooling is needed:

If you are starting to homeschool at preschool level and your child never has been to public school, this step is not needed. De-schooling is process for many kids who have gone to public school and whatever reason now trying out to homeschool. Many times kids are taken out of school because of bullying, emotional issues and problems with learning has happened in regular school, these students will need time to get rid of unplesant feelings, routine and schedule of schooling for while in order to get back to learning again.

You can find out more about deschooling here: Click here.

7. You can start School in Midyear:

Let us suppose, your child in public school is having some issues with school and does not want to go, can you start homeschooling mid year? of course, you can. Just like you can change school in mid year, if you move to different city or state, you can do that staying in same place with homeschooling. You do not need to wait for school year to end to make uncomfortable situation continue with your child. You need to find right legal homeschool ways to ask for school to transfer his record to your new homeschool entity, just follow the process that is legal in your area to make sure you do not any hassle from school administration.

8. Choose Curriculum:

There are many homeschooling educational companies that sell curriculums for homeschooling parents. There are several ways to choose a curriculum that is right for your child’s age and his or her skill level. Most of them do not have to cost lot of money and even those do cost money have better return over the years so do not skimp on certain things and save on other issues.

  1. Use public library, PBS and Internet to supplement education
  2. For preschool and KG levels not much curriculum is needed, basic phonics program, reading to them, colors and shapes will do.
  3. You can check out some curriculum at library before buying it online as there are many online companies selling homeschooling curriculum in various levels.
  4. You can choose online or video based educational series
  5. Your child can take classes by independent vendor teaching program on subject you know little about.
  6. Some basic things you can teach your child, such as reading, cooking, simple math, algebra, science projects and more.
  7. You can choose to buy grade level curriculum which will cover all required subjects to learn or you can buy different subjects from different vendors, eclectic learning works for many homeschooler. For example, a kindergartener can read 2nd grade level language arts program and 1st grade level math program and KG level social studies, you can do that in homeschooling.

9. Keep it fun:

Some families have class setting just like public school, and they do all worksheets and follow course work, other families are more hands on and unschooler where kids lead learning happens. Whatever your teaching style is, make sure to focus on fun of learning and not to make it like displined rigid environment with unbreakble rules. Learning happens when kid’s mind are open and eager, so make it fun and interesting for them.

If your child is having fun learning about butterflies, even though class time might be over, continue talking to him or her that is best time learning can happen. Homeschooling is all about flexibility and focusing on child.

10. Take time to Live and fun:

Switch off the teacher mode once school is over and be mom or dad. That is one of the hardest thing for some homeschooling parent to do, as they are constantly seeing an oppurtunity to teach or show something cool to a child.While learning can happen in every ordinary things we do in life, sometimes just be mom or dad and let kid have time to play and imagine. Limit Television and Un-necessary Internet time.

Whatever you do, have fun to in order to engage and teach and strengthen the bond between you and your kids.

Check out:

10 Things to Consider Before you Start Homeschooling

Homeschool Reference Books for Parents

Best kindergarten curriculum I love! Sing, Spell, Read and Write

Homeschool Curriculum Reviews

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Homeschool FAQ Homeschool Parenting Tips Homeschooling tips

Homeschooling FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions

If you are new to homeschooling or have questions before you get started, please check here. We have tried to answer most frequently asked questions here.

1. What is Homeschooling?

Homeschooling is where usually one parent takes responsibility of their child education. It is one of the most flexible and easy to adapt education system as it adapts to child’s skill and pace they can learn. That means learning classes from private vendors, community colleges, co-op schools, and at home. Everything we do in daily life can be learning experience, so education continues even after school hours.

2. What is not homeschooling?Myths about Homeschooling:

Some people consider that only poor people, lazy people do homeschooling and kids do not learn much at home. This is hardly the truth. There are many rich and famous people have done homeschooling in past and current time. Please check out famous homeschooler articles for current actors, musicians and other famous people who are homeschooling their kids right now.

Other popular myth is only Christians do homeschooling. While there are many Christian who do homeschooling, many homeschooler are various religion or not religious at all. Some are doctors, engineers, teachers, some are from constructions, janitors and so on. Homeschooler like you and me, normal human being who wants to be charge of their child’s education.

3. Come on, it is not legal is it?

Homeschooling is legal in 50 states of USA, Canada. Some other countries in Asia and Europe have varied legality for homeschoolers, some are more friendly then others. Every state and country have their laws, some are very basic to just let your current school district know about, some school also offer homeschool or independent study program that parent can do home. We are in process of putting data up for each 50 states and other countries, so watch this space.

4. What about Socialization? Will not child be lonely?

One of the major concern for new homeschooling family is lack of social aspect that traditional school may bring. It is also keeps from potential people from trying out homeschooling. However, homeschoolers get plenty social time with other children and adults when they have field trip, park days and classes being taken at vendor’s or at co-op. Sometimes, there are also sports, scouts and other social aspects that any other traditional school going kids do plus more. Kids can be part of soccer team, pen pal, art camps, piano and other music gathering along with educational part of school that will be sure to give plenty of social time to talk, learn and play together.

Many homeschooler kids do well with kids their own age along with adult conversation as they are part of mixed ages social gathering just like in real life.

5. Why people choose to homeschool?

Why would anyone want to homeschool when there are free public school available? Many parents or kids choose to homeschool for following reasons;

  1. Your child can learn things he or she is interested at his or her pace.
  2. If your child is gifted and ahead of learning, he or she might get bored learning things he or she already knows.
  3. If your child is behind in learning, he or she might be confused and feels frustrated as he or she may not understand concept being taught.
  4. If you child has a special need, traditional school teacher or kids may not be able to give right kind of attention he or she may need.
  5. Special need kids or gifted classes can be expensive, tough to find for some parents.
  6. If you child needs a special attention in some subject, traditional schooling may not be able to provide with large student to teacher ratio.
  7. With homeschooling, kids get to learn things they are interested while keeping up with what is required by law to study basic skills.
  8. Some parents like homeschooling as it strengthen the family bond between them and siblings.
  9. Learning can be part of real world for example, learning colors and shapes while doing grocery fruit shopping for early learning,  learning math while paying money to cashier and so on.
  10. Flexibility to choose subjects and time. For example, if you child loves animals, he or she can spend 2 hours on animal science while visiting a petting zoo or watching birds, you are not bound by bell of class to stop when child is interested in more learning.

6. What to watch out for in Homeschooling?

Homeschooling is not easy way out, it requires proper planning and discipline to doing school work while living daily life of chores and other necessary things. Here are some of the things to consider when choosing to homeschool.

  1. One parent might have to give up income to stay home to teach kids. Loss of income can be huge deal for many families.
  2. If you are single parent, you can still do homeschooling while working part time or making other adjustment but it can be tough.
  3. Loss of private time; If you have small kids you will know this already, parents do not get much personal time to do things they enjoy. If you homeschool that means your kids and you will be mostly together, unless they are in some private class, so lack of time is something to think about.
  4. Sometimes, parents may not think they can teach their kids or have enough knowledge. That can bring issues to teaching.
  5. There is not much information and acceptance about homeschooling in world, specially some areas so one may feel isolated, and criticized about their choices. There are legal entity that supports homeschooling parents such as HSLDA.
  6. Convincing your spouse, friend or loved ones might be tough for some parent who wish to try homeschooling.
  7. You will still have to do all required learning by your state and you will have to keep records like school for your own record.
  8. House chores such as cooking, cleaning and doing other necessary things will have be planned with school class activities.

7. How much homeschooling costs?

Homeschooling can cost little to thousands of dollars per semester, it depends on how you teach and what resources you can use. Homeschooling does not have to be expensive though. There are free resources available to all tax payers regardless they choose public school or private, you can use them; They are public library for learning materials, educational videos, reading, phonics programs, free museum days, pbs children and educational shows, internet, you tube sites.

There are some costs for taking classes, buying boxed curriculum, paid field trip, sports, piano/music classes, art classes and so on. Some of the expense people have to do it, even for free public school. You can minimize the expenses by buying used curriculum, buying what you need and reusing them with other children and selling them once you are done to keep cost at reasonable budget.

8. If my Child is homeschooled, can he be qualified for good college later on?

This is one of the major concerned for any new potential homeschooler and it is valid question. To answer it in short term: Yes, your child will be able to go to good college or even IVY league college even if he or she is homeschooled. Matter of fact, some of the best college actually seek out homeschooler kids to recruit fot their college. According to stats, homeschooler kids tend to have higher ACT scores compared to traditional school counter parts, which helps. Universities like Stanford and Purdue have homeschoolers kids in engineering, sport scholarship as well. So, there are good chance for your homeschooler for admission in college and university to be admitted.

9. If my child is homeschooled, will he or she be able to fit in normal society?

While it is true, homeshcooling done in smaller group class or at home, many homeschooler do not have practice raising hand to ask question or stand in lines, in most cases homeschoolers fit in very well in society as well or sometimes better compared to other kids. How so you ask? Well, if you see in traditional school class, kids are approximately same age, (plus or minus 6 months), so kids in school do not get much practice to converse with other ages of kids or adults. How many time you work as an adult in office where you see people same age as you? Hardly never, so when you actually homeschool, one tends to be around, younger kids to older adults, just like in real life situation at life and in office, kids tend to be better prepared to handle world in most cases.

Traditional school has other issues such as bullying, guns and violence which is much less when one is homeschooling or one parent is there to intervene right away; At school, there are good teachers who look after kid’s benefit but typical high 20-40 students to 1 teacher ratio does not make it easy for them to watch all of them.

10. What if I am out of US and Canada, can I still homeschool?

Homeschooling has its roots in America and it is legal in all 50 states and Canada, other countries have followed the suit and many countries have small to big homeschooling community. You may want to search on net for your local area homeschooling program to be sure to find support community. You may want to look at look in our resource area as we are in process of updating and adding details that can be helpful to homeshcooler no matter where they live.

Further Reading:

Homeschooling Resouces

Homeschooling Articles

Homeschool Curriculum

Homeschool Reference Books for Parents

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Homeschool Curriculum Homeschool Parenting Tips

Rosetta Stone Homeschool Spanish (Latin America) Level 1 including Audio Companion

Learning Foreign Language Homeschool:

Rosetta Stone is well known software brand for learning various languages around the world. Rosetta Stone for Homeschool features a foreign language curriculum specifically designed to provide homeschool students with a rich, fully interactive and engaging language-learning experience, while giving parents the tools and resources needed to manage student progress without extensive planning or supervision. Rosetta Stone Homeschool is self-paced and designed to make it easy for parents to offer language learning even if they don’t speak the language their students are studying. Students are instantly captivated by Rosetta Stone so they stay engaged. Plus, with positive reinforcement and quick results, their language-learning confidence builds.

If you or your child want to learn any foreign language, Spanish is one of the easiest language to start with. It is also one of the top spoken language around the world, including in USA.

Rosetta Stone Homeschool Spanish Level 1 features:

  • Rosetta Stone Homeschool teaches your student a new language naturally.
  • Innovative solutions get them speaking new words, right from the start.
  • Rosetta Stone Homeschool moves forward only when your student is ready at your pace.
  • Parent Administrative Tools allow you to formulate lesson plans, manage your student’s progress and track their success.
  • Audio Companion CDs let them reinforce the Rosetta Stone experience anytime, anywhere.
  • It is great program for homeschooler or anyone who wants to learn at home.

What is Included in the Product Kit:

  • Version 3 Homeschool Edition CD-ROM software for Level 1 (Windows/Mac)
  • Headset with microphone
  • User’s guide
  • Parents guide
  • Supplemental Education Material CD
  • Audio Companion, a multiple-CD set to play or download to an MP3 player

What we like about Rosetta Stone Language Programs:

  1. This program is great for homeschooler or anyone who wants to learn new language at home.
  2. This is comprehensive learning program that fits your learning life.
  3. Your student will learn their next language the same way they learned their first language
  4. This language program learned without any memorization on their part, naturally.
  5. Interactive program that is based on step by step feedback and going forward.
  6. Your student will start speaking from the very first lesson, learning basic building blocks.
  7. Learning through it is fun and addictive. That is best way to learn anything new.
  8. No translations are required. This association of language with images is an integral part of the Dynamic Immersion method.
  9. It gradually incorporating new words, phrases and more complex grammar as it reinforces learned language.
  10. The simple, intuitive interface helps to keep your students engaged in the solution.
  11. No prior knowledge of spanish is required to start this level 1 program.
  12. There is Parent Administrative Tools help parents plan lessons as well as monitor and report on student progress.
  13. Sample topics include: greetings and introductions, colors, adjectives, numbers, family relations, time of day, singular and plural nouns, important and simple tool of learning.
  14. Audio Companion CDs reinforce language learning anytime, anyplace.
  15. Learn on computer at your pace and reinforce your learning with audio cds in mp3 or cd player.
  16. Less priced then what would you pay at community college or private language tutoring.
  17. You can use to teach other kids in the family.
  18. You can resell at once you master the program.
  19. Owning this software program means you can learn when you want at home, car at your own pace, as often as you like.
  20. Build confidence through learning new language and mastering it.
  21. Tolll free numbers to call, if you have questions or need further help for installing issues.
  22. Multiple computer platform: Platform: Windows Vista / 7 / XP, Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard

Things to Consider:

  1. This program is suited towards middle grades children to adults, it is not for Kindergarteners.
  2. You or parents has to judge how learning is going and tweak it, not same as personal tutoring.
  3. It is selling for over $200 so not cheap program but compared to private tutoring and college classes very reasonably priced.

Where to Buy it?

There are several online sites to buy it from including ebay but we always prefer the reliability of barns and noble. We usually find the best deals there.

Click here to find out more about it:  Rosetta Stone Homeschool Spanish (Latin America) Level 1

Click here to buy Rosetta Stone Homeschool Spanish Level 1-5 at discounted price

 

Other Related Products:

If you like to learn Complete Spanish Language through Rosetta Stone, You can buy Rosetta Stone Spanish (Latin America) Level 1-5 Set at over 35% or more discount.

Spanish Level 1-5 Set |        French Level 1-5 Set |   German Level 1-5 Set |Italian Level 1-5 Set

In addition to above popular language learning software programs, Rosetta Stone also offers following language learning at home;

All Image Sources: Rosetta Stones