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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Homeschooling: How?

 I've had this blog post in draft form for about three weeks. My proverbial feet-dragging almost certainly stems from the fact that I'm not one hundred percent sure on how I'm going to homeschool. You might be saying, "But, Mari! Kindergarten starts in September!" I knooow.

Did you know there are different homeschooling methodologies? I didn't. In retrospect, of course there are different methodologies. Just as there are many different parenting styles, learning styles, etc., there are different homeschooling styles as well. Charlotte Mason, traditional school at home, Waldorf, UNschooling, classical education, on-line classes, unit studies, and literature-based learning are some of the more popular options, and most of them overlap into public/private/traditional schools as well. It's appealing to choose one method and just go with it, but I like things about each method, so until I've strengthened my home school muscles, we'll go with the eclectic method.

A friend of mine introduced me to a friend of hers who has home schooled SIX children. I'm sure she's a professional homeschooler, if there is such a thing. She clued me into a program called Classical Conversations. I was skeptical. The foundation of CC involves lots and lots of memorization. How boring does that sound? I want to foster Eleanor's love of learning, not squelch it, buuut then I visited a Classical Conversations meeting (they meet once a week for 2-12 week sessions.) While Classical Conversations is a Christian-based program (religion is not the main reason I've chosen to homeschool), I was impressed. I was impressed with the students, the parents, and their program. At the end-of-year presentations we were asked to participate in, I teared-up I was so impressed!

I'm sure CC is not for everyone, but it solves a few problems we were facing. 1) Eleanor WANTS to go to school (I think she really just wants to ride a school bus, but that's another story), and one day a week will give her a chance to know schoolmates and make friends. 2) I do not want to be an island in my home school journey. When I started contemplating home schooling, I knew no one else with young kids who even considered the idea. In fact, most of my friends think I've lost my marbles.  It gives me insta-support and an insta-community. 3) The curriculum is right up Eleanor's alley. She loves to memorize and she loves to sing songs. I think she will thrive in this setting.

CC does not cover reading and math, so we're still left with those subjects. We've been working on reading for some time now, and I will probably pick up some traditional language arts curriculum and some traditional math curriculum. I'm kicking around a program called Math-U-See and a program called SonLight for language arts, but Charlotte Mason and lap/note books really appeal to me, so I might incorporate those. At the end of the day, we're dealing with Kindergarten. This is a journey, I don't have all the answers, and we'll change as necessary. At this point I want school to be fun, just a little challenging, and a good experience for our family.

I might write another post about my educational philosophy and why I'm attracted to UNschooling, but too afraid to try it.

Here a few blogs I really like about homeschooling: Penelope Trunk, Half-a-Hundred Acre Wood, Rockabye Butterfly, and Simple Homeschool. If you know of any good ones, let me know! I'd like to find a good Charlotte Mason blogger.

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