Home schooling is an alternative education being provided by many schools to the students around the world. The student can attend the class at their own pace and from their own place without any physical presence. The classes are delivered by the teachers; assignments are assigned in the online environment.
Generally people feel like home schooled kids lack in socialization because they are isolated in the home for the whole day. But this is not the fact is the home schooled kids are socialized. They find their friends as just like in the traditional schools. They can go on vacations at all sorts of times of the year.
Many students feel amazing about online school because they don't need to rush to the school which is far away from the stay place, they cannot be bullied by the aggressive students, they don't have stress and they like sitting and learning at their own place where no physical presence is needed in the class. The rest of the things like assignments and homework are all same, but they are done and submitted on the online environment.
That depends on what you mean - how many homeschooled children complete public/private high school, or how many complete homeschool high school? You can get a lot of answers to homeschooling questions at http://www.unschooling.com and http://www.homeedmag.com . To answer your question directly, just about every homeschooled child completes some form of high school or equivalent, and most go on to higher education. But a classroom is not the only place to learn.
To gather feedback on their learning experience, students can be asked questions such as: How engaging do you find the course material? Do you feel supported by your teachers in your learning journey? Are the assignments and assessments helping you understand the material? How well do you feel you are able to participate in class discussions? Do you feel that your learning needs are being met in this course? Are there any specific areas where you feel you need more support or resources? How would you rate the overall quality of your learning experience in this course?
Homeschooling. In the far distant past this simple word described how children received their educational training within their own homes rather than in a remote location managed by others. They weren’t “schooled” at the church or in the public schoolhouse by a “schoolmarm” but rather at home, schooled by their own parents. Today it has taken on significance far beyond its simple origins. To many it has become a code word for the anti-government, fundamentalist Christian movement’s efforts at their own form of “mind control”. To others it’s simply a way to keep their children from being exposed to the culture of drugs, sex, and violence increasingly evident in many of our public schools. And still others see homeschooling as a way to give their intellectually gifted children relief from the “one size fits all” approach prevalent throughout much of our educational system. One thing appears certain regarding the contemporary trend toward homeschooling: it is growing in popularity. Estimates of how many of our children are being homeschooled are as high as 2 million. In the early days of this trend most proponents were driven by religious concerns as public education became more and more secular. These advocates were certain homeschooling was the right thing to do. Their need was to learn how to home school effectively. Support organizations and help groups quickly sprang up and private schools began to offer specific homeschool curricula. While all states allow Homeschooling, there are different regulations and national organizations popped up to help parents sort through the maze of what regulations, if any, their particular state had for Homeschooling. For many later entrants the concern was less about “how to homeschool” my children and more about “should I homeschool” my children. Opponents of homeschooling cite difficulties in acquiring social interaction skills when a child is removed from daily interaction with his or her peers, while proponents point out the availability of extra-curricular activities at public schools for homeschooled children and the growing number of social support groups where homeschooled students could interact with each other. If you search the Internet for guidance on homeschooling you’ll find a huge variety of opinion from parents and professional educators and advocates. Here’s what’s difficult to find: the opinions of children who have been homeschooled. You’ll find very little about how to involve children in the decision to homeschool that directly impacts them. They appear to have been pawns in their parents’ game. If the decision is based on the desire to protect a child from the outside world, sooner or later that child will have to enter that world. Having no experience with the culture of drugs, sex, and violence in many or our high schools, will homeschooled children be prepared to deal with that kind of culture in a college environment? For some insight into how homeschooled children reflect back on their experience, go to Wiki Answers and enter “how do homeschooled people feel about homeschooling.”
hmm... i would look for the reasons behind your "love" for her. talk to her and tell her how you feel, the fact that youre homeschooled should be beside the matter.
their hormones are changing so they experience feelings they've never felt before. body shapes are changing as both sexes experience these, they are interested in the opposite sex. they feel more mature than junior highers, and feel that the "love" they experience is true and that no one else knows what they feel. it's just a psychological phase they all go through.
You can hire an attorney to see if a judge will give you permission to home school your child.
depends on the student...
Homeschool can be free, or it can cost thousands of dollars. It really just depends on what you want to do. If you want to put effort into searching for free resources and piecing together your own curriculum, you could homeschool for practically nothing. If you want to use a full curriculum that has been put together for you, you can spend hundreds or thousands of dollars buying that program complete with the supplies - just open the box and go. If you feel the need to hire a professional teacher or tutor to teach your children in your home, the cost will be even higher. Studies have shown that most homeschooling parents in the United States spend about $300-600 per year per child on school supplies, books, curriculum, software, field trips, and other school related items. The cost is generally higher for high school students than elementary students.
It lets the students feel more of a personal relationship with their teacher. It also generally makes students feel important and makes them view you in a positive light.
They highly respected her.
you have to make them feel comfterble or else thell feel alienated from there class
Ricky Carmichael did not like home schooling. Ricky Carmichael did not like anything that took him away from Motocross racing when he was growing up.