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He Says, She Says Saturday: Homeschooling

(aka HSSSS:HS)

c. December 20, 2007

Pippa's first rendition of her own name. c. December 20, 2007

Well, you’ve waited a long time for an installment of your favorite husband and wife bloggy duo doing what they do best, so this week, we aren’t going to disappoint.  We are tackling possibly our biggest (and certainly most potentially controversial) topic yet.  Oh, yeah, and it’s timely, too!

We have just this very week begun the process of sticking a little toe in the pool of homeschooling, and we have no idea whether we’ll be spending the next who-knows-how-many years in the pool or just doing a quick lap, finding the water a little too chilly, and hopping right back out.  (Uh, sorry… metaphor taken way, way too far.)  Last night we ordered this pre-K curriculum for me to start with Pippa this school year.  At this point, we are planning to start her in public school for kindergarten next year, but we are open to being totally swept off our feet by our “experiment year” and deciding to stick with homeschooling for as long as we feel it is the best thing for her and for our family.

Homeschooling is something Trevor and I have thought about and talked about for longer than we’ve had children, but as the time to make a definite decision grew nearer and nearer, we have found ourselves with more questions than answers.  I thought that the more I looked into homeschooling, the more certain I would feel that it was a perfect fit for us.  It certainly does look good, and I see so many good reasons to do it, but I still see a few pretty good reasons not to do it, and that’s where I am right now.

The Pros:

  • I am a trained, certified teacher.  If I am going to be at home with children, why wouldn’t I be their teacher?  Why would I send my children off for someone else to teach, so that I could go and teach someone else’s children, all the while wishing I could be with my own instead?  I love the thought of being the one to witness those great Ah-ha! moments: learning to read, learning to add and subtract, learning how a transistor works in an LDR circuit (okay, so part of me is still thinking long term maybe).  Is that a selfish reason to homeschool?  Maybe.  Let’s move on.
  • For pre-school, it’s cheaper, even the way that we’re choosing to do it, which is at the more expensive end of the homeschool price range.  Unless this year is a total disaster, we are planning on using the same material to teach Romilly and Beatrix before they start school, too.  And the new one, come to think of it.  That’s less than $100 per kid.  Bargain.
  • Homeschooling would keep the girls primarily in an environment in which I control their influences.  I can see and deal with heart issues as they arise without having to wonder if new behaviors (or turns of phrase) have been picked up somewhere else or just from their own sinful little hearts (or learned from mine for that matter!)
  • Homeschooling , at its best, gives kids a foundation of loving to learn and sets them up to be lifelong self-teachers.  I really do believe this.  As much as I loved my public school experience (I truly did, and more on that will follow in the Cons list), I can look at who I am and know that I have been trained to be deadline driven and very motivated by the praise of others (read: grades).  Now that no one is requiring me to keep to a certain schedule or marking my performance, well… let’s just say I would not be a straight-A student anymore with my current syllabus of cooking, cleaning, and planning fun and enriching activities for my children.   Low B’s if I’m lucky, except for the cleaning – you already know about that.  A lot of that is probably my personality, and just plain human weakness, but I can’t help but think that that the qualities that I’ve seen in homeschooled adult friends (namely self-motivation and stick-to-itiveness) serve them very well in whatever they pursue in life.
  • No having to unteach and reteach the subjects that are being taught from an unbiblical point of view in schools.  I was amazed when I was a science teacher at just how pervasive the evolution mentality is.  The foundations are laid early, and in more topics than you could ever imagine evolutionistic ideas being relevant to.  But even the evolution can of worms is secondary to the implicit, relativistic no-one-is-right-no-one-is-wrong morality that colors how almost every subject is taught.  Schools make a great effort *not* to teach morals, but nature abhors a vaccuum, and in this age of political correctness, I absolutely believe children are getting the message loud and clear that “whatever I think is okay, is okay for me.”  And that’s *not* okay for me.

The Cons:

  • Clearly, I am not the most organized girl in the world.  I believe I can rise to the challenge of staying on top of things and keeping the necessary records, but it will be a challenge.  To that end, I will not, as I once thought I might, be doing Pippa’s pre-K year from scratch.  Yes, it might be cheaper and even more effective to write all my own lessons and get all or most of our books from the library.  Maybe I will get there someday if we stick with this, but in order to give this a fair shot at working, this year we are using a very structured pre-packaged curriculum that I have heard good things about from several people.
  • I am *not* going to list “lack of socialization” among my cons (I mention it here only because it seems to be everyone’s number one point against homeschooling), except to tell you why I don’t buy it.  Homeschooled kids are, in my experience, at ease with people of all ages because they have been living life with their families rather than being cooped up in the company of only children born the same year as them.  In the grand scheme of life, spending forty hours a week or so with people exactly your age and who have spent their lives (for the most part) living within a few miles of where you’ve spent yours is not a realistic scenario.  I’m not saying it’s damaging or that it’s a good reason *not* to send a child to public school, just that I don’t see socialization with peers to be the be-all-end-all that it’s made out to be.  What a wealth of wisdom and life experience there is to be gained from accompanying a parent on daily interactions with others: errands, church activities, visiting neighbors or elderly friends (hmm… maybe I should have listed this as a Pro…).  Not to mention that there are *ample* opportunities to get homeschooled kids together with other kids.  It just isn’t an issue.
  • But here is the one Con that continues to niggle at me and make me question the whole thing.  As Christians we are called to be salt and light to the world.  We are to be in the world but not of the world.  Our lives are mission fields.  At what age in the life of the young believer does all this come into effect?  I can safely say for my girls “not yet”, since I don’t believe any of them has truly understood the gospel yet, though we pray each day that they will.  But suppose, by God’s grace, Pippa at age nine is a growing, thriving young believer with a true sense of God’s purpose for her life?  At that point, I think I would want her to be in her mission field.  I would not want to deprive her of the faith strengthening (though trying) experience of seeing how the world lives and what makes us different as God’s children.  Nor would I want to deprive public schools of the (hopefully positive) influence of Christian children.  Junior high and high school were incredible times of growth in my own life.  In part because of the wonderful youth group God placed me in at the time, but also, I believe because it was a time of becoming aware of what others believed, and claiming my faith as my own.  I can remember discovering in middle school that a long time friend, raised Jewish, was now calling herself an atheist.  It shocked me to my core to see how the world had already pulled her away from what she had been raised to believe, and I wanted desperately to talk her out of it, to defend God’s glory somehow.   I tasted my first tastes of mocking and labelling, and I learned to cherish and cling to my faith.  More importantly, I know that even at such a young age, God is able to use a believer in the life of another, and I want that for my kids.  It’s hypothetical and probably a few years off, but therein lies my one glaring objection to homeschooling.  And I think it’s kind of a biggie.

I would absolutely love to hear anyone’s thoughts or experiences on the subject.  What decision did you or will you make for your own children and why?  What other arguments (for or against) have I overlooked?

Most of all, I’m looking forward to finding out what he says about it, and I’m sure you are, too!  Don’t let me keep you.

Filed under : Family,HSSS Saturdays
By Jodi
On August 30, 2008
At 7:34 pm
Comments : 10
 
 

How the New Computer Set-Up Is Going

The computer has lived in the study (on the floor, no less) for 12 days now.  My back is suffering from the time I’m still spending on it doing necessities.  My e-mail correspondence is suffering.  EBay is suffering.  My blog… well, I don’t have to tell you.  It’s been six whole days since my last post, and that was only a photo.  Forgive me?

The good news: my home is cleaner, I’ve spent more time with my children, and conversation has been restored to our family mealtimes.   All things considered, I think it was a good trade (although I type that with gritted teeth at this particular moment as I have spent the last two hours sitting on the floor tackling a mountain of eBay paperwork.  Poor me!)

We will get a desk eventually and things will find a balance, I’m sure, but in the meantime, I just wanted to assure everyone who’s still reading that I’m alive and well and missing the blogosphere immensely!

Filed under : Uncategorized
By Jodi
On August 26, 2008
At 4:41 pm
Comments : 2
 
 

Wordless Wednesday: An Idyllic Day In Debbie-Mum’s Garden

For more Wordless Wednesday, click here.

Filed under : Uncategorized
By Jodi
On August 20, 2008
At 9:10 am
Comments : 4
 
 

A Much Needed Restructure

Until last Thursday, our main PC resided very happily on our main dining table.  It has a flatscreen monitor and wireless keyboard and mouse, so we felt it could be moved easily enough when we needed the space for company, and it was worth it to have it so accessible.  I could surf the ‘net in the evenings while Trevor watched the baseball, and we were still one big happy family in the same room.

What we hadn’t counted on when we made this decision was that the computer would become an extra family member at our mealtimes.  An obnoxious, conversation-dominating family member who never gives anyone else a chance to talk but wants to talk about himself all the time.  You know the type?  At lunchtime with the girls I would catch up on e-mails and blogs, at dinnertime Trevor would check his feeds.  Over dessert the girls would beg to watch cartoons on YouTube.  It was totally fun, but totally depriving us of precious time together.

I also hadn’t counted on feeling an almost irrestistible urge to sit down and ‘check a couple things’ every time I was passing by during the day (that is, from the kitchen to the rest of the house – any idea how many times I do that in a day?!?).  The computer was sucking me away from my girls, and it just wasn’t okay.

Self-control might have been the better solution, but failing that, we made the tough decision on Wednesday night to banish the computer to the study.  Trevor wasn’t too impressed with having to go into the crawlspace *again* to feed the cable back from whence it originally came, but we both knew it was what had to be done.

I think we’re all feeling pangs of withdrawal now, but in the long run, less PC accessibility is going to be a blessing to our home.  We’re pretty sure.  Like 80, 85% sure at least.

Filed under : Miscellaneous
By Jodi
On August 19, 2008
At 9:29 am
Comments :1
 
 

How To Find Out Who Reads Your Blog…

…And doesn’t already know that you’re pregnant:

It’s official: baby #4 is on the way!  An ultrasound yesterday confirmed that I am about eleven and a half weeks pregnant, and due right around Trevor’s (30th) birthday at the beginning of March.  We feel once again humbled and blessed to be given the great privilege of being someone’s parents, and we’re so excited to see who this little one will turn out to be.

As a side note, if you’ve been noticing a distinct lack of posts of any level of interest, wit, or thought-provokingness over the last two months or so, now you hopefully understand why.  As I near the end of my first trimester, the fog of nausea and exhaustion is starting to lift, and I’m hoping (for the sake of my poor family as well as my readership) to be back to myself very soon!

Filed under : Family
By Jodi
On August 15, 2008
At 9:09 am
Comments : 8
 
 

Wordless Wednesday: Nary a Creepy Old Man in Sight

We had a fabulous day yesterday with dear friends from Romilly’s online playgroup, once again confirming to any naysayers that they are all *actual* moms with *actual* toddlers.  Thanks so much to Tracy, Sara, Danielle, Toni and Amy for a wonderful day out!  (Especially thanks to Tracy for hosting us… tell me again why you don’t have a blog for me to link to???)

For more WW, click here.

Filed under : Wordless Wednesday
By Jodi
On August 13, 2008
At 8:08 am
Comments : 2
 
 

A Third of My Life Ago

Taken at Easter (obviously) 1999, but the earliest photo of us together that I could find.

Taken at Easter (obviously) 1999, but the earliest photo of us together that I could find.

Today (or at least extremely early tomorrow morning) is our much-neglected, barely-acknowledged *other* anniversary.  It is worthy of particular notice this year (although I will admit, only Trevor noticed, and was too shy to blog about it), as the event in question took place a whole decade ago tonight.  Ten years ago, we shared our first kiss (our RDK, as we like to call it.  We never really had an RDT, my husband being the strong, silent type).

When I look back on that night, I realize that that was when it really began.  Of course our wedding day was the day that we promised before God to love each other forever, and that will always be the ‘big’ anniversary.  But that night in August 1998, just before he went down to the basement of my mom’s house for the night and I went up to my room two whole floors away, he had my heart.  And he has never stopped having it for one moment since.  Sometime the next couple days (I’m sure he won’t thank me for telling you this), Trevor told me that he wished we could just skip past the whole long-distance relationship thing and be married already.  I knew exactly how he felt.  We were 19 and 20 at the time.  We have never looked back, and we have never been apart, except for the sort of apartness that an ocean can cause.

Happy Whatever-We-Call-Today, my love.  I’m so thankful I got to keep you.

Filed under : Uncategorized
By Jodi
On August 12, 2008
At 8:14 pm
Comments : 4
 
 

Our Budding Author

I stole some precious one-on-one time with my big girl the other day at my mom’s house while the little girls were napping.  We walked down to the pond and fed the geese (they like Tostitos, apparently.  Who knew?) and ended up at the little play area just behind my mom’s cul-de-sac.  Having Mommy to herself was apparently more exciting to Pippa than the play equipment, because she kept wandering over from the slide to the bench where I was sitting in the shade.

There, I had the joy of hearing my daughter tell *me* a story.  And it was so good, that when we got back to the house, I had her illustrate it, and when we got back to our own house, I wrote it down.  Here it is in nearly-published form, for your reading pleasure.   (Click each page to enlarge.)

Filed under : Girls
By Jodi
On August 8, 2008
At 3:18 pm
Comments : 4
 
 

Ch is a Useful Sound

Pippa still struggles to make a few consonant and double consonant sounds.  It’s normal for her age, and usually, we can understand each other just fine.  This morning, not so much.

Pippa came out of the playroom where all three girls were playing, I *thought* out of harm’s way, while I cleaned up a broken mug in the living room.  She was quite worked up, and this is how it went:

Her: Mommy, come tick!  Bee-tix is eating sock!

Me: (Not really that concerned, bigger fish to fry, what with the broken mug and all) She’s eating… a sock?

Her: No, Mommy.  SSS-ock!

Me: Uh… truck?

Her: No.  SSSS-OCK!

Me: (Running through every consonant she does that sometimes sounds like an S, but totally blanking) Okay, honey, I’ll be there in just a second once I throw away this glass.

*      *      *

Just a second later, I found this girl, happy as can be, eating…

Ohhh… CHALK!

Filed under : Girls
By Jodi
On
At 10:17 am
Comments : 4
 
 

Wordless Wednesday: Mexican Princesses

Thank you so much to Andrew, Carol, Tabitha and Oscar for these beautiful new tops!  We love you and miss you all.  May God bless your  family and your work for Him in Mexico!

For more Wordless Wednesday, click here.

Filed under : Uncategorized
By Jodi
On August 6, 2008
At 8:15 am
Comments : 3