We have found that this 'socialization issue' is not a
big problem. Our sons are both involved in city sponsored sports
leagues. This has been very successful for us. They have both taken to
their respective sports with vigor. This is just one example of what we
do for socialization, but they have enjoyed it so much. Some communities
provide other types of community activities such as swimming teams and
even debate clubs. A call to your local community center could prove to
be very valuable in your search for educational, and physical activities
outside the home.
I am not sure what ideas you have in mind with regard
to socialization, but it has been our experience that homeschooling
offers higher quality socialization and probably a wider variety than
any to be found in the public school system. We graduated our son in
California from High School, and he was active in political campaigns,
anti-abortion activities, computer bulletin board sysop in San Diego and
will be starting one up here in the Littleton area. He organized a
"Republican Youth Group", etc... Rarely would a public school
system student have the time to do what can be achieved by those who are
free to pursue their personal interests, including socialization. Rarely
do they choose to socialize with those who have involvement with immoral
or illegal agendas.
Perhaps this isn't what you were after, simply put
socialization for homeschooling is NOT the problem so many make it out
to be. In fact it is wonderful to be delivered from the socialization
that takes place so often in our public institutions.
Socialization:
The S Word
My objection to the social life of
almost all schools . . . is that it is for the most part mean-spirited,
competitive, ruthless, snobbish, conformist, consumerist (you are judged
by what you can buy, or your parents buy for you), fickle, heartless,
and often cruel. Most children come out of school with far less
self-esteem, less sense of their own identity, dignity, and worth, than
they had when they went in.
John Holt, in Growing Without Schooling
August 1983
I find it curious that when the subject
of homeschooling comes up the quality of education is rarely at the top
of the list of questions that follow. It is as if, even among those most
critical of the idea, there is a tacit agreement that schools do not
have the monopoly on teaching. In recent years there have been many
articles, research projects, and exposes pointing out what we
homeschoolers have been taking for granted for years. Why, then, are so
many people so confused about the socialization question?
Being out in the world engenders in children a sense of reality. They
see what goes on all day in the business of life, and where they fit in.
They see how adults manage day-to-day details and long-range plans, and
they learn to handle and accept the balance of success and failure, of
struggle and recreation. Children recognize their value to the community
as they do their part to contribute, and they understand the role of the
community in their own lives, as a resource and support. Perhaps of most
importance are the opportunities simply to spend time with people of all
ages, experience, and points of view. One fascinating aspect of the
society described in The Continuum Concept is that the children,
included from infancy in the business of the village, have a smooth
transition into adulthood without what has come to be accepted as the
universal truth of adolescence: rebellion.
The vast majority of children are segregated in school by age (leaving
aside the obvious fact that by virtue of their geographical location,
and its consequent effect on social milieu, they are also usually
segregated by race, culture, or class). They spend a large proportion of
their waking time learning from, competing with, and being compared to
each other, jockeying for position among their peers and approval from
their teachers. The pressures to fit in and to succeed are very powerful
to children (as they are to most adults) and when the seal of approval
comes from outside the child and not from his or her own sense of
achievement, an important element of self-trust, of knowing inside when
something is right or true or good or valuable, may be compromised.
Belonging to the right group and getting the right grade — these
become goals in themselves.
The other regrettable byproduct of this system is the Us versus Them
mentality it fosters. Think about it. There are the cool kids and then
there are the dweebs, dorks, and losers. And the brains — sometimes by
choice, sometimes by proclamation, but either way, they are rarely part
of the in-crowd. There's our class against their class, and the students
versus the teacher. Then there's the big kids versus the little kids.
And, of course, kids versus parents. This lays some pretty effective
groundwork for our beliefs versus their beliefs and our kind of people
against yours. Eventually, given sufficient anger, frustration, and lack
of social skill, we come around again to Us versus Them, as families, as
neighborhoods, and as nations.
-- Victoria Wright, The
Mining Company
What
is proper socialization?
Socialization is not what takes place in a school.
At a conference a nurse\educator who advocated Ritalin stated school is
an abnormal environment and some children cannot adapt therefore a
little help is needed. I personally have a problem with drugging our
youth. I think it shows a poor example that a pill can cure.
I have homeschooled my 15 year old son and I have a
five year old daughter. My son is now in a Jr. college full time. He
started when he was 13. He actually attends the classes and is treated
respectfully. He went as a high school special originally but now has
over one year done and is going to attend full time. By the time he
would have graduated from regular high school he will have a degree and
a trade to help him in furthering his education or employment. He has
had time to pursue a variety of activities. He volunteers in the
community and has a reputation as being a very nice young man to anyone
in the community that meets or knows him. He tried school when he was in
sixth grade but he did not have time to socialize. Between school,
homework and his one outside activity he had no time for playing. He
choose to leave school after a month.
What is the purpose of education? To get a child
prepared for the real world. In the regular school they, generally
speaking, draw this out for 12 years. A child that wants to obtain a
doctorate degree is looking at being old before obtaining one.
Schools should offer an accelerated program so the child can go at their
own pace. I have my Masters in Education.
Send
us your ideas!
Please call 1-800-863-1474
with any questions you may have!
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