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Bridgeway Homeschool
Academy Homeschooling
FREE REPORT REVEALS HOW TO AVOID THEM Below is a digest of the 10 part email series about homeschooling problems. Everyone approaches homeschooling with a different perspective. Some approach it with fear and trepidation; others with excitement and enthusiasm; others feel backed into a corner with no other options; and still others look forward to homeschooling as a way to invest more into their children. No matter the perspective, everyone wants to do it right! We all look forward to a successful home school year full of rewarding experiences, rich learning and enjoyable time with our children. However, it is easy to make mistakes and though those mistakes can be learning experiences, it is so much more rewarding to look back at a year full of positive experiences than one that was full of “learning experiences” for the homeschooling Mom or Dad. My aim is to help you avoid the ten most common mistakes homeschooling parents make and therefore, help you to tackle the year armed with the information necessary for an enjoyable home school year! Examine each point carefully and look honestly at yourself and your teaching style. Not every mistake will apply to you—that will depend on your personality and approach—but all can easily occur without warning! 1. I have never been so frazzled in my life! We would cram in our studies in the morning, then load up the car to head out to our daily routine. I can’t remember who burned out first—the kids or me, but I do know we burned out. Soon those creative moments of science experiments, creative writing fun, and history projects were a thing of the past and we became a slave to our activities schedule. The key: limit yourself to one or two activities at a time and make schooling a priority. When you have more time to commit at home, schooling can become much more enjoyable! 2. Find what activities work for your family and take advantage of them. There are many opportunities out there through local museums, art schools, YMCAs, support groups, colleges, churches, and historical sites. A great idea that worked for us was to get together with several other homeschooling families and plan out a year’s worth of field trips—one per month. We then assigned one to each parent to organize, picked the dates (which we all reserved), and looked forward to our once a month outing. On occasion, we would also get together at a local playground or state park for another day of fun or learning. This smaller network allowed us to support each other on a more personal basis and to feel free to call on another when we needed encouragement or ideas. 3. One the other hand, I have also seen families who decide to home school with no direction, no formal home school curriculum, and no real goals in mind. Students will live up to your expectations and if none exist, they will quickly adapt and really enjoy themselves for a time. However, by Halloween, kids long for the structure of school and parents are thinking that the ghosts and ghouls knocking on their door look much more appealing than their bored and antsy children. The individualized instruction that homeschooling provides opens up the door for students to master concepts much quicker than in a classroom full of distractions. However, it also makes it very easy to coast through the year without really accomplishing anything. The answer to this struggle is planning. The key to careful planning is to know your child. What are his or her abilities? Struggles? Weaknesses? Passions? Putting a home school curriculum plan together that addresses all of these gives you the tools up front to a successful school year. A full service academy like Bridgeway Homeschool Academy guides you through this planning stage through diagnostic placement testing, open dialogue, and the expertise of certified teachers and trained staff members. Diagnostics will pinpoint for you exactly where your student needs to begin in each subject based on his or her skills, struggles and strengths. And the staff will work with you to ensure that your needs and academic desires are met.
4. I recommend you commit an entire day at the beginning of the school year to organizing your home school room. Engage your children in the task—let them decide how to organize their supplies. Store away your teacher’s guides and answer keys—preferably in a file drawer so they are always at your fingertips and organize the curriculum in a sequence that makes sense. The more time you devote ahead of time to organizing, the less wasted time throughout the school year searching for items you know “are around here somewhere!” 5. Let me share some personal experiences. I am ashamed to say, I fell into this one very badly my first year of homeschooling. At the beginning of the school year, I was really good about taking breaks—even heading outside with my children to play baseball, catch, soccer, volleyball, tag . . . you name it. My favorite time for one of these breaks was when one of the kids was struggling, grumpy or looking tired, or when I found myself overwhelmed with the mess around me, or when grogginess was setting in for all of us. I would announce, “RECESS TIME!” and we would head outside for a good 20 minutes of fun. It never ceased to amaze me how easy it was to get back to a difficult task after a quick breather. However, as the year went on, I found myself getting more and more involved with other things—see my notes under Overscheduling above. Suddenly, it was essential for my kids to finish up their work in the morning so we could have the afternoon free and breaks became a thing of the past. I never realized just how frustrating this must have been for my kids until a recent homeschool graduate put it on her top ten list. Sure enough, my kids hated it! To them the tradeoff was not worth it. A “free” afternoon after a grueling morning was not of value to them. To avoid this one: schedule regular breaks and take them whether you think you need them or not and be sure to spend at least one break enjoying your kids! You will find that the time you spend with them will help you relax and enjoy the day much more than if you use it to get things done! In the end a more relaxed longer day is better than a crammed short day any day! Another idea that works very well for many families is to allow four days a week for schooling and take one day off for extra-curricular activities. This allows them to take advantage of socialization opportunities, field trips, and/or cleaning catch up days without sacrificing the academics. 6. We had many a day where my kids were ready to pull their hair out or just did not grasp the concept while I stood over them like a Nazi! Those poor kids! When I finally learned to back off, our homeschooling became much more effective. On days when my fifth grader just could not quite figure out how to reduce fractions to the lowest common denominator, we would take a break and move on to something else. Although in some cases, we did not even return to math that day, more often than not, we found that waiting until the evening when the hustle and bustle of the day was over worked much better! At that time, she could sit down and breeze through the math concepts that were impossible just a few hours earlier. In some cases, you may need to abandon an entire course and try a different approach. Now, don’t be too quick to make this decision—too many of these decisions can be costly. Take the time to really evaluate whether it is the homeschool curriculum or your misuse of it that is causing the struggle. Sometimes it just takes a fresh look or slowing down a little to make a course work better for you. But if you find that something just does not work, don’t be afraid to set it aside or pass it on to someone else. On the other hand, don’t make the mistake of rushing your children through a study that they are passionate about! Take the time to allow them to pursue it further. The Internet, carefully monitored, can be a terrific tool for digging deeper into topics or areas of interest. The Bridgeway Home School Academy Members site is full of resources, educational videos, information and graphics that can enhance any subject! Bottom line: watch and learn from your kids and adapt as necessary. Don’t become a slave to your home school> curriculum.
7. Sometimes pride keeps them from asking for advice when things get tough; sometimes just the overwhelming task of schooling the children makes it difficult to seek out socialization opportunities; sometimes, it is the misperception that “That is the way it is for homeschoolers.” This is a huge danger! Irrevocably, Moms who try to do it alone become frustrated and very lonely. Do you find yourself keeping the telemarketer on the phone as long as you possibly can? Does your UPS man find it difficult to escape from your front door after delivering a package? You need socialization! It is just as important for you as it is for your kids. Socialization for a homeschooling Mom means a sounding board for ideas, advice from those who have been through it before, friendships that allow us to be ourselves, an easy way to share or access information and ideas, a terrific venue to pass on newly discovered educational events or opportunities . . . all absolutely necessary for Moms who are investing so much into their children. Support groups, homeschool publications, seminars, homeschool conferences, memberships, classes . . . all of these are terrific ways for homeschooling families to socialize with other children and adults. Don’t ignore this! This will make or break your homeschooling endeavors. Joining an academy like Bridgeway will also add that extra support to your homeschooling program. The ability to drop an e-mail to your Academic Advisor, to read the homeschool tips and ideas that are delivered to your computer each week, and the knowledge that help and support are just a phone call away are valuable assets to any homeschooling program.
8. Trying to keep those same standards is like trying to rake leaves into a pile in the middle of a tornado. Face it: your home will never be the same. Your meals will not always be healthy, your errands will not always be run, your bills may be late, and your bathrooms may not always sparkle. Worse yet, walking in to your friend’s home may begin to become one of the most discouraging moments of your day! Her perfectly arranged seasonal décor, her floors that are cleaner than your counters, her spotless carpets, and her very organized desk will be difficult not to notice. And when she says, “Please ignore the mess,” you may even want to strangle her! But take a deep breath and remember: 1. 2.
3. 4.
5. 6. If you are going to survive this homeschooling experience, you must learn to lower your standards! Find the one thing that you cannot live with and take care of that every day. Give your children pride in their home by assigning chores that can be completed before school each morning and be willing to let the rest go. 9. You set up the boundaries, then, allow your kids some freedom within those boundaries. Your willingness to bounce ideas off of your kids and to really consider their input will mean so much to them . . . and you might be surprised at what they come up with! 10. However, there is also a wealth of information out there that is absolutely invaluable to any homeschooling program. From educational and interactive games, to live cam pictures of our solar system, the possibilities are endless. And if you know where to go, you can tap into homeschool resources and instruction that will never run dry! I welcome you to check out two such invaluable resources. Both were developed by professionals with a concern for children and a passion for education, these types of sites are absolutely necessary for any homeschooling program! Click a Tutor will provide additional on-line home school instruction in any subject you can imagine. Easy to use, easy to search and full of fun learning experiences, this site is a terrific addition to any homeschooling program. Bridgeway Members is another terrific homeschool site exclusively for Bridgeway Academy students and their parents. Parent help, worksheet printables, grade specific educational games, courses, and resources, this site offers more information in one location than any other home school resource site. Homeschooling can be an incredibly rich and rewarding experience for both students and parents. Yes, there will be tough days; however, avoiding these top ten mistakes WILL make your homeschooling much more effective! About the author
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