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Homeschooling?
What About Socialization?
Will my Home School child be a social outcast?
Many parents as well as students are often
concerned about the Socialization factor when considering home
schooling. Parents sometimes feel their children might miss out on
the social contact or interaction between students in a traditional
school setting. However, some see the possibly detrimental side to
today's public school system. So many children find themselves and
their studies actually suffering due to social complications that
would not exist in a home school setting,
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, 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
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 economic background, 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 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.
The other regrettable byproduct of this system is the Us versus Them
mentality it fosters. Think about it. There are the cool kids and
there are the dweebs, dorks, and losers. And the brains - sometimes
by choice, sometimes by proclamation, are rarely part of the
in-crowd. It's our class against their class, and the students
versus the teacher. The big kids versus the little kids. And, of
course, kids versus parents. This lays some pretty effective
groundwork for an worldview attitude of my beliefs versus theirs, my
people versus yours.
-- Victoria Wright, The Mining Company (Summary)
Worried About Social Activities?
If you're considering homeschooling but are worried about your
child's social development, you'll soon find that your community is
full of resources where homeschooled children interact with other
kids. Just for starters, there's the YMCA or YWCA, local community
centers and sports teams, Boys & Girls Clubs, church or synagogue
groups, Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, Camp Fire, and coordinated
activities with other homeschooled kids.
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