Sunday, August 29, 2010

Homeschool Jungle Freaks

For a time now, I have wanted to put into words the reason why our family has chosen to homeschool.  It is a troublesome task though, developing a creed such as this one, because my reasons change daily.

On the first day of the local school year, my first grader slept in until 8:30 and finally straggled out to the living room in his underwear to watch a morning cartoon and then eat a leisurely breakfast.  On that particular day, when I said my oft-repeated phrase, "This is why I homeschool," it was because I felt gratified that I could let The Boy Wonder have a relaxing morning instead of the stressful one we would have suffered through if he had needed to be at school, already fed and alert, at 7:30.  I want to cuddle and play with him in the mornings, not yell at him to hurry up.


Last week, when we finished reading Charlotte's Web, I checked the movie out of the library, made buttered popcorn on the stove, and snuggled up with the kids amidst a pile of pillows on the living room floor to watch the movie and discuss the differences between the two mediums.  On that day, THAT was why we were homeschoolers.

Friday evening, as we curled up at bedtime to read and then compare and contrast two very similar folk tales from Japan and Germany (Issun Boshi and Tom Thumb), and The Boy Wonder wanted to get out of bed to find the countries on the globe, THAT was why I was grateful to be homeschooling.

I homeschool because I do not see the benefit in a 6.5-hour school day when the state requires only 4.5 hours of instruction time.  I teach my children at home, for now at least, because many of the curriculum standards that are adhered to in the early grammar school years are things mama is more than qualified to teach.  We have chosen to do our learning at home, at the zoo, at the park, at the nature center, at the botanical gardens, in our kitchen, on the front porch, at church, and at art classes because I want to curate the curriculum according to my own peculiar child's individual interests, needs, strengths, and weaknesses.

I desire to teach my children a love of learning, an appreciation for the natural world, the hunger for knowledge and the ability to seek out the answers to their many questions.  I hope to give them the time and the space to discover who they wish to become, and to give them the opportunities to acquire the skills they will need to get to where they wish to go.

Childhood is a time for play, for exploration, and for learning.  Learning so much about so many things.  If my six-year-old wants to immerse himself in everything to do with outer space, we can create unit studies to weave in math and handwriting and reading and crafts and creative thinking that revolve solely around outer space.  When we are driving down the highway and we pass a horse trailer with a camel on board, we can come home and spend the afternoon on the computer finding out as many ridiculous camel facts as we wish to know.  We can learn anything we want, and we can spend as much time as we want on any given subject without having to adhere to a constrictive, arbitrary schedule.


And childhood is short.  So very short.  If the weather is beautiful and there are frogs sitting on the lily pads in our pond, handwriting practice can wait.  If math worksheets have grown tedious and sitting at a table is becoming torturous for all of us, taking a walk or a bike ride is an option we have.  If no one has had enough sleep and grouchiness is making the beginning reader feel frustrated enough to cry, an impromptu trip to the library to pick out storybooks for mama to read aloud can be the best solution.


We can take a Tuesday off from school to make ice cream and play with Legos.  We can do lessons in our pajamas.  We can spend six days in a row on nothing but science experiments.

We are fortunate to have this opportunity, and we intend to make the best of it.


When it comes down to it though, my reasons for homeschooling are stated nowhere near as articulately and as eloquently as in the now-viral graduation speech from the valedictorian of Coxsackle-Athens High School.  And during those times, those all-too frequent times, in which I think this whole homeschooling thing just might kill me, I read that speech again and remind myself that I felt much the same way as I completed a senior year that could have been better spent pretty much anywhere other than within the four walls that held me hostage while I finished one remaining real high school credit amongst a padded schedule of mostly pointless electives that filled up the extra required time needed of a student who had already fulfilled all the other college-prep requirements.  And I recall clearly how absurd it seemed when I achieved honor graduate status after a year of goofing off and showing up only when I was sure I would get busted if I were not there.

Simply put, my goals for my children are not the same as the goals of the American public education system.  I have no need to normalize my children, to create middle-management worker bees, or to uphold the societal status quo.  And that, I think, is the most compelling reason I can think of to homeschool my children for as long as we are able.

9 comments:

Becky said...

Your kids also spend the day with each other. One learns about the other's needs and desires and it will probably make them closer as adults.

Jessica Ham said...

Yes! That is how I feel about homeschooling my children also. Well put, Sarah!

Jennifer Jo said...

You say it well. Love the relaxed, broad-minded approach to learning. Homeschooling rocks!

Sarah Hubbard said...

Well stated!!!! It gets easier every year and the time spent with them is priceless! WOOT for homeschooling for sure!

Erin said...

I've been homeschooling my dc since birth, my oldest is 17 today!. Couldn't imagine it any other way.

Enjoy:)

*I found your post via your mama. She's so proud of you, comes through often.

Lee said...

We homeschool too and for the reasons you wrote so well. Also because my 2 older boys are not neurotypical and did not thrive with the test driven, heavy handed techniques of our overcrowded classrooms. (I realize I speak only for my own experience--I am not slamming public schools.) I know my 6 y/o would be the class clown because he is bright enough to finish his work quickly and then use the extra time to "entertain." I'd rather let him goof up for us and then use help him use his creativity in a way that doesn't punish him for it.

Nikki said...

::applause:: Very well said! I am a homeschool grad and I can think of many wonderful experiences I would have missed out on had I been in a "classroom". This is why I WILL homeschool my children, when I (Lord willing) have them!

Amie said...

Good words - going to link - we LOVE homeschooling for all the reasons that you pointed out and more.

April said...

We have the same reasons for homeschooling, plus a few more, like the fact that we live in a foreign country and I don't like the school systems here. :)