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Home : Getting Started : Setting Up Your Homeschool: How Can You Begin Homeschooling?  Start!

 

 

 

 

How Can You Begin Homeschooling? Start!

Jessica Hulcy

 

Texas Home School Coalition Association REVIEW © May 2001

 

 

The best way to begin homeschooling is to activate the five-letter word, START. So often, parents who truly desire to teach their children at home say, "I am not trained. I am not smart enough. I will ruin my children!" If God places a burden on a person’s heart, He will provide the means to accomplish that task. The same God who provided manna and quail for the Israelites in the desert will surely provide parents with the skills, knowledge, direction, and yes, even patience to teach their own children, if they desire.

 

Once parents trust, where do they begin?

 

Most parents begin by attending a book fair to shop for curricula. This is akin to grocery shopping for the entire year without a list or a menu plan. Instead of standing at a vendor’s table asking how much a particular curriculum costs, parents would be better served sitting at home talking about each child and setting individual goals and objectives for them. Public and private school teachers face a classroom of twenty to thirty students, making it very difficult to individualize. Since most home schooling families are slightly smaller than that, it is possible to tailor each child’s curriculum to him.

 

Set Goals

Every year my husband and I set goals in four areas for each of our children. They are: academic skills, physical skills, work skills, and character/spiritual development goals. Home schooling allows the whole child to be taught in every aspect of his life, not merely the academic. The people who love the child the very most (the parents) plot a game plan for their child based on what the state requires a class to cover. The scope and sequence is the state’s twelve-year game plan for what will be taught (scope) and when it will be taught (sequence) to students. Public and private schools must follow the scope and sequence exactly, because students are constantly changing teachers.

 

Adapt Academic Scope

In home schooling there is a single teacher, who can certainly keep track of what each child has covered. This arrangement allows greater flexibility with the sequence. Why wait until seventh grade to teach Texas history if you are going on a family trip around Texas? I have successfully taught Texas history to a fourth grader, a seventh grader, and a ninth grader. Flexible sequencing takes advantage of all of life’s events.

 

Choose Curricula

Home school parents should, first, set goals, second, recognize the scope, and, finally, choose curricula. Parents often remark of their own education that, although they made good grades, they actually remember little. How sad it is to have spent all that time covering material yet not learning. Most parents’ education consisted of reading the chapter and answering questions at the end. When choosing curricula, parents should consider which methods foster the best learning.

 

Consider Curriculum Methods

One need not be an educational expert to recognize that multi-sensory, hands-on curriculum bombards the child with information through all his senses, thereby increasing retention. However, if a child needs drill with spelling or math facts, parents should select workbooks that give ample opportunity to practice until perfect. I believe parents should never use a whole workbook; rather, they should assign only those pages the child needs and toss the rest of the workbook. The curriculum should be tailored to the child’s needs, not to the next workbook page.

 

Consider Curriculum Content

Equally as important as curriculum method is curriculum content. Most home schoolers want curricula taught from a Christian worldview, yet they are unsure of what that entails. Many curricula tout a Christian worldview because they have sprinkled Bible verses here and there or have included the life of Christ in their history. A Christian worldview, however, involves training children in the process of sifting all of life’s learning and decisions through a Christian worldview sieve. The worldview sieve is constructed from sound biblical teaching designed to train students in "taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ," (II Corinthians 10:5). Curricula that follow the Hebrew model of training the heart instead of the Greek model of training the head provide such a sieve.

 

Consider Curriculum That Mentors

Finally, a parent needs to select a curriculum that involves her as a mentor/teacher who dialogues with her child rather than simply grades his papers. This dialogue process not only builds critical thinkers but also builds the ultimate goal of home schooling a lifetime relationship between parent and child.

 

Meet Jessica Hulcy

 

 

 

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