How good or bad, so to speak, a child comes out through homeschooling depends largely on the parents and how they go about it. Also location can matter, to a degree I believe.
Some parents do treat it as a way to shelter their children, those kids often go to college unprepared and find all these new things exciting and interesting. Like drinking, drugs, partying, sex etc...
These kids can also be more socially challenged having been locked away.
Then some just do a poor job at teaching their kids. Unschooling, for example, screams lazy parent.
Kids who are homeschooled Well often excel beyond public or private school students. They can get extra help in weak areas, can learn to focus and work independently.
You can teach them about the ways of the world without exposing them to it daily, where they'll spend hours a day being pressured and learning about things with misinformation.
Due to not requiring them to be at school all day, then come home to do homework, they have more time for extracurriculars and less likely to burnout.
Some areas have large homeschooling communities with numerous homeschool groups. They can have other parents offer classes to all the students in their particular group. Some will even have group functions set up by the group where all the kids can get together.
In the past it wasnt uncommon for colleges to seek out homeschooled children, though with the woke climate so prevelant in many colleges now I'm not sure if that's still as true.
I've never had kids, never will get the chance, but if I did I'd definitely prefer homeschooling if possible.
Some parents do treat it as a way to shelter their children, those kids often go to college unprepared and find all these new things exciting and interesting. Like drinking, drugs, partying, sex etc...
These kids can also be more socially challenged having been locked away.
Then some just do a poor job at teaching their kids. Unschooling, for example, screams lazy parent.
Kids who are homeschooled Well often excel beyond public or private school students. They can get extra help in weak areas, can learn to focus and work independently.
You can teach them about the ways of the world without exposing them to it daily, where they'll spend hours a day being pressured and learning about things with misinformation.
Due to not requiring them to be at school all day, then come home to do homework, they have more time for extracurriculars and less likely to burnout.
Some areas have large homeschooling communities with numerous homeschool groups. They can have other parents offer classes to all the students in their particular group. Some will even have group functions set up by the group where all the kids can get together.
In the past it wasnt uncommon for colleges to seek out homeschooled children, though with the woke climate so prevelant in many colleges now I'm not sure if that's still as true.
I've never had kids, never will get the chance, but if I did I'd definitely prefer homeschooling if possible.
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