Hi! I and my brothers and sisters were home-schooled in our childhood. I also help to home-school our 2 grandchildren, Dawson - 9, and Mandy - 7, though not as much as I had been, because their parents put them in a Christian public school, the last 2 years. As there's less time to do so, because of their being at the school so long each day, in the school part of the year.
I see no need for their being in the Christian public school, and they are hyperactive, and so learn better with interactive teaching methods, as compared to the typical sitting and listening to a teacher talk - method which is how public schools do it for a large part of their time of teaching children. That's how it was for me when I was young - I was better able to learn in the more interactive style of teaching, as compared to the classroom method.
I've taught them both how to read, and make them read a chapter in their Bible story book every day I'm with them. I've also taught them math for their age levels. Their father doesn't understand why I don't spend more time teaching them though, as he's used to the classroom method and finds it hard to trust the home-school method, which requires much less class room (passive sitting - aloud instructions) type of time.
But his children are hyperactive, and he has difficulty understanding their need for more rest in between study times. And fails, i think - to see that passive sittting in a class - room style of teaching, doesn't really improve their ability to learn more than otherwise.
And unfortunately, their mom - our daughter divorced her good, Christian husband, this year. That alone is hard on children. They'd be better off in being always in a stable home situation, I think and with loving, trustworthy dad and grandparents around them if available, and we are. And they both don't like to go to school.
I see no need for their being in the Christian public school, and they are hyperactive, and so learn better with interactive teaching methods, as compared to the typical sitting and listening to a teacher talk - method which is how public schools do it for a large part of their time of teaching children. That's how it was for me when I was young - I was better able to learn in the more interactive style of teaching, as compared to the classroom method.
I've taught them both how to read, and make them read a chapter in their Bible story book every day I'm with them. I've also taught them math for their age levels. Their father doesn't understand why I don't spend more time teaching them though, as he's used to the classroom method and finds it hard to trust the home-school method, which requires much less class room (passive sitting - aloud instructions) type of time.
But his children are hyperactive, and he has difficulty understanding their need for more rest in between study times. And fails, i think - to see that passive sittting in a class - room style of teaching, doesn't really improve their ability to learn more than otherwise.
And unfortunately, their mom - our daughter divorced her good, Christian husband, this year. That alone is hard on children. They'd be better off in being always in a stable home situation, I think and with loving, trustworthy dad and grandparents around them if available, and we are. And they both don't like to go to school.
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