La educación en el hogar generalmente se entiende en un contexto más amplio en el sentido de que la educación de un estudiante se lleva a cabo exclusivamente en el hogar. Sin embargo, en realidad es más un continuo que una elección absoluta de todo o nada hecha por los padres y el niño.
Hay varios casos en los que la educación en el hogar es fluida, y los padres optan por la educación en el hogar un año en particular pero no el siguiente, según el contenido y el plan de estudios. Otros pueden enseñar todas las materias en casa excepto las materias más prácticas como Drama y Educación física.
El concepto de educación en el hogar se ha vuelto ambiguo en los últimos años, ya que las familias optan por mezclar el hogar, las lecciones en línea y la escuela, ajustándose de manera flexible a las demandas del plan de estudios, las circunstancias y los problemas de salud pública.
Beneficios de la educación en el hogar
Los beneficios de la educación en el hogar son vastos y variados. Se pueden ver en diferentes áreas de la vida de un niño, como social, emocional, mental y académicamente.
Socialmente, los niños que reciben educación en el hogar a menudo tienen más oportunidades de socializar que sus compañeros que reciben educación tradicional. Esto se debe a que pasan más tiempo interactuando con su familia y amigos. También pueden socializar con una variedad de personas, ya que pueden salir y conocer gente nueva con más frecuencia.
Emocionalmente, los niños educados en el hogar generalmente tienen mejores habilidades de regulación emocional que los niños educados tradicionalmente. Esto se debe a que no están constantemente bombardeados con emociones negativas, como el estrés y la ansiedad.
Mentalmente, los niños educados en el hogar a menudo tienen mejores habilidades de pensamiento crítico que sus compañeros educados tradicionalmente. Esto se debe a que no están confinados a un plan de estudios fijo y pueden explorar diferentes conceptos a su propio ritmo.
Académicamente, los niños educados en el hogar a menudo se desempeñan mejor que sus compañeros educados tradicionalmente. Esto se debe a que no se ven frenados por las limitaciones de un sistema escolar tradicional. También pueden obtener más atención personalizada de sus maestros, lo que conduce a mejores resultados académicos.
Comprensión más profunda
El gobierno juzga a las escuelas según los resultados de las pruebas. Esto puede llevar a “enseñar para el examen”. A medida que los maestros llenan las cabezas de los niños con información para aprobar los exámenes, corren el peligro de privar a los niños de la oportunidad de obtener una comprensión profunda de las materias y disfrutar del aprendizaje. Los niños educados en el hogar pueden aprender sobre historia en edificios históricos y museos, ciencia en laboratorios, geografía en el campo y literatura en el teatro. Descubren que el aprendizaje es vida y no se limita a una habitación.
Aprendizaje personalizado
Fuera de una clase de treinta, la enseñanza se puede adaptar para satisfacer las habilidades, intereses y estilos de aprendizaje de un niño en particular. Puede investigar diferentes métodos, incluidos Montesorri y Waldorf, y encontrar un método o una combinación de métodos que se adapte a su hijo. Puede nutrir las habilidades de su hijo dándole el tiempo y el espacio que necesita para aprender a su propio ritmo, ¡sin que la confianza en sí mismo dañe los traseros! A su hijo se le puede enseñar a través de sus propios intereses. Si a su hijo le encantan los autos, entonces se le puede enseñar matemáticas e inglés en torno al tema de los autos.
atención enfocada
Los maestros no solo enseñan. Tienen papeleo que completar: ¡una montaña de papeleo que consume mucho tiempo y energía! Tienen iniciativas gubernamentales que cumplir, reuniones a las que asistir y mucho más. Usted está libre de estas obligaciones, lo que le brinda más energía y tiempo para planificar, enseñar, abordar los conceptos erróneos de su hijo y reforzar el aprendizaje para garantizar que no haya brechas.
Logro académico superior
Es difícil encontrar datos del Reino Unido que comparen los logros académicos de los niños educados en el hogar con los de la escuela. Sin embargo, los datos de EE. UU. están disponibles para su análisis. Un estudio realizado por Sandra Martin-Chang de la Universidad de Concordia (2011) sugiere que los niños educados en el hogar lograron mejores resultados académicos que sus compañeros de la escuela estatal.
En lo que respecta al Reino Unido, los beneficios de la matrícula individual están bien documentados. Aunque los padres pueden carecer de experiencia docente, las ventajas de la enseñanza individualizada pueden superar esto. Los niños que reciben apoyo personalizado logran mejores resultados académicos, tienen una mayor profundidad de comprensión y tienen más confianza en sus habilidades.
Educación artística más amplia
Las materias artísticas se están dejando cada vez más de lado en las escuelas ordinarias debido a la falta de financiación y la presión para lograr resultados académicos. Sin embargo, aprender arte, diseño y música es invaluable para el desarrollo emocional y cerebral de los niños. Las investigaciones han demostrado que aprender a tocar un instrumento musical fortalece la memoria y mejora el razonamiento espacial y las habilidades de alfabetización. Las materias artísticas son agradables, brindan una sensación de logro, fomentan las habilidades de pensamiento creativo y celebran la humanidad.
Negativos detrás de la educación en el hogar
También hay algunos aspectos negativos asociados con la educación en el hogar, como el potencial de aislamiento social, la falta de un entorno de aprendizaje estructurado y la posibilidad de que los padres se involucren demasiado en la educación de sus hijos.
Si bien la educación en el hogar tiene algunos aspectos negativos, es importante recordar que cada situación es diferente. Lo que funciona para una familia puede no funcionar para otra familia. Es importante sopesar los pros y los contras de la educación en el hogar antes de tomar una decisión.
Costo
Si educa a su hijo en casa, no podrá trabajar mucho, si es que lo hace. También los padres tendrán que comprar recursos, encontrar el dinero para las actividades y pagar los costos de los exámenes. En el lado positivo, algunos centros de actividades y museos ofrecen descuentos para grupos de educación en el hogar, y el costo de educar a su hijo en el hogar es menor que las tarifas de las escuelas privadas.
Cualificaciones de los padres
Los maestros se capacitan durante años y tienen una amplia experiencia en la enseñanza de una variedad de materias. Su autoridad local se involucrará si descubre que no le está brindando a su hijo una educación adecuada. Debe ser honesto consigo mismo acerca de las áreas temáticas débiles y abordar cualquier problema educándose a través del aprendizaje a distancia o clases en persona, empleando tutores privados para su hijo, o una combinación de ambos.
El futuro de la educación
Entonces, ¿es la educación en el hogar el futuro de la educación? No hay una respuesta definitiva a esta pregunta. Sin embargo, lo que sí sugiere es que existe una demanda creciente de formas de aprendizaje más flexibles y personalizadas, que la educación en el hogar sin duda puede proporcionar. A medida que la sociedad continúa cambiando y evolucionando, es probable que el sistema educativo deba adaptarse para satisfacer las necesidades de los estudiantes del siglo XXI. Y aunque la educación en el hogar puede no ser la opción correcta para todos, sin duda es una opción que vale la pena considerar para aquellos que buscan una forma de educación más personalizada e individualizada.
My Mom homeschooled me due to the fact that I had a learning Disability and the Public Schools didn’t want to take the time to properly teach me,so they tried to sweep my under the Rug and pretend I didn’t exist until she pulled me out and Taught me herself. I loved it! I was able to get the one on one teaching I NEEDED,I did other programs with other homeschooled children who later became my friends twice a week,I began to excel once we found a method that actually worked for me. I was always and will always be so grateful to my Parents for doing what they did,I wouldn’t have changed a thing. I’m in my early 30’s now,I graduated College,became a Welder for 3 years,a warehouse manager for 2,a CNA for 2 and now run my own Business. Homeschool is such an amazing tool for your child if done RIGHT.
My husband and I chose to homeschool our son for non-religious reasons. We wanted to travel extensively as a family as well as incorporate logic and rhetoric to his scholastic repertoire. Throughout our time homeschooling we visited India, Germany, England, France, and most of the US. He is now a sophmore at university studying engineering. He’s capable of master level research, and due to his logic and rhetoric studies, has never had difficulty holding his own in adult conversations on many topics. I feel as though this particular Vice episode was a very one sided perspective on homeschooling. Not all of us are conservative evangelical Christians.
Basically anybody born in the 18 hundreds was homeschooled. And we know somefamous homeshoolers such as taylor swift, Tyler from twenty one pilots, Julian Assange, nhl hockey player karl stollery, very sucesfull people.
I begged my mom to let me homeschool. I hated going to my school so much and could never really do well with it. Found it incredibly boring. Now that I’ve left school I got very into studying on my own terms. I just kept following my curiosity. Everytime I’d satisfy my brains natural questioning it’d open up several routes for more curiosity. It just kept going and going and going until I ended up owning my own business and doing anything I felt like doing naturally. I never went to college or moved up the chain at a business. That curiosity and drive to achieve something in the world that is both useful and exciting is a magical thing when you keep letting your mind go after it. I can’t wait to see where my brain will take me next. Its like I don’t even know where my life is going. My brain is just building and building my understanding more and more. Quantum physics, robotics, the human anatomy, psychology, animals, nature, business, politics. I just eat these things up. They become so much more exciting when you see the whole big picture and how they all interconnect. Especially mathematics. Oh math is a cool thing. I think mastering math is something that can elevate any field in the universe to levels that are almost uncomprehendable. Math is like finding the unknown. You see how it balances but why? Then you keep building until the equation lines up with reality. Its so magical. I can’t believe how incredibly bored I could be in class learning about these subjects but now I am just insanely driven to learn about all of them. I never will be able to sit in a claim and learn. I think I might have some sort of disorder. When I talk to other people who know a lot about something its like I bounce between the subject at hand and 10 other subjects. Nobody ever understands. But I can say. Never stop learning. Never ever ever stop pursuing what you are curious about. It is so amazing once you really experience what learning actually is.
My mother home educated me throughout my compulsory school years. I’m eternally greatful for it. One thing I can say is that she didn’t confine me from being exposed to other ideas. I spent a lot of time with all sorts of people, and my mother and I would often just have conversations about the ideas and types of views that the people that I had met and spent time with had. As I got older sometimes my opinions conflicted with hers but most of the time they didn’t. Her goal wasn’t to indoctrinate me into her world view, it was to give me a firm foundation that would allow me develop me into a free thinker that could form her own opinions and thoughts; as well as develop my love of learning, so that I would want to continue learning as an adult. The amount of reading I did is quite astonishing to people when I tell them. I roughly read 32 books a school year, and you cannot read that much without stumbling across conflicting ideas that you need to process through.
I was homeschooled as well, hi to everyone in the comment section, was really glad to read your stories ❤️. Let me tell you a bit of mine. So I left public school being in the 3 grade, to be more precise, it was neither my mom’s nor my brothers decision, who were also homeschooled with me, but my dad’s decision. At the very beginning everybody, including our family except dad were fairly sceptical about this idea, cuz back then no one was really practicing it ( Russia). So all the condemnation from relatives was successfully received. I was very small and almost unconscious about all that. Contrary to a common opinion, we ( me+brothers) studied A LOT, way more then peers, all at home. Little kids, from 9am till 8 pm, one rest day per week, no summer holidays. At first we didn’t enjoy it much, but now… I am blessed. Thank you God and dad. Won’t elaborate on my inner transformations and gained knowledge, will just say that it gave me a whole lot of experience, spirituality, broadened my horizons and yes, I’ve learnt many scientific fields. In this video doctor Peterson states that at times the underlying reason for parents to put kids at home is control and power. Only now (17) do I understand it. Yes, there is a part of tyranny in our life and upbringing, as doctor Peterson would say “chaos”, but it doesn’t tarnish this whole experience and actually it’s a different story). To sum up, homeschooling is a great idea
My youngest son spent the first 6 years (K-5) being homeschooled. In those years, he was not only taught well (by his mother, primarily) but he also “learned”, how to learn. He became an avid reader and a problem solver. Consequently, he went though grades 6-12 in regular public school, making straight A’s and was put on the principal’s trophy and received several scholarships and awards. He went on to college and was hired by Apple before he even graduated. He was in sports, baseball, volleyball etc, varsity basketball, was on several clubs (chess being his favourite) and on several committees during his High School career. He is a well rounded, intelligent and social person. The only thing he missed from the early years of “normal” school were all the foolishness and poor education system’s that have destroyed our young people’s minds.
We’ve homeschooled our two children (11 & 13) from the very beginning. This decision was made in large part because my wife and I both went to public school. I was the socialite, indulging in alcohol and drugs, partying all the time, and she was the introverted shy kid who was picked on all the time. With the help of God I was able to transcend the addictions, and have built a stable family life in the process. My wife is full time at home, so although I help out with the education at home, it is mainly my wife who is doing the teaching. We use a wide variety of curriculum, tailored to each child depending on their strengths and needs. It has never been financially ‘easy’ having a single parent income. However it has allowed me to focus more on my career, as well as become more financially literate, and with that I have been able to reach a level where I can adequately provide for the needs of my family. The dual income approach that most families adhere to is a deception of the modern age, because it never seems to be enough. The result is usually two parents who are burned out, financially insolvent, and never seem to have enough time together as a family. I can honestly say, not only have my children received a remarkable education, but we have probably spent more time collectively as a family than 90% of parents today. I don’t regret making the decision to homeschool for a single second, and I would strongly recommend it to anyone who is at least willing to give it a try.
I have been homeschooled my entire life, and I must say, it has been so overwhelmingly impactful on so many ways throughout my life. I would be a completely different person in public school.
Homeschooling has allowed me to pursue my passions, and desire to work. I am 15, have an impactful job, fulfilling ECs, and spending more time at home gives you a fantastic work ethic.
I live on a farm, and my father has been instrumental with instituting a work ethic within me, and I don’t think that could’ve happened if I was in public school
I was homeschooled by my mother since I was in first grade. I had a wonderful experience, learned alot, and, most importantly I learned to love learning. The lessons that I learned have led me to go to community college at 16, achieve and maintain a 4.0 GPA (or very close to it), and pursue various pathways of independent and private industry based research. I recently graduated from community college with my A.S. Chemistry and I am now at one of the highest rated universities in the U.S. for science (Stony Brook University).
Homeschooling played a big part in making me who I am today, and I would recommend it to anyone that has an interest in their children’s success.
I was public schooled most of my life and believed the myth that homeschool kids are “weird” until I became friends with some when I was in university and found them to be intelligent, empathetic and down to earth. Looking back, I do wish I was homeschooled – for at least part of my education if not most. I was bullied in public school for being a new immigrant and there were a few years from grade 3-5 where it affected my education and I didn’t learn much bc of the bullying. Finally learned to stand up for myself a bit in 6th grade but dang, what a waste of 2 years where I could’ve been having fun and learning ♀️
The thing I am most grateful for in my life is my parent’s decision to never let me go to public school. I was homeschooled all the way up into college.
……………………………………………………………….
I went to public school in a small town and hated every second of it. I was bullied by my peers and teachers alike. I was by no means stupid, but I was so focused on trying to fit in and escape my tormentors that my grades slipped. I didn’t care about learning, I wanted to survive socially. I was even held back a grade, which made the bullying even worse. As I got older, I realized that I was trying to fit in with small minded people. I’ve returned back to college and discovered I love learning, I currently have a 3.9 GPA, and have made the Dean’s list several times. I’m currently 9 weeks pregnant and have decided I will use my bachelors degree to home school my child. I often wonder how much better I would have done academically if I wasn’t so focused on being bullied and trying to “fit in”.
We started homeschooling our kids about 35 years ago. I can’t imagine leaving kids in a public school today. Although there were not the resources then as there are now, we taught curriculum that was developed by professional educators even then. My wife has an elementary education degree and I have a PhD in chemistry, so we were well equipped to handle this task. Our daughter has a Master’s degree in special education, and our son is a PhD biochemist. I think they’ve done well.
I am grateful for being homeschooled from Kindergarten to Year 8. It allowed me to deeply explore subjects I loved and had passion for, and gave me time to do the things I enjoyed. Now I am in school and I know people who have been doing school since Kindergarten and I have noticed they have absolutely no passions for many of the subjects we have at school, even electives. I feel like homeschool allows people to discover their strengths and not be ashamed of their weaknesses.
I basically quit school and came home in 8th grade for multiple reasons– mainly being too busy for school. (The other was the freedom to visit multiple 90+ yr old great grandmothers while they were still around.) I studied Japanese at home with correspondence or telephone lessons, I had a private art teacher, I had Shinkendo swordsmanship lessons for exercise, violin lessons I’d continued ages 8-18, and I started my own studio teaching young kids at 14. At that time I also joined the local (adult) symphony and was the youngest player. I was also one of the youngest music teachers in our county. At 18, I branched out and started teaching beginner Japanese language. Not only was public school a waste of time for me, and many of the kids were the opposite of friend material, but… Simply put, I had no time for their version of “learning”.
I was homeschooled from first to fourth grade, it gave me a strong foundation of learning, and it gave me a very high reading level when I did go to school in 5th grade. My mom wasn’t able to homeschool me any more. My math skills were not strong, but I easily made that up because I was taught how to learn and study. I was the 8th grade valedictorian. then, a sophomore, and my average was 100.7. I wouldn’t have changed anything, I got the best of both worlds. I am an electrical engineer now. I owe a lot to homeschooling.
I was homeschooled from the 8th grade on. I begged my parents to homeschool me. And it was honestly the best decision of my life (this far). I got a good taste of what public school is like, I got social skills, and then I got out. I ended up graduating 2 years early and I had my AA by the time I was 18. AND because of homeschool, I worked almost full time for a lot of my teen years, which gave me real world experience, and a good savings for starting a successful adult life. My best friend did the same thing, and neither one of us regret it for a second. The pros far outweigh the cons.
I’ve noticed homeschooled kids are generally more intellectually curious, and think of learning not as a chore, confined to some prison-like building, but rather as a lifelong pursuit with its own intrinsic rewards and motivations.
I am eternally grateful for my mother for homeschooling me. She had 6 kids and homeschooled all of us and encouraged us to go to college. When I was a teen, I would sometimes cry when my friends who went to public school would tell me the things that happened to them at school. The things that they experienced were appalling. I escaped that terrible damage because my mother loved me enough to homeschool me. My mom has been scorned and called “over protective” which angers me. So loving me enough to remove me from situations like bullying, drugs, and porn is “over protective?” I can’t thank her enough for saving me from the public schools and a damaged childhood. God bless you mom.
Well, it’s worthy to fight that. i did both homeschool and public school, in and out sort of deal.
i noticed that when i was homeschooling and exploring the internet for things i found a lot of interest in and watching documentaries that i was learning a lot about what i thought was important.
when i went back to public school i found they completely bastardized my favorite topics and forced me to do stupid unnecessary shit just for a number on a piece of paper.
♦
La educación en el hogar generalmente se entiende en un contexto más amplio en el sentido de que la educación de un estudiante se lleva a cabo exclusivamente en el hogar. Sin embargo, en realidad es más un continuo que una elección absoluta de todo o nada hecha por los padres y el niño.
Hay varios casos en los que la educación en el hogar es fluida, y los padres optan por la educación en el hogar un año en particular pero no el siguiente, según el contenido y el plan de estudios. Otros pueden enseñar todas las materias en casa excepto las materias más prácticas como Drama y Educación física.
Beneficios de la educación en el hogar
Los beneficios de la educación en el hogar son vastos y variados. Se pueden ver en diferentes áreas de la vida de un niño, como social, emocional, mental y académicamente.
Socialmente, los niños que reciben educación en el hogar a menudo tienen más oportunidades de socializar que sus compañeros que reciben educación tradicional. Esto se debe a que pasan más tiempo interactuando con su familia y amigos. También pueden socializar con una variedad de personas, ya que pueden salir y conocer gente nueva con más frecuencia.
Emocionalmente, los niños educados en el hogar generalmente tienen mejores habilidades de regulación emocional que los niños educados tradicionalmente. Esto se debe a que no están constantemente bombardeados con emociones negativas, como el estrés y la ansiedad.
Mentalmente, los niños educados en el hogar a menudo tienen mejores habilidades de pensamiento crítico que sus compañeros educados tradicionalmente. Esto se debe a que no están confinados a un plan de estudios fijo y pueden explorar diferentes conceptos a su propio ritmo.
Académicamente, los niños educados en el hogar a menudo se desempeñan mejor que sus compañeros educados tradicionalmente. Esto se debe a que no se ven frenados por las limitaciones de un sistema escolar tradicional. También pueden obtener más atención personalizada de sus maestros, lo que conduce a mejores resultados académicos.
Comprensión más profunda
El gobierno juzga a las escuelas según los resultados de las pruebas. Esto puede llevar a “enseñar para el examen”. A medida que los maestros llenan las cabezas de los niños con información para aprobar los exámenes, corren el peligro de privar a los niños de la oportunidad de obtener una comprensión profunda de las materias y disfrutar del aprendizaje. Los niños educados en el hogar pueden aprender sobre historia en edificios históricos y museos, ciencia en laboratorios, geografía en el campo y literatura en el teatro. Descubren que el aprendizaje es vida y no se limita a una habitación.
Aprendizaje personalizado
Fuera de una clase de treinta, la enseñanza se puede adaptar para satisfacer las habilidades, intereses y estilos de aprendizaje de un niño en particular. Puede investigar diferentes métodos, incluidos Montesorri y Waldorf, y encontrar un método o una combinación de métodos que se adapte a su hijo. Puede nutrir las habilidades de su hijo dándole el tiempo y el espacio que necesita para aprender a su propio ritmo, ¡sin que la confianza en sí mismo dañe los traseros! A su hijo se le puede enseñar a través de sus propios intereses. Si a su hijo le encantan los autos, entonces se le puede enseñar matemáticas e inglés en torno al tema de los autos.
atención enfocada
Los maestros no solo enseñan. Tienen papeleo que completar: ¡una montaña de papeleo que consume mucho tiempo y energía! Tienen iniciativas gubernamentales que cumplir, reuniones a las que asistir y mucho más. Usted está libre de estas obligaciones, lo que le brinda más energía y tiempo para planificar, enseñar, abordar los conceptos erróneos de su hijo y reforzar el aprendizaje para garantizar que no haya brechas.
Logro académico superior
Es difícil encontrar datos del Reino Unido que comparen los logros académicos de los niños educados en el hogar con los de la escuela. Sin embargo, los datos de EE. UU. están disponibles para su análisis. Un estudio realizado por Sandra Martin-Chang de la Universidad de Concordia (2011) sugiere que los niños educados en el hogar lograron mejores resultados académicos que sus compañeros de la escuela estatal.
En lo que respecta al Reino Unido, los beneficios de la matrícula individual están bien documentados. Aunque los padres pueden carecer de experiencia docente, las ventajas de la enseñanza individualizada pueden superar esto. Los niños que reciben apoyo personalizado logran mejores resultados académicos, tienen una mayor profundidad de comprensión y tienen más confianza en sus habilidades.
Educación artística más amplia
Las materias artísticas se están dejando cada vez más de lado en las escuelas ordinarias debido a la falta de financiación y la presión para lograr resultados académicos. Sin embargo, aprender arte, diseño y música es invaluable para el desarrollo emocional y cerebral de los niños. Las investigaciones han demostrado que
aprender a tocar un instrumento musical fortalece la memoria y mejora el razonamiento espacial y las habilidades de alfabetización. Las materias artísticas son agradables, brindan una sensación de logro, fomentan las habilidades de pensamiento creativo y celebran la humanidad.
Negativos detrás de la educación en el hogar
También hay algunos aspectos negativos asociados con la educación en el hogar, como el potencial de aislamiento social, la falta de un entorno de aprendizaje estructurado y la posibilidad de que los padres se involucren demasiado en la educación de sus hijos.
Si bien la educación en el hogar tiene algunos aspectos negativos, es importante recordar que cada situación es diferente. Lo que funciona para una familia puede no funcionar para otra familia. Es importante sopesar los pros y los contras de la educación en el hogar antes de tomar una decisión.
Costo
Si educa a su hijo en casa, no podrá trabajar mucho, si es que lo hace. También los padres tendrán que comprar recursos, encontrar el dinero para las actividades y pagar los costos de los exámenes. En el lado positivo, algunos centros de actividades y museos ofrecen descuentos para grupos de educación en el hogar, y el costo de educar a su hijo en el hogar es menor que las tarifas de las escuelas privadas.
Cualificaciones de los padres
Los maestros se capacitan durante años y tienen una amplia experiencia en la enseñanza de una variedad de materias. Su autoridad local se involucrará si descubre que no le está brindando a su hijo una educación adecuada. Debe ser honesto consigo mismo acerca de las áreas temáticas débiles y abordar cualquier problema educándose a través del aprendizaje a distancia o clases en persona, empleando tutores privados para su hijo, o una combinación de ambos.
El futuro de la educación
Entonces, ¿es la educación en el hogar el futuro de la educación? No hay una respuesta definitiva a esta pregunta. Sin embargo, lo que sí sugiere es que existe una demanda creciente de formas de aprendizaje más flexibles y personalizadas, que la educación en el hogar sin duda puede proporcionar. A medida que la sociedad continúa cambiando y evolucionando, es probable que el sistema educativo deba adaptarse para satisfacer las necesidades de los estudiantes del siglo XXI. Y aunque la educación en el hogar puede no ser la opción correcta para todos, sin duda es una opción que vale la pena considerar para aquellos que buscan una forma de educación más personalizada e individualizada.
PrisioneroEnArgentina.com
Febrero 28, 2023
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My Mom homeschooled me due to the fact that I had a learning Disability and the Public Schools didn’t want to take the time to properly teach me,so they tried to sweep my under the Rug and pretend I didn’t exist until she pulled me out and Taught me herself. I loved it! I was able to get the one on one teaching I NEEDED,I did other programs with other homeschooled children who later became my friends twice a week,I began to excel once we found a method that actually worked for me. I was always and will always be so grateful to my Parents for doing what they did,I wouldn’t have changed a thing. I’m in my early 30’s now,I graduated College,became a Welder for 3 years,a warehouse manager for 2,a CNA for 2 and now run my own Business. Homeschool is such an amazing tool for your child if done RIGHT.
My husband and I chose to homeschool our son for non-religious reasons. We wanted to travel extensively as a family as well as incorporate logic and rhetoric to his scholastic repertoire. Throughout our time homeschooling we visited India, Germany, England, France, and most of the US. He is now a sophmore at university studying engineering. He’s capable of master level research, and due to his logic and rhetoric studies, has never had difficulty holding his own in adult conversations on many topics. I feel as though this particular Vice episode was a very one sided perspective on homeschooling. Not all of us are conservative evangelical Christians.
I will consider HS for my kid.
Basically anybody born in the 18 hundreds was homeschooled. And we know somefamous homeshoolers such as taylor swift, Tyler from twenty one pilots, Julian Assange, nhl hockey player karl stollery, very sucesfull people.
I begged my mom to let me homeschool. I hated going to my school so much and could never really do well with it. Found it incredibly boring. Now that I’ve left school I got very into studying on my own terms. I just kept following my curiosity. Everytime I’d satisfy my brains natural questioning it’d open up several routes for more curiosity. It just kept going and going and going until I ended up owning my own business and doing anything I felt like doing naturally. I never went to college or moved up the chain at a business. That curiosity and drive to achieve something in the world that is both useful and exciting is a magical thing when you keep letting your mind go after it. I can’t wait to see where my brain will take me next. Its like I don’t even know where my life is going. My brain is just building and building my understanding more and more. Quantum physics, robotics, the human anatomy, psychology, animals, nature, business, politics. I just eat these things up. They become so much more exciting when you see the whole big picture and how they all interconnect. Especially mathematics. Oh math is a cool thing. I think mastering math is something that can elevate any field in the universe to levels that are almost uncomprehendable. Math is like finding the unknown. You see how it balances but why? Then you keep building until the equation lines up with reality. Its so magical. I can’t believe how incredibly bored I could be in class learning about these subjects but now I am just insanely driven to learn about all of them. I never will be able to sit in a claim and learn. I think I might have some sort of disorder. When I talk to other people who know a lot about something its like I bounce between the subject at hand and 10 other subjects. Nobody ever understands. But I can say. Never stop learning. Never ever ever stop pursuing what you are curious about. It is so amazing once you really experience what learning actually is.
My mother home educated me throughout my compulsory school years. I’m eternally greatful for it. One thing I can say is that she didn’t confine me from being exposed to other ideas. I spent a lot of time with all sorts of people, and my mother and I would often just have conversations about the ideas and types of views that the people that I had met and spent time with had. As I got older sometimes my opinions conflicted with hers but most of the time they didn’t. Her goal wasn’t to indoctrinate me into her world view, it was to give me a firm foundation that would allow me develop me into a free thinker that could form her own opinions and thoughts; as well as develop my love of learning, so that I would want to continue learning as an adult. The amount of reading I did is quite astonishing to people when I tell them. I roughly read 32 books a school year, and you cannot read that much without stumbling across conflicting ideas that you need to process through.
Con los medios de comunicación de hoy debe ser facil y positivo . para tener en cuenta
I was homeschooled as well, hi to everyone in the comment section, was really glad to read your stories ❤️. Let me tell you a bit of mine. So I left public school being in the 3 grade, to be more precise, it was neither my mom’s nor my brothers decision, who were also homeschooled with me, but my dad’s decision. At the very beginning everybody, including our family except dad were fairly sceptical about this idea, cuz back then no one was really practicing it ( Russia). So all the condemnation from relatives was successfully received. I was very small and almost unconscious about all that. Contrary to a common opinion, we ( me+brothers) studied A LOT, way more then peers, all at home. Little kids, from 9am till 8 pm, one rest day per week, no summer holidays. At first we didn’t enjoy it much, but now… I am blessed. Thank you God and dad. Won’t elaborate on my inner transformations and gained knowledge, will just say that it gave me a whole lot of experience, spirituality, broadened my horizons and yes, I’ve learnt many scientific fields. In this video doctor Peterson states that at times the underlying reason for parents to put kids at home is control and power. Only now (17) do I understand it. Yes, there is a part of tyranny in our life and upbringing, as doctor Peterson would say “chaos”, but it doesn’t tarnish this whole experience and actually it’s a different story). To sum up, homeschooling is a great idea
My youngest son spent the first 6 years (K-5) being homeschooled. In those years, he was not only taught well (by his mother, primarily) but he also “learned”, how to learn. He became an avid reader and a problem solver. Consequently, he went though grades 6-12 in regular public school, making straight A’s and was put on the principal’s trophy and received several scholarships and awards. He went on to college and was hired by Apple before he even graduated. He was in sports, baseball, volleyball etc, varsity basketball, was on several clubs (chess being his favourite) and on several committees during his High School career. He is a well rounded, intelligent and social person. The only thing he missed from the early years of “normal” school were all the foolishness and poor education system’s that have destroyed our young people’s minds.
We’ve homeschooled our two children (11 & 13) from the very beginning. This decision was made in large part because my wife and I both went to public school. I was the socialite, indulging in alcohol and drugs, partying all the time, and she was the introverted shy kid who was picked on all the time. With the help of God I was able to transcend the addictions, and have built a stable family life in the process. My wife is full time at home, so although I help out with the education at home, it is mainly my wife who is doing the teaching. We use a wide variety of curriculum, tailored to each child depending on their strengths and needs. It has never been financially ‘easy’ having a single parent income. However it has allowed me to focus more on my career, as well as become more financially literate, and with that I have been able to reach a level where I can adequately provide for the needs of my family. The dual income approach that most families adhere to is a deception of the modern age, because it never seems to be enough. The result is usually two parents who are burned out, financially insolvent, and never seem to have enough time together as a family. I can honestly say, not only have my children received a remarkable education, but we have probably spent more time collectively as a family than 90% of parents today. I don’t regret making the decision to homeschool for a single second, and I would strongly recommend it to anyone who is at least willing to give it a try.
De esta manera se pierden los valores morales, patriotucos y cristianos y los pibes se convierten en ostras.
I have been homeschooled my entire life, and I must say, it has been so overwhelmingly impactful on so many ways throughout my life. I would be a completely different person in public school.
Homeschooling has allowed me to pursue my passions, and desire to work. I am 15, have an impactful job, fulfilling ECs, and spending more time at home gives you a fantastic work ethic.
I live on a farm, and my father has been instrumental with instituting a work ethic within me, and I don’t think that could’ve happened if I was in public school
I was homeschooled by my mother since I was in first grade. I had a wonderful experience, learned alot, and, most importantly I learned to love learning. The lessons that I learned have led me to go to community college at 16, achieve and maintain a 4.0 GPA (or very close to it), and pursue various pathways of independent and private industry based research. I recently graduated from community college with my A.S. Chemistry and I am now at one of the highest rated universities in the U.S. for science (Stony Brook University).
Homeschooling played a big part in making me who I am today, and I would recommend it to anyone that has an interest in their children’s success.
I was public schooled most of my life and believed the myth that homeschool kids are “weird” until I became friends with some when I was in university and found them to be intelligent, empathetic and down to earth. Looking back, I do wish I was homeschooled – for at least part of my education if not most. I was bullied in public school for being a new immigrant and there were a few years from grade 3-5 where it affected my education and I didn’t learn much bc of the bullying. Finally learned to stand up for myself a bit in 6th grade but dang, what a waste of 2 years where I could’ve been having fun and learning ♀️
The thing I am most grateful for in my life is my parent’s decision to never let me go to public school. I was homeschooled all the way up into college.
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I went to public school in a small town and hated every second of it. I was bullied by my peers and teachers alike. I was by no means stupid, but I was so focused on trying to fit in and escape my tormentors that my grades slipped. I didn’t care about learning, I wanted to survive socially. I was even held back a grade, which made the bullying even worse. As I got older, I realized that I was trying to fit in with small minded people. I’ve returned back to college and discovered I love learning, I currently have a 3.9 GPA, and have made the Dean’s list several times. I’m currently 9 weeks pregnant and have decided I will use my bachelors degree to home school my child. I often wonder how much better I would have done academically if I wasn’t so focused on being bullied and trying to “fit in”.
We started homeschooling our kids about 35 years ago. I can’t imagine leaving kids in a public school today. Although there were not the resources then as there are now, we taught curriculum that was developed by professional educators even then. My wife has an elementary education degree and I have a PhD in chemistry, so we were well equipped to handle this task. Our daughter has a Master’s degree in special education, and our son is a PhD biochemist. I think they’ve done well.
I am grateful for being homeschooled from Kindergarten to Year 8. It allowed me to deeply explore subjects I loved and had passion for, and gave me time to do the things I enjoyed. Now I am in school and I know people who have been doing school since Kindergarten and I have noticed they have absolutely no passions for many of the subjects we have at school, even electives. I feel like homeschool allows people to discover their strengths and not be ashamed of their weaknesses.
I basically quit school and came home in 8th grade for multiple reasons– mainly being too busy for school. (The other was the freedom to visit multiple 90+ yr old great grandmothers while they were still around.) I studied Japanese at home with correspondence or telephone lessons, I had a private art teacher, I had Shinkendo swordsmanship lessons for exercise, violin lessons I’d continued ages 8-18, and I started my own studio teaching young kids at 14. At that time I also joined the local (adult) symphony and was the youngest player. I was also one of the youngest music teachers in our county. At 18, I branched out and started teaching beginner Japanese language. Not only was public school a waste of time for me, and many of the kids were the opposite of friend material, but… Simply put, I had no time for their version of “learning”.
I was homeschooled from first to fourth grade, it gave me a strong foundation of learning, and it gave me a very high reading level when I did go to school in 5th grade. My mom wasn’t able to homeschool me any more. My math skills were not strong, but I easily made that up because I was taught how to learn and study. I was the 8th grade valedictorian. then, a sophomore, and my average was 100.7. I wouldn’t have changed anything, I got the best of both worlds. I am an electrical engineer now. I owe a lot to homeschooling.
I was homeschooled from the 8th grade on. I begged my parents to homeschool me. And it was honestly the best decision of my life (this far). I got a good taste of what public school is like, I got social skills, and then I got out. I ended up graduating 2 years early and I had my AA by the time I was 18. AND because of homeschool, I worked almost full time for a lot of my teen years, which gave me real world experience, and a good savings for starting a successful adult life. My best friend did the same thing, and neither one of us regret it for a second. The pros far outweigh the cons.
I’ve noticed homeschooled kids are generally more intellectually curious, and think of learning not as a chore, confined to some prison-like building, but rather as a lifelong pursuit with its own intrinsic rewards and motivations.
Tus is the present and future education
The kids are gonna learn what they really need under parents su previsión
Grea idea
I am eternally grateful for my mother for homeschooling me. She had 6 kids and homeschooled all of us and encouraged us to go to college. When I was a teen, I would sometimes cry when my friends who went to public school would tell me the things that happened to them at school. The things that they experienced were appalling. I escaped that terrible damage because my mother loved me enough to homeschool me. My mom has been scorned and called “over protective” which angers me. So loving me enough to remove me from situations like bullying, drugs, and porn is “over protective?” I can’t thank her enough for saving me from the public schools and a damaged childhood. God bless you mom.
The gov. is making harder and harder every day to allow kids to homeschooling
Well, it’s worthy to fight that. i did both homeschool and public school, in and out sort of deal.
i noticed that when i was homeschooling and exploring the internet for things i found a lot of interest in and watching documentaries that i was learning a lot about what i thought was important.
when i went back to public school i found they completely bastardized my favorite topics and forced me to do stupid unnecessary shit just for a number on a piece of paper.