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[Serious] Huzzah for homeschooling!
#21
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
Bich, you got sources for that shit? Legit sources, not your usual drek.
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#22
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
(March 15, 2019 at 9:44 am)Drich Wrote: Research suggests homeschooled children tend to do better on standardized tests, stick around longer in college, and do better once they're enrolled. A 2009 study showed that the proportion of homeschoolers who graduated from college was about 67%, while among public school students it was 59%.Jan 21, 2018
Why homeschooling is the smartest way to teach kids today ...
https://www.businessinsider.com/reasons-...o-teach-ki...

I disagree. My grandnephews and grandnieces are being brought up to be creationists. I've yet to meet any creationists who weren't little more than intellectual illiterates, especially in regard to the modern sciences. Dodgy
"The world is my country; all of humanity are my brethren; and to do good deeds is my religion." (Thomas Paine)
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#23
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
One of my relatives wants to sue the local school system because his kid couldn't pass some test or other to get a diploma.

The kid was homeschooled from Day One.

Waiting for the attorney that will take this one. Levitate
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#24
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
(April 2, 2019 at 1:05 pm)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote: One of my relatives wants to sue the local school system because his kid couldn't pass some test or other to get a diploma.

The kid was homeschooled from Day One.

Waiting for the attorney that will take this one. Levitate

[Image: jesus-is-not-always-the-answer-254899.jpg]
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#25
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
(April 2, 2019 at 10:09 pm)Fake Messiah Wrote:
(April 2, 2019 at 1:05 pm)Gawdzilla Sama Wrote: One of my relatives wants to sue the local school system because his kid couldn't pass some test or other to get a diploma.

The kid was homeschooled from Day One.

Waiting for the attorney that will take this one.  Levitate

[Image: jesus-is-not-always-the-answer-254899.jpg]

That isn't a question, it is a trigonometric identity. I guess that they could have been told to "show that" both sides are equal, and it would take a couple of steps to "show that", but it can be done by inspection. /pedant
If you get to thinking you’re a person of some influence, try ordering somebody else’s dog around.
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#26
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
I remember stumbling on reddit some years ago on a post where some guy was describing his homeschooling in Christian household. He didn't learn anything, he just played xbox and was accepted into Christian college just because he said in the interview how he follows Jesus

Quote:I was homeschooled by Christian parents who taught me close to nothing

I need to vent something here, because I've been holding this back for a very long time. This is a throwaway account for a reason. I grew up in a household with very Christian parents. They are basically Southern Baptists (even though they attend a non-denominational church). Growing up, they decided to homeschool me, thinking it would keep me away from trouble and so I wouldn't be deceived by the secular world.

Throughout my time homeschooling, I basically learned / was taught close to nothing besides very basic stuff. And life was this way until college (I home-schooled all the way through high school) and I didn't have a say in anything. I wasn't doing school-work on weekdays and I would wake up at whatever time I wanted. I'd maybe study a few nights every week, but nothing was on schedule and I was never disciplined, in that sense. I'd just play xbox and was told to read my bible. My mother, for whatever reason, decided to forge my grades into looking 'good' in order to give the illusion to the public school system that I was indeed learning and moving forward in my education every year; but it was a blatant lie.

I still managed to have a few friends, and by age 17 (22 now) I started being pretty rebellious due to constant isolation. I still considered myself a christian but I was slowly letting it go as I started reading about drugs; I'd sneak downstairs and use the computer at night, reading stuff on erowid, then found a couple dealers in my area who I became friends with. That was my escape.

What really bothered me and still does today, is how I felt so alien to everyone, and how everyone sort of saw me that way, too. I remember some friends quizzing me on math and asking me questions about my schoolwork, and my face would get super red, not knowing how to answer their questions; I managed to laugh it off or ditch the conversations every time. But deep down there was this constant shame, I felt like an imposter, and my mind kicked into 'fight or flight' moments whenever academics were brought up in front of me. I was always fearful of being put on the spotlight as a kid and not being able to answer simple math questions in front of an authority figure and being taken away or something.

My mother thought all I needed in life was the love of Jesus Christ and that would somehow make everything okay. This really fucking dehumanized me and I feel incredibly stupid most days. The only reason I made it into college, is because it was a private christian college who gave me an interview (pretty much told them 'i want to serve jesus, god wants me here, whatever') and they let me in.

From that point forward, I've self-taught myself everything, with the exception of a few professors being patient with me. I've managed to transfer to a real university but recently dropped out because I don't think I can survive the upper-level courses. I still feel like I have the mind of an 6th grader sometimes, especially in math and science. I've always been able to read and write okay, but cognitively I feel so behind in comparison to the people I know.

I just wanted to vent / share my story. This shit does happen, unfortunately, and I fucking hate homeschooling. I hate religion. And I have successfully let go of it after a serious identity crises with it all. But yeah, this has negatively affected everything in my life.

tl;dr parents never homeschooled me unless it was about god; had to learn mostly everything on my own. I still feel very far behind in comparison to a lot of people my age.
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#27
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
My husband's cousins are homeschooling their (adopted) son. They really have no business doing it. Neither of them know the first thing about education. I'm not even sure they should really even be allowed to be his parents, because they are so very bad at it.
The whole tone of Church teaching in regard to woman is, to the last degree, contemptuous and degrading. - Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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#28
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
Business insider  Dodgy
Seek strength, not to be greater than my brother, but to fight my greatest enemy -- myself.

Inuit Proverb

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#29
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
(April 8, 2019 at 8:00 pm)Cecelia Wrote: My husband's cousins are homeschooling their (adopted) son.  They really have no business doing it. Neither of them know the first thing about education.  I'm not even sure they should really even be allowed to be his parents, because they are so very bad at it.

Adoption means, they are his parents and what they do is no one else's business.
Yes it sucks but that's the law.
It's amazing 'science' always seems to 'find' whatever it is funded for, and never the oppsite. Drich.
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#30
RE: Huzzah for homeschooling!
(April 9, 2019 at 12:09 am)Succubus Wrote:
(April 8, 2019 at 8:00 pm)Cecelia Wrote: My husband's cousins are homeschooling their (adopted) son.  They really have no business doing it. Neither of them know the first thing about education.  I'm not even sure they should really even be allowed to be his parents, because they are so very bad at it.

Adoption means, they are his parents and what they do is no one else's business.
Yes it sucks but that's the law.

It may be the business of Child Protective Services. Your idea of absolute domination of a child is very 19th Century.
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