Does anyone have some good homeschooling websites?

North Carolina Homeschooling.?

  • I currently live in North Carolina, and I've been looking online for free homeschooling websites, but i havent found one yet. Does anyone have any suggestions or answers? My ...show more

  • Answer:

    It's cheaper to go on your own...the websites are there, after all, to make money. It's a business model, just like everything else. :-) Sure, some people sign up with an online version of public school; that’s really technically not “homeschool,” since you're counted as public school student and you’re assigned a teacher, a strict schedule, and predetermined workload assigned by the school district, etc. The Dirty Little Secret here is that the district gets to keep the federal funds for you, as you’re a public school student this way. (Quite obviously, your school district will like this option best. Often when one queries the school as to the options available for “homeschool,” the school administrators will smile sweetly and mention just such an arrangement, conveniently omitting the rest of your options. This “lie by omission” quietly implies that this is the one and only way “homeschooling is done.” There’s a quite a debate in the homeschooling community about whether or not this constitutes an effort by the educational bureaucracy to redefine the meaning of homeschool, and what effect that would have on legislation and regulation of more traditional homeschool. But I digress.) Thankfully, the rigged game isn't the only one in town. Another route chosen by some people is to buy materials from the curriculum companies and enroll with online schools, but they're "independent" of the school districts, and they don't owe anyone a darned thing...their test scores (if any; few homeschoolers in the traditional sense are obligated to take state standardized tests) are their own business, as is the pace, order or depth at which they choose to go through the material. Others choose to mix and match from places that offer a "curriculum-in-a-box." Caveat Emptor on this one...and it will depend heavily on how you learn best as to whether or not a particular course or kit works well for you. Others decide to create their own curriculum, based on their own personal criteria. Some states want you to keep a portfolio of material to prove you're doing something there at home (makes for a great portfolio to turn in to colleges for admissions!), other states want you to submit your curriculum for the year for approval, others may require testing that could send you back to public or private school if you fall below a particular percentile...just in case. Again, depends on the state. Still other people endorse what they call "unschooling," and they throw out all the textbooks and tests altogether and simply follow what interests them in a more holistic way. (See the writings of John Holt, or Google "unschooling" for more on that theory of education.) A good book on the subject is “The Teenage Liberation Handbook: How to Quit School and Get a Real Life and Education,” by Grace Llewellyn. Here’s an excerpt: "Did your guidance counselor ever tell you to consider quitting school? That you have other choices, quite beyond lifelong hamburger flipping or inner-city crack dealing? That legally you can find a way out of school, that once you're out you'll learn and grow better, faster, and more naturally than you ever did in school, that there are zillions of alternatives, that you can quit school and still go to A Good College and even have a Real Life in the Suburbs if you so desire? Just in case your counselor never told you these things, I'm going to. That's what this book is for." Even if you don’t hold with what the author has to say, the point of view she has is dramatically different and can be a great springboard to help you get in touch with what you believe school and learning should be like. The book also outlines a very nice reference for curriculum, as well as chapters about dealing with your school, convincing your parents, and getting a social life. There’s a also a big section on interviews with college admissions officers, and what they see as pros and cons when they’re looking at a homeschooled student’s application. It's meant to be a very usable book.

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