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Benefits of Being Homeschooled

The Benefits of Being Homeschooled (and the week we FULLY took advantage of them)

Our family's life looks NOTHING like it did just a few years ago.  

I mean NOTHING.

We've gone from children in traditional school with mom staying home and dad going to an office 40+ hours a week,  to children being homeschooled, mom writing curriculum and running a blog, and dad being an IT consultant. 

We don't function on a traditional schedule or timetable. 

We're living more and more off the grid, and that feels more and more NORMAL. 

As my husband and I were talking about this, we came to the conclusion that homeschooling was the catalyst for ALL of this.

Taking that huge leap of faith six years ago has allowed everyone in our family to more fully realize their dreams.

Isn't that just AMAZING? 

You see, homeschooling is just not about "school at home".  It's about a lifestyle of being together, breaking free from many of society's norms (and schedules!) and NOT being in that hamster wheel that too often defines American families. 

This week, all of the benefits of homeschool really became crystal clear to me. As I look back on our week it makes me smile to see the ways homeschooling has blessed our family.

*This post may contain affiliate links.

This month's featured resource is Teaching From Rest by Sarah Mackenzie. I'm reading this book in preparation for next year and it is inspiring and equipping me! 

On to #CollageFriday: 


Pursuing a Skill With the Goal of Excellence

Benefits of Being Homeschooled (and the week we FULLY took advantage of them)

 

I remember well the STRUGGLE it was to get my daughter to practice piano when she was in public school.

She loved music, but she was just DONE at the end of a school day. That bus would drop her off at 3:30 and she was worn out. There was little time left for her to pursue what really mattered to her. 

Homeschooling eliminated that struggle. 

 Both of the children now play piano. It is a PRIORITY that practicing happens. We explain to them that we invest time and money in this skill, and if they stick with it, they will have a lifelong knowledge and enjoyment of music.  They can use their talents to make others happy and to bring themselves enjoyment, too. 

Music is important to us, and I believe we can pursue it deeply and passionately because we have the TIME. 

{What is it that interests your kids? Do you see how deeply they can pursue that interest because they are given time and space?}

Mother's Day was such a gift to me because it was the kids' piano recital. I was such a happy mama.  I could care less if they are virtuosos, what I care about is the perseverance and commitment they are learning through honing a skill. 

(Uploading videos because these #CollageFriday posts serve as my scrapbook - and record of our learning. I look back on several years of these Friday posts and am so glad I've kept track of everything we're up to!)


Benefits of Being Homeschooled (and the week we FULLY took advantage of them)

Standardized Testing Week = NO BIG DEAL!

Another benefit of homeschooling is that we don't have to teach to or emphasize a dumb test. 

The longer I'm away from public schools, the more ASININE these tests seem to me. 

And, when I hear kids talk about the total fuss that is made over them in schools, it just makes me sad. 

Did you eat a good breakfast?  (shouldn't we do that EVERY day)

Do you have your #2 pencils and is everything bubbled in completely?

Our children took the Stanford 10 (through Classical Conversations) for two mornings this week. We didn't make a big deal out of it, and they said everything went just fine. 

The kids needed scrap paper for the testing, so I packed some fun notebooks from DaySpring for them. (A little encouragement from God on a standardized test could be quite helpful - ha!) 

While the kids were testing I worked, ran errands, and even READ FOR PLEASURE. 

The comment of the week (from Grant):  

"You know, the social sciences portion of that test was weird.

It seemed like only things the government would want you to know."  

That's my boy. 

We didn't do any other school this week other than testing. Grant enjoyed a fun afternoon with a friend who lives very close to us. Both boys had a taste of freedom because we let them ride bikes to and from each other's houses. They did all by themselves and then enjoyed an afternoon of Minecraft! 

I'm pretty sure we could sell most kids on standardized tests if we told them they could have the week off of school and play Minecraft, don't you? 

Black Top Basketball with LEGO® Education StoryStarter curriculum

 

Learning With LEGO® Education

My son has become immersed in all things LEGO over the past several years. 

I'm SO thankful we discovered LEGO® Education and can use many of their products in our homeschool. 

This week, Grant has been using the StoryStarter curriculum to narrate Treasure Island to me. We listen to a bit of the story together, and then I ask him to build his favorite scene. (In one of the photos below you will see Jim hiding in the apple barrel listening to Long John Silver and his terrible plans!)

The other pictures show a basketball arena Grant created, complete with announcer and a game going on. Using the curriculum, I prompted him to build a sports stadium of any kind, and after he built he used the StoryStarter Story Visualizer software to create a commentary of the game -- which he called "Black Top Basketball".

 Click here to see his PDF creation! 

A HUGE benefit to homeschooling is that I have learned right alongside my children. When I observed how much Grant loved LEGOS, I wanted to do everything I could to learn more about them, and also blog about that, too. 

Little did I know I would eventually be blogging for LEGO® Education and speaking on behalf of them at a homeschool convention.

How FUN is that?   

This week I have been busy preparing to be the facilitator of a StoryStarter workshop at FPEA, which is held in Orlando next weekend. 

Benefits of Being Homeschooled (and the week we FULLY took advantage of them)

Benefits of Being Homeschooled (and the week we FULLY took advantage of them)

The Beach With a Buddy

It's great to go the beach when most kids are still in school! 

Grant's super good friend invited him on a spur of the moment beach trip at the end of the week. 

This is the first time Grant has been gone from us (without his sister) for more than one night. I'm so happy he has this time to make memories with his friend! 

A HUGE benefit of homeschooling is vacationing during off-peak times and sometimes taking school on the road with you. 

Another benefit of homeschooling is the time our children have to cultivate friendships, and having their parents around to help them navigate how to successfully cultivate those friendships, too.  

I am most thankful I can guide my children through heart issues with friends, and that they have friends whose parents share our goals and values. 

(In the mean time, we get to enjoy a weekend with just Anna, which is very rare. This is her big children's chorus concert weekend - 3 performances in 3 days, which is always very fun, but VERY exhausting! )

 

I could go on and on about the benefits of homeschooling - but I have a feeling this post has been LONG ENOUGH.  

Have you noticed the benefits of homeschooling? What are they? 


Join Me For Collage Friday

Join Me For Collage Friday, a weekly homeschool link up

Feel free to grab this graphic (right click and save to your computer) and include it with your photo collage post.

*As long as your post contains lots of photos you can join in the fun - don't feel like you have to make a fancy collage!

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Homeschool: So Much More Than "School"

When our family went from public school to homeschool, I saw educating my children at home as just that: a way to teach them at home.

Homeschool: So Much More Than "School"

I naively thought I would teach them 6 hours each day and we would call that "school". 

I printed the attendance roster from the state, stuck it on the refrigerator, and checked off the days.  I wrote lesson plans and checked to see if my objectives lined up with the state department of education's objectives. I bought the "What Every Child Needs to Know in XYZ Grade" books for each of my children's grade levels. 

You can stop shaking your head and laughing now. 

I was a new homeschooling mom. All I had ever known was public school. I was a public school teacher with a degree in educational administration. 

It took me about 6 months to realize that homeschool is SO MUCH MORE than SCHOOL! 

Homeschool is a lifestyle of learning and inquiry that cannot be confined to space or time. 

Homeschool is giving our children the gift of unlimited possibilities, opening of every little door they want to walk through, and affording them ample time to contemplate things of beauty and importance. Homeschool is so much more than SCHOOL.


This week, as I recap our week (as I've done for nearly four years every Collage Friday), it struck me just what a gift homeschool is, and how it is so much more than memorizing facts, writing papers, completing math lessons, and diagramming sentences.  

*This post contains affiliate links. 

Give Them Time & Freedom

Homeschool is So Much More than "School"

Because Anna is in her very last week of Challenge B  (working hard to finish Mock Trial, short stories, and prepping for a blue book exam), Grant has been a bit more free this week, and it's glorious! 

Our weather has been perfect, friends have shown up in abundance, and there have been very few demands on our time.  As a result, Grant has learned A LOT on his own, read books, created with LEGOS, and much more!

Grant's week -- going left to right, top to bottom:

  • The boy saved his money for a remote control Mustang. He has been drawing courses in the driveway, creating rock race tracks, and parallel parking between cans of tennis balls! He has very few toys (aside from LEGOS), so it did my heart good to see him get himself a "toy" that he just loves. 
  • We did have one rainy day. Grant got a lazy start to that day and laid in bed to finish Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of Nimh.  He loved this book, and I love that he chose to read. (I'm trying to be intentional about picking quality literature from our local library and then giving him a choice of what he would like to read. He's not my "reader", but he is enjoying reading much more these days!)
  • We've been listening to Treasure Island on audio and completing a study guide to go with the book -- I blogged about that this week in case you're interested. 
  • Lots of LEGO building was done this week - I thought this zipline was pretty creative!
  • Grant also started a homeschool tennis class this week! We are taking a break from organized team sports, but my athletic guy was really needing an outlet. This class is perfect because it meets once a week. We were invited by a friend and it's such a nice collection of children, too. 

Perseverance Pays Off

I'm a super proud mama right now -- I know "pride" isn't such a great thing, so maybe I should say I'm just so pleased for Anna and what she has accomplished this year. Yes, there has been a huge amount of "schoolwork" completed, but she has grown so much as a person, as well.

Challenge B is a demanding year, and Anna has persevered to complete so VERY BIG projects. She has also been on a personal journey of faith and will be confirmed this Sunday. 

Homeschool is so much more than "School"

This has been a BIG WEEK in her life!

  • Mock Trial is this Friday. She's been prepping A LOT, and even dad is getting in on the preparations.  My husband and I get to attend mock trial and see all of the hard work first hand. I'm so excited!
  • Anna and I sat down with her chemistry lessons on the weekend. We both didn't quite understand the last lesson in Discovering Atomos, but I have learned (thanks to the Challenge philosophy) that if we sat down together, read and reread the lesson, then TALKED through our questions together, we could tackle the challenge together. And, contrary to the world's "school" mindset, success is not about getting the answers RIGHT... it is about tackling a problem, exercising your brain, and not giving up. The learning comes in the struggle. 
  • One of Anna's closest friends came to spend the evening with us this week - she will be out of town for Anna's confirmation and helped us with some party favors and also brought her the most beautiful cross -- which was HAND MADE from horseshoes. These girls have such a wonderful friendship... they have been friends through church since they were little - and even though one is homeschooled and the other goes to private school, they have remained friends. They each take such an interest in the other's life (and they only intersect at church) and are just faithful friends. This is a blessing. 
  • I cannot leave out the near completion of Saxon Algebra 1/2! We are Saxon fans here. The math growth I have witnessed in Anna in the past three years is phenomenal. We had tried two other programs before settling on Saxon, and I wish I would have just LISTENED to people when they told me to try Saxon! 

As I start to look back on our year, I see that this year (more than any year before) was a year of FAMILY LEARNING. 

Each member in our family has grown in their quest for knowledge, interests, and relationships. 

The longer I homeschool, the more I see that it is a mindset, not simply a way to educate children. 

Homeschooling is SO much more than just SCHOOL... it's LIFE. 

Notebooking Pages Sale

Our favorite resource is on sale until May 8. A Lifetime Membership to Notebooking Pages is just $50 -- you will have thousands of notebooking pages at your fingertips for the rest of your homeschooling life. That's a good deal!



Join Me For Collage Friday

Feel free to grab this graphic (right click and save to your computer) and include it with your photo collage post. Use the widget below to add your post with photo collages for the week. Visit other bloggers in the link-up to gain ideas and offer encouragement and support.

Join here, on Instagram, or post a collage on the Homegrown Learners' Facebook wall! 


Collage Friday