High School Homeschooling
As children start turning into young
adults, parents may begin to feel insecure about high school
homeschooling. When children reach the teen years, many parents
decide to discontinue the home schooling process and happily hand over the task to outside authorities.
But is this really necessary? Is the strictly compartmentalized education provided in schools a better
option?
If social concerns are worrying you, look for
interest-oriented associations, clubs and societies. These offer a lot of support for leaders, opportunity for
shared experience, and foster a sense of belonging. Make up your own group or share this responsibility with
someone else. Home education support groups provide fantastic opportunities to meet your child's needs. This is the
best way to develop intelligent, self-motivated, healthy and able young people.
If the growing burden of some of the higher level Math or
Science seems to be beyond you, enlist the help of someone who knows more. You can even barter your own
services and thus save some money. With home schooling becoming more and more popular, support groups will
have innumerable resources that help you find the right teacher for your child.
The underlying principle that guides home schooling is
this: any child has the innate capacity to grow, develop and
achieve its full potential. All it needs is the right environment and all the right answers. Be there to
provide these and think twice before you turn over this responsibility to a third party.
As long as you have everything in place to help your young teen
continue to grow and develop in the same areas as a public school does, there's no reason why you can't do
high school homeschooling.
The ultimate goal of the educational system is to shift
to the individual the burden of pursuing his education.
~John W. Gardner
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