Home Schooling Costs
When people talk about educating their children at
home in the absence of any definite or structured curriculum,
the natural assumption is to think that home schooling
costs will be cheap. But this is far from
the truth. Although home schooling does not stick to any
particular text, this is perhaps more of a bane than a boon,
when it comes to finance.
When you need to make sure that your children receives
state-of-the-art education so that they can compete with
regular school goers, expenses will naturally mount. The actual
cost of educating a child at home is surprisingly high.
Up-to-date textbooks, course materials, a library, computing
equipment, lighting, specially designed furniture all cost
money. In this case, the cost may be slightly lesser when it
comes to home schooling the second child. Add to this any
additional tuition cost for tutors who come to teach
subjects that cannot be handled by parents, like
higher-level math or science. The total cost can be a bit
mind boggling.
If you take another important factor into
consideration, home schooling costs may effective triple.
The need for having one of the parents tied to the house and
fully dedicated to providing education deprives the family of a
second earning member. The average home schooling teacher is
usually a lady with a college degree. This means that she can
easily bring home a pay of $35,000 or more. It is also
interesting to note that most families that
have more than 2 children do not opt for home schooling at
all.
But, there are those who have been successful in carrying
out home schooling at low rates. This is dependent on the size
of the family, the support group, the type of materials
used and the availability of the material. When successive
children can reuse the materials, cost goes down. Much of
the course material can be got from vendors of home schooling
materials.
A membership in a public library, theatre, concerts, ballets
and other cultural events also help in cutting costs.
Sometimes, it is even possible to barter expertise. For
instance, the mother of an 8-year old gives dancing classes,
and her daughter receives drawing classes for free. Support
groups allow you to divide the cost of field trips, science
projects and fairs.
Whatever the cost, advocates of home schooling say that the
benefits far outweigh these considerations. When you are able
to decide what knowledge your child receives and when he or she
should be taught and to what extent, it gives you a lot of
freedom and a lot of power. Both the children as well as the
parents benefit from this mutually enriching experience.
Higher education must lead the
march back to the fundamentals
of human relationships, to the old discovery that is
ever new, that man does not live by bread alone.
~ John A.
Hannah
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