Stupidification

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the isolation factor is just us as people living in the west not being able to think outside of the box.

i really think its a weak argument against homeschooling....as humans we've been blessed with an intellect so inshaAllah we can think outside of that box..?

I am not sure I understand dear sister?

what good is intellect if you can't cultivate it?
what good is land that is deprived of all elements that make it crop optimally?

also I am not making an opinion for or against, I am merely stating my opinion of why I think home schooling is a bad option..

among many other reasons not mentioned here, is if the mother acts as a teacher, what training does she really have.. will she magically be good at precalculus as she is with english lit, or constantly reach for the teacher's manual for answers?
I have known two home schooled kids who dropped out of college--just not being able to keep up..



:w:
 
It depends on who teaches you isn't it? I'm assuming some parents get proper teachers in to teach their children at home...
 
I am not sure I understand dear sister?

what good is intellect if you can't cultivate it?
what good is land that is deprived of all elements that make it crop optimally?

also I am not making an opinion for or against, I am merely stating my opinion of why I think home schooling is a bad option..

among many other reasons not mentioned here, is if the mother acts as a teacher, what training does she really have.. will she magically be good at precalculus as she is with english lit, or constantly reach for the teacher's manual for answers?
I have known two home schooled kids who dropped out of college--just not being able to keep up..



:w:

lol.

i just wanted a discussion....

..hmmm in terms of magically becoming good at so and so there are individuals who have the capacity..(well i believe everyone does) to teach themselves...your never too old to learn!

Anyway obviously homeschooling is an option for those who are capable...im not saying everyone shud do it. lol.
 
It depends on who teaches you isn't it? I'm assuming some parents get proper teachers in to teach their children at home...

yeah....that's another option

i guess i c homeschooling as a way to get the most out of children and to help them flourish...keeping in mind personally i would (and i have) look at the people of our past, our scholars and how they were taught....we cant do it exactly like them but we can take things and imitate and see the way they were trained as children.

alot of them didnt go public school...it was mainly private tuition.
 
Discussion is an exchange of intelligence. Argumentation is an exchange if ignorance

...hence the discussion...

:)
 
Psst! Can someone explain to me how homeschooling works! :D

It depends on the program you follow, and maybe even the country but in the US, you register like in normal school and take a test that contains many questions of different subjects and depending on how well you answer them, the school program places you in a grade and they send you all the books needed for the curriculum, including manuals, workbooks, quizzes etc etc. Your home teacher teaches you depending on the manuals and they can assign you further assignments. If you have any questions, you can call the program or you can chat online. If you want an "experienced" teacher, your hometeacher will teach you At home and then after a certain amount of time, you will take tests and mail them to your teacher. H/She will correct it and mail back the test with your grades. At the end of the school year, you get a certificate indicating you have finished whichever grade you finished.

Again, it depends on the program and grade. Not everyone can homeschool. My parents didn't homeschool my brother because they know that he needs to learn to get along with people of all sorts but that isn't much of a big deal for me.
 



My parents didn't homeschool my brother because they know that he needs to learn to get along with people of all sorts but that isn't much of a big deal for me.

Would have you preferred to have gone to public school?

im curious to know how your experience was....if you don't mind discussing?
 
Would have you preferred to have gone to public school?

im curious to know how your experience was....if you don't mind discussing?

To be perfectly honest, I hated the idea when it came up, because I wasn't sure if I could handle my studies. I said I wanted it anyway because some of the sisters I really looked up to did homeschooling. The first year was a bit hard and my father was extremely strict. I had never been close with anyone in my family, but that soon changed as I had to spend time with them a lot. I became really close to my mother and sister and I even started talking normally with my father (a big accomplishment on both our parts Alhamdulillah :D). My public school experience was so bad that most of my personality changed. There were too many racists at my school, which resulted in me never talking to anyone (of course it's as much my fault as theirs).

Because of homeschooling, I have a lot of time to spend on Islam, family matters, and reading. Also, my math improved A LOT, mostly due to the fact that my father teaches university math. :D Homeschooling was a thousand time better for me than public school but I know a sister who quit because she couldn't handle the responsibility. A person has to have a lot of discipline, a good teacher, and a sense of responsibility.
 
Alpha Dude said:
I guess as muslims they'd be going to the mosques?
How many (well-behaved) kids hang around the mosques for fun and recreation? :p

After a solid few hours of education, kids don't want more education, they want to play. With other kids.

yeah....that's another option

i guess i c homeschooling as a way to get the most out of children and to help them flourish...keeping in mind personally i would (and i have) look at the people of our past, our scholars and how they were taught....we cant do it exactly like them but we can take things and imitate and see the way they were trained as children.

alot of them didnt go public school...it was mainly private tuition.
What were those public schools like in those times?

As to this whole homeschooling debate: maybe it depends on the child. If the kid's extroverted, you'd harm their personality by keeping them at home, and might foster emnity between the child and the parent/teacher, which is counterproductive to their education.

If the kid's introverted... you'd harm their personality by keeping them at home so they don't really get to interact with other children, and learn social skills.

Okay, they can go out during the working week, but unless it's the same time as schoolkids, they're never going to really learn how to interact with groups of people the same age on a daily basis.

Imagine if you could only physically see your friends during break-time. No working together, or joking around in class with them. You don't see them, you don't hear them, you don't interact with them until break- or home-time. Hmm.

Then again, I went to a public school (in the sense it is not homeschooling, not in the sense that it's all posh and private :p), so I'm biased. But I value all the friends I made from nursery to university, who I probably would not have met had I been homeschooled.

Also - there are financial considerations. If you're willing to pay a large amount of money for a permanent private tutor, you may as well send your child to a private school and get the best of both worlds as it were.

i think school stupidifies children and limits their understanding and intellectual capacity by entrapping them in the framework of the national curriculum
Given that homeschooling also requires children's education to adhere to the framework of the national curriculum, how exactly is homeschooling a solution to that problem?

If the child is struggling with a particular subject at school, by all means hire a private tutor to help them out. I'm not entirely convinced about homeschooling myself - i.e. if I had children, I would not decide homeschooling to be an appropriate option.

I am not begrudging anyone who supports it, or who was educated that way. It's just my personal opinion.
 
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lol...basically you teach the child yourself...but you need to also fulfill the..wait for it...objectives of the national curriculum!

Professor Mortimer J Adler...check him out he has some pretty cool ideas on the schooling system...(hes a philisopher btw...so uh...approach with caution)

Where do you take your exams? At home? Your mum could just give you the answers lol...

Or do you go to a centre? (most likely)
 
I don't know that I persoanlly agree with home-schooling among other concerning issues would be social isolation and not everyone ends up a 'John stuart'

I think choosing a top ten school would be a better option.. I have never attended public school myself, and wouldn't want to subject any kid to it.. but I am not so sure learning at home is best-- there is much to be gained from human interactions good or bad!..


Just my opinion and Allah swt knows best

:w:

:sl:
But I guess :) as long as the kid :rollseyes can't differentiate between good and bad they should be home schooled but when they get the sense and know their dos and don'ts they should be put to face the society in public schools otherwise they could feel themselves misfit in the present society and may develop a phobia from people +o(.
 
I do not know the percentages, but up here in the rural areas of Minnesota, South Dakota and North Dakota, home schooling seems to be the norm rather then the exception.

The kids still seem to have well rounded social lives and do interact well. There does not seem to be things like wide spread juvenile delinquency, wide spread teen age pregnancies nor gang related activities. They is limited social contact in the form of sport events like rodeos, hockey, fishing derbies, plus lots of farm chores.

What really surprised me is the kids appear to be well educated.

Home schooling seems to be the way to go, especially if you want to instill family and religious values in the kids.
 
I do not know the percentages, but up here in the rural areas of Minnesota, South Dakota and North Dakota, home schooling seems to be the norm rather then the exception.

The kids still seem to have well rounded social lives and do interact well. There does not seem to be things like wide spread juvenile delinquency, wide spread teen age pregnancies nor gang related activities. They is limited social contact in the form of sport events like rodeos, hockey, fishing derbies, plus lots of farm chores.

What really surprised me is the kids appear to be well educated.

Home schooling seems to be the way to go, especially if you want to instill family and religious values in the kids.
I think 'norm' is the operative word here.

If the norm is non-home-schooling, I feel negative social effects will manifest for home-schoolers.
 
I think 'norm' is the operative word here.

If the norm is non-home-schooling, I feel negative social effects will manifest for home-schoolers.

That is a strong possibility. Up here home schooling is the norm for the Rural areas. That would make a difference.
 
Personally i would not opt for homeschooling. Perhaps it is becuase of my bias by being educated in a public school. I feel one learns creativity by being in a classroom of different students who think of a concept differently. For instance, the letter "a", to some poeple its a letter in the alphabet, to others its a picture, to others its curvy. My point being that in a school, a child gets exposed to different ways of looking at one thing. Homeschooling, he/she will only learn one perspective, which would perhaps be the same as his/her parents. Furthermore, i agree with bro Muezzin when it comes to scoial life; the friends that i made in elemantary school were with me through out my education, and are perhaps my closest friends.
Lastly, i am doing homeschooling for a lil girl right now, and i feel that she would learn a lot more in a classroom environment then from me. (that could just be becuase im a bad teacher!) but when she grows up and needs to learn calculus and stuff, she would definely (in my opinon) be better off in a public school.
This is my opinion, some may turn out to be quite successful from homeschooling
Yes it is true that chilren learn a lot of wrong (islamically wrong) things in public school which is why i feel a parent should be best friends with their children when they are in school and have a very porper and strong islamic environment at home.
 

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