I hope this is okay to ask here. My oldest son has been using HOD since 2nd grade. He is getting ready to start 10th grade this year!
![Shocked :shock:](./images/smilies/icon_eek.gif)
Annaz, I LOVE your post! Thank you for sharing your heart!annaz wrote:Take this for what it's worth, because I am a non-conformer. It is difficult, because I'm surrounded by the public school mindset even though most of the people I know homeschool (albeit through co-ops.) I try very hard not to be driven by doing something for money or lack thereof, nor the world's ways, but it is excrutiatingly frustrating to be around this mindset that has infiltrated homeschooling. I feel like HOME school has been lost as all I hear is "where are the co-ops" or how to take the SAT twice a year for 4 years to master it to get to college. What a racquet! Let me ask, have we all lost our minds? Did we lose our vision; do we have a vision? I know some aren't called to homeschool, therefore they do it as they feel like it or when it gets tough they throw in the towel. I also realize that it's not an option for some, so don't throw tomatoes at me. I get that there are many who wish to go to college to further their education. I get that they need to test in. But I also get that no one ever seems to realize that there are other possibilities in life. That when did college become the next step, the have-to? And if we actually train and educate our children properly, do we need to play the game?
I am in no way bashing college. But in my opinion, the entire purpose has been lost.
I will be enjoying our last few high school years, doing high school material, and life prep. But I refuse to spend it whirling around like the crazy people I know, simply reinventing the public school mindset by adding in college classes to save a dime or time, or to hurry up this precious process of which I can never get back.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on being able to create deadlines, etc., at home, as well as using studying for AP tests as a tool. I'm going to keep those thoughts in mind as we navigate the high school years. Your comment that I quoted, however, especially spoke to me. Thank you so much for sharing.MelInKansas wrote:These teens are still laying down a lot of patterns and developing their world view. The cost of college is no joke, but the cost of the struggle they may have as a result of those classes is also pretty great. I will pray the Lord gives you wisdom.