Homeschooling Chart
6 Responses to Homeschooling Chart
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We laughed. Then my oldest suggested a picture of our startlingly similar living room school bookshelf be posted–which I overruled on the grounds that right now it’s a total mess…
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“Honey, what do you think Rod’s kids do at homeschooling all day?”
“I dunno, they’re probably out riding sweet roller coasters all the time.”
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This was cute– and in good time too. There’s been a lot of seriousness and contention hereabouts of late. We needed a laugh.
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Rod, how do you keep your bookshelf so organized? I clean mine up in the morning, & by 9:45am it’s back the way it was! Good post.
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We homeschooled our three kids. They are now off making their way in the world. Each do well in their chosen fields.
Often I’d be asked about why we didn’t have them in public school, weren’t we concerned about their socialization? It was never about their scholastic education, just socialization.
I had two answers. First, when the schools start testing for socialization then we’ll have something to talk about.The other thing I’d say is that our kids live in a genuine inter-generational world. Because they weren’t segregated by age, they learned how to live and work in a social setting of great diversity. And it wasn’t simply within a age range of children, but also with adults who were mentors, coaches and tutors.
It isn’t for every family. It worked well for ours.




Where are all these coming from all of sudden? I linked to one for “Professors” on my FB page the other night and our lobbyist described one pertaining to “Lobbyists” tonight.