The dreaded S word
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We need some help in this department, too! But my kids really like it when we host informal parties in our home. Where parents come AND bring their children. I think it does them good to see the parents socializing as well, and it gives them lots of options: hang with the grown-ups for some of the time, show kids your room, mingle in the snack area, play games with kids, etc. And if they can get to know the kids this way, they can hang together on other occasions. Just a thought. Have fun/j
One of the reasons that MOPS is so popular is for that very reason, MOPS stands for mothers of preschoolers. It is for moms who want to get together and meet usually at a playground and talk while the children play. Maybe you can start something like that for some of the local Homeschoolers in the area. Your daughter might even like it if you joined something where the children were younger than her, so that she could have some experience being the oldest and more experienced, giving her the advantage. This always helps boost morale!
Just some thoughts.
Just some thoughts.
Phi 4:13 I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me.
"deschooling"
How recently have you and daughter begun homeschooling? It can take a while for kids to work through some of their attitudes/ideas about school, themselves, and other people, from what they learned while in regular school settings. It took our kids literally months, and when our seven-year-old began acting relatively normal again about eight months after we took him out of school, some other homeschooling parents informed me this was just about average...
Sometimes it helps for very shy people to just be in a medium-sized, low-pressure group of relatively friendly (not pushy) people on a regular basis, and to be allowed to hang around and watch how the others interact--to be included in a kind of passive way. Many homeschoolers I've known are like this, friendly but neither too standoffish nor too pushy (you have to know the group of kids in question; that's just part of the job.)
My daughter was nine when we pulled her out of regular school. She was academically advanced and had come in for quite a bit of jealousy and criticism from the other students. A couple of years later we signed her up for a couple of classes at a university-model school, and she was amazed to find herself with kids who did not seem to be doing one-upmanship all the time, jockeying for position--the usual brutal school-kid behaviour. She said they were genuinely friendly and nice. I said maybe it was because 1) they were homeschoolers, and b) they didn't HAVE to be together seven hours a day, five days a week, for 2/3 of a year, and not only that but c) they were taking classes THEY had chosen (that's one advantage of university model.) They could enjoy each other's society because it WAS a chance to socialize, as well as learn. (My opinions)
Sometimes it helps for very shy people to just be in a medium-sized, low-pressure group of relatively friendly (not pushy) people on a regular basis, and to be allowed to hang around and watch how the others interact--to be included in a kind of passive way. Many homeschoolers I've known are like this, friendly but neither too standoffish nor too pushy (you have to know the group of kids in question; that's just part of the job.)
My daughter was nine when we pulled her out of regular school. She was academically advanced and had come in for quite a bit of jealousy and criticism from the other students. A couple of years later we signed her up for a couple of classes at a university-model school, and she was amazed to find herself with kids who did not seem to be doing one-upmanship all the time, jockeying for position--the usual brutal school-kid behaviour. She said they were genuinely friendly and nice. I said maybe it was because 1) they were homeschoolers, and b) they didn't HAVE to be together seven hours a day, five days a week, for 2/3 of a year, and not only that but c) they were taking classes THEY had chosen (that's one advantage of university model.) They could enjoy each other's society because it WAS a chance to socialize, as well as learn. (My opinions)
Use the talents you possess, for the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except the best. --Henry van Dyke
12-year-old son -- Friend Problem
Our son, age 12, has been home schooling for about 3 years now. Initially he seemed to be maintaining friendships from his public school days. Now, it seems he had no buddies -- worse yet, he doesn't seem to care. We've tried to help him connect with kids at church or sports and he doesn't seem interested. When forced into a social situation, he seems fine. He just doesn't want to follow up with asking a kid over or to hang out. There is a distinct lack of motivation. Should we be concerned and push him to make a friend or two?
12-year-old son
1. Are there other homeschoolers at your Church or in his sports?
We've been attending the same church since he was 2 years old. He's never "connected" with any of the kids there really. There is a group of home schoolers, but he fights me about being around them. We tried having him connect with several boys in one family, but they ganged up on him -- physically hitting him etc. He reacted poorly -- he cursed, which I've never known him to do elsewhere -- the mother made a big deal out of him cursing and ignored that her sons, two of whom are older, having beat up on him -- they were in a pool and he thought they were trying to drown him -- that was about 18 mos. ago. So of course he doesn't want to have anything to do with them. Since then, he won't even go into Bible or Youth around them. (He took responsibility for using foul language, but he did so to get the boys' mother to pay attention and help him -- she was ignoring that he was in trouble until she heard him curse... the mother admits that -- it was just a bad situation...)
He plays football and is cordial with teammates but not interested in getting to know any of them better -- even if invited, which I don't understand at all.
2. Are you involved in a homeschool support group or co-op? If so are there any opportunities there for him to find a close freind?
We did a co-op this past year and he kind of liked several of the kids -- but it was a distance away and the others live even further away...
His closest friend (since he was about little) -- the kid's a really nice kid, played football but is now into soccer etc. and moved about 1/2 hour away -- they stay in touch sometimes, but the other boy has started liking girls and Myspace etc., and my son's not up for that kind of thing.
He did have the brother of his little sister's friend hang out all day yesterday and then spend the night -- they played XBox etc. The boy is a year older and very bright -- so that helped them to connect. They've known one another for a long time but the other boy always thought of himself as "older" etc. I think they were surprised that they had such fun because the little sisters have been buds for years without the two of them connecting at all.
My husband thinks it is silly for me to worry -- that all middle schoolers go through "friend changes" and "friend problems" at this age -- He thinks I've forgotten that the older ones (now 24, 21, and 18 ) had the same kinds of issues and they were in public/private school.
Thanks for any suggestions -- it doesn't seem to matter how long we parent -- there's always something that challenges us, it seems.
We've been attending the same church since he was 2 years old. He's never "connected" with any of the kids there really. There is a group of home schoolers, but he fights me about being around them. We tried having him connect with several boys in one family, but they ganged up on him -- physically hitting him etc. He reacted poorly -- he cursed, which I've never known him to do elsewhere -- the mother made a big deal out of him cursing and ignored that her sons, two of whom are older, having beat up on him -- they were in a pool and he thought they were trying to drown him -- that was about 18 mos. ago. So of course he doesn't want to have anything to do with them. Since then, he won't even go into Bible or Youth around them. (He took responsibility for using foul language, but he did so to get the boys' mother to pay attention and help him -- she was ignoring that he was in trouble until she heard him curse... the mother admits that -- it was just a bad situation...)
He plays football and is cordial with teammates but not interested in getting to know any of them better -- even if invited, which I don't understand at all.
2. Are you involved in a homeschool support group or co-op? If so are there any opportunities there for him to find a close freind?
We did a co-op this past year and he kind of liked several of the kids -- but it was a distance away and the others live even further away...
His closest friend (since he was about little) -- the kid's a really nice kid, played football but is now into soccer etc. and moved about 1/2 hour away -- they stay in touch sometimes, but the other boy has started liking girls and Myspace etc., and my son's not up for that kind of thing.
He did have the brother of his little sister's friend hang out all day yesterday and then spend the night -- they played XBox etc. The boy is a year older and very bright -- so that helped them to connect. They've known one another for a long time but the other boy always thought of himself as "older" etc. I think they were surprised that they had such fun because the little sisters have been buds for years without the two of them connecting at all.
My husband thinks it is silly for me to worry -- that all middle schoolers go through "friend changes" and "friend problems" at this age -- He thinks I've forgotten that the older ones (now 24, 21, and 18 ) had the same kinds of issues and they were in public/private school.
Thanks for any suggestions -- it doesn't seem to matter how long we parent -- there's always something that challenges us, it seems.
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