Spouse against homeschooling
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Spouse against homeschooling
Brand new to this forum.
I really want to homeschool but my husband is opposed. I am not looking for convincing arguments to try to persuade him, we're past that. I am instead trying to weigh homeschooling in a situation of parental disagreement vs. public schooling. Anyone else been through this? Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Also, just for more information, our children will be turning 5 and 3 in the next few months. I have been a stay at home mom since my first was born.
I really want to homeschool but my husband is opposed. I am not looking for convincing arguments to try to persuade him, we're past that. I am instead trying to weigh homeschooling in a situation of parental disagreement vs. public schooling. Anyone else been through this? Any thoughts would be appreciated.
Also, just for more information, our children will be turning 5 and 3 in the next few months. I have been a stay at home mom since my first was born.
My husband was adamantly opposed to homeschooling at first...but did finally eventually agree to let me test it for part of a year. This was in November of 2004 and he agreed to let me take them out of school -when he couldn't believe some of the stuff the kids were telling him about. We agreed to discuss it again in the summer of 2005 based on what happened at home that year.
After that partial year trial, he was a little more supportive and agreed to continue, one year at a time. I don't know for sure if him being able to compare what he saw in their public school with what they were learning at home had something to do with his change of heart or not, but I would suspect it did. It took a few years, but now he is a big supporter.
Personally, I would not have tried homeschooling without his tentative-half hearted agreement. Even with his "ok, if you insist, but only for the rest of this year" it was hard to be excited about homeschooling around him. It was a very difficult year for me because he didn't really want to be involved in decisions and whenever I had a bad day (and there will be bad days) I didn't feel like I could go to him or let him know about it because he would say "This was your idea, if it's not working, just send them to school." This was not what I wanted to hear when I knew it was just one bad day out of many good ones. I felt a huge amount of pressure to "perform" as a teacher because I dreaded the thought of possibly having to send them back to school. I was very blessed to have a network of supportive homeschool friends during this time. I probably couldn't have done it without them.
As much as I think homeschooling is a much better choice, I think it is SO important to have your spouse at least agree (even with reservations) to a trial. I think it would cause too much conflict in a marriage, which could be ultimately worse for a child than going to school, to try to "do it with or without you."
Best wishes.
After that partial year trial, he was a little more supportive and agreed to continue, one year at a time. I don't know for sure if him being able to compare what he saw in their public school with what they were learning at home had something to do with his change of heart or not, but I would suspect it did. It took a few years, but now he is a big supporter.
Personally, I would not have tried homeschooling without his tentative-half hearted agreement. Even with his "ok, if you insist, but only for the rest of this year" it was hard to be excited about homeschooling around him. It was a very difficult year for me because he didn't really want to be involved in decisions and whenever I had a bad day (and there will be bad days) I didn't feel like I could go to him or let him know about it because he would say "This was your idea, if it's not working, just send them to school." This was not what I wanted to hear when I knew it was just one bad day out of many good ones. I felt a huge amount of pressure to "perform" as a teacher because I dreaded the thought of possibly having to send them back to school. I was very blessed to have a network of supportive homeschool friends during this time. I probably couldn't have done it without them.
As much as I think homeschooling is a much better choice, I think it is SO important to have your spouse at least agree (even with reservations) to a trial. I think it would cause too much conflict in a marriage, which could be ultimately worse for a child than going to school, to try to "do it with or without you."
Best wishes.
Jill
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Finally...past the arguments
It may just be "wording" or "semantics", but I'd say being past "convincing arguments" is a GREAT thing. Hard to change a man's opinion with that. So, if we do not mean the same thing by that term, fine. Otherwise....
PRAY & FAST! The best way to have heart surgery is for the God who created the heart to do His work. He moves when people fast and pray.
See my post here: http://www.home-school.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=6407
Now, that post is most likely seen as trying to be a convincing argument. It was partially intended to be, and partially intended to just be Proverbs 27:17. Either way, you may find it helpful.
PRAY & FAST! The best way to have heart surgery is for the God who created the heart to do His work. He moves when people fast and pray.
See my post here: http://www.home-school.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=6407
Now, that post is most likely seen as trying to be a convincing argument. It was partially intended to be, and partially intended to just be Proverbs 27:17. Either way, you may find it helpful.
We use My Father's World Homeschool Curriculum for our 2 kid's homeschool education.
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We had the same problem here. For me, priority #1 was to make sure that we were both in agreement. It will not be a good environment for your children if the two of you are constantly fighting. The way I got around this was to homeschool my children over the summer as a trial period. It was ultimately his decision based on how the children were acting and how much they had learned by the end of the summer. The summer went great, my oldest learned more in a short summer period than she had all year in school and now he is very gung-ho about homeschooling. Pray about it first but this is what worked for us.
Visit www.RaysHomeschool.com for tips, tricks, advice, and a look into the life of a homeschooling family.
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I just joined this forum for this exact reason. Even though my daughter is only 7 months old, I wanted to bring up homeschooling well before she has to go to school. My family is very supportive of me wanting to homeschool but my fiancee and his family are against it and all they can come up with is the socialization debate and that public school is important but can't give me any good reasons. He finally said that I can homeschool her only if I have her reading and doing math at a first grade level before kindergarten.(I don't know why he chose that to be the deciding factor) All I want is for him to be ok with me at least trying it and see how it goes before saying no. I have family and friends that are living proof that homeschooling is better and they are extremely happy, outgoing, successful people.
In 1818, Thomas Jefferson wrote
The objects of... primary education [which] determine its character and limits [are]: To give to every citizen the information he needs for the transaction of his own business; to enable him to calculate for himself, and to express and preserve his ideas, his contracts and accounts in writing; to improve, by reading, his morals and faculties; to understand his duties to his neighbors and country, and to discharge with competence the functions confided to him by either; to know his rights; to exercise with order and justice those he retains, to choose with discretion the fiduciary of those he delegates; and to notice their conduct with diligence, with candor and judgment; and in general, to observe with intelligence and faithfulness all the social relations under which he shall be placed."
The objects of... primary education [which] determine its character and limits [are]: To give to every citizen the information he needs for the transaction of his own business; to enable him to calculate for himself, and to express and preserve his ideas, his contracts and accounts in writing; to improve, by reading, his morals and faculties; to understand his duties to his neighbors and country, and to discharge with competence the functions confided to him by either; to know his rights; to exercise with order and justice those he retains, to choose with discretion the fiduciary of those he delegates; and to notice their conduct with diligence, with candor and judgment; and in general, to observe with intelligence and faithfulness all the social relations under which he shall be placed."
My girls r also going on 5 & 3 so i decided to homeschool them this yr to see if i could get my hubby on board. For this yr. I didnt want to get in over my head so i got our criculium books from half price book. Next yr ill order an actual criculium that will cover more of the subjects needed and keep us more organized. We joined a sm homeschool group and we have our oldest in a 2 day preschool and homeschool her the other 3 days. I keep a binder of stuff she does at school and a binder of stuff we do at home. Ive been able to show my hubby all the stuff we were able to do at home and all the pics of us playing games, learning and from outtings we've been on and hes warmed up to the idea of homeschooling. Still not 100% but almost there. maybe u can try doing things w ur kids before kinder to show him all they can be learning from being at home.
My hubbys main concern was them not being socialized and today he actually got to see how good they r with people. We were at a family reunion with a lot of people none of us knew and my 4 yr old went up to the 8 yr old and invited her over to play ponys with her since it was all older people there. He thought it was so neat that she could get along with an older child and be the one to talk to her first. Ive had my girls in playgroups from day one so they r pretty socialized and make friends easily without needing to be with the same group of kids everyday. I wish u luck on ur journey! I'm still working on my inlaws...lol
My hubbys main concern was them not being socialized and today he actually got to see how good they r with people. We were at a family reunion with a lot of people none of us knew and my 4 yr old went up to the 8 yr old and invited her over to play ponys with her since it was all older people there. He thought it was so neat that she could get along with an older child and be the one to talk to her first. Ive had my girls in playgroups from day one so they r pretty socialized and make friends easily without needing to be with the same group of kids everyday. I wish u luck on ur journey! I'm still working on my inlaws...lol
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Here's my solution to my husband and family's concerns about socialization: I've enrolled the kids in programs that run during the summer and holidays for the children of two-income families. So essentially my kids are in "school" whenever other kids are out of school.
I like that these programs are ONLY about socialization since there's no academic instruction going on. That we work on at home. It gives me a break and the kids some variety in their activities and playmates. It also gives my kids the skill-set they would need if we ever decided to send them back to school, e.g., dealing with teachers, lines, other kids etc, but in a low pressure environment where they don't have to worry about grades and standardized tests.
I also like that the teachers get to primarily focus on the children's happiness and improvement of their social skills rather than having to primarily focus on their academic achievement. It's been very helpful for my oldest son who has ADHD and for whom learning social skills is the most difficult subject.
I like that these programs are ONLY about socialization since there's no academic instruction going on. That we work on at home. It gives me a break and the kids some variety in their activities and playmates. It also gives my kids the skill-set they would need if we ever decided to send them back to school, e.g., dealing with teachers, lines, other kids etc, but in a low pressure environment where they don't have to worry about grades and standardized tests.
I also like that the teachers get to primarily focus on the children's happiness and improvement of their social skills rather than having to primarily focus on their academic achievement. It's been very helpful for my oldest son who has ADHD and for whom learning social skills is the most difficult subject.
Michelle
Homeschooling mom of boys ages 7, 5 and 2
Homeschooling mom of boys ages 7, 5 and 2
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