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#1
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Since you guys are a neutral party.
I have this old girlfriend I recently got back in touch with after about 23 years. Everything is cool and we enjoyed catching and all that but the conversations are taking a different turn.
Anyway she home schools her kids, I have never agreed with home school because I think it tears some families apart. Her Virtual School in Wisconsin is supposed to be shut down due to violations of statutes of some sort. It's called the WIVA if you're interested at all. Well she sent me this link to read about how they're going to have some kind of demonstration march to keep the WIVA open. I read one of the Teachers story there and it makes me mad, as the Home School thing usually does. When you read it and my comments you'll know why. I was going to send her this email but wanted an outside opinion first. She still might see it because if you Google my user name here it comes up a lot. Her first name is Sue so you know what you're reading. Here's what I was going to write her about it, am I an asshole and off base here?... Quote:
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#2
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Even after your introduction, I have no idea what you're looking for.
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Your friend, Skagalak |
#3
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Everyone I know/worked with that is home schooled has very little social skills and couldn't interact well with others. You can supplement the education at home but school is as much learning how to interact as it is academics.
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#4
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Basically if I'm too much of a hard ass really. I think I'm just gonna drop the issue and listen to her complain about losing her school because of a silly thing called laws. They all ignore the law and try to use "It's a better education, what's wrong with that" excuse to circumvent the law.
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#5
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I think ignoring it is the best answer, your going to argue about something that has no bearing on where your next meal is coming from.
I agree completely with knutty, the value add of social skills gained in 'public' schools plays an intregral part in a childs development. |
#6
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Quote:
I think it's a toss up.
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Your friend, Skagalak |
#7
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I have two families in my neighborhood with home schooled children. The children in both are much better behaved than most kids I've met. In one family the kids seem a bit less socially motivated but the kids of the other family are very outgoing and friendly. All the kids from both families seem very very bright. I know that I don't have the patience or skills myself to home school my kids but these folks sure do a fine job of it. In the end it's up to the parents as it should be. To each their own.
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#8
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What I didn't know about these Virtual Schools is that they are chartered by the public school system. It's public school at home. Teachers may not even live within the district that pays them. Students may be going to these schools because of open enrollment that don't live within the district that pays for the school. I think I'd be upset also if I was a Union Teacher working within my district but seeing funding go to Virtual schools. Because it's public it's free for the parents to an extent, certainly not as expensive as if they were actually Home Schooling their children and footing the bill themselves and paying school tax on top it. The Schools even loan them Computers to use for online lessons. One of the other things I think that isn't fair to parents who live within the district and who aren't fortunate enough to have one spouse make enough money for one parent to stay home is this. They don't have the option of taking advantage of the program, they send their kids to public school yet some of their tax money that's supposed to be used for their district school goes to parents and kids in these Virtual classrooms. Parents and kids already fortunate enough to have one parent at home are using money footed by the less fortunate.
Personally I don't care if someone wants to home school their kid or not. Is it a better or worse education, are the kids better or worse adjusted socially, I don't know and don't care. It's the attitudes of some parents and these Teachers that try make it sound like if your kids aren't homes schooled they're at a disadvantage somehow. Those aren't even the issues here, yet they continue to ignore the real issue and keep spewing this rhetoric. Like I say it's all a straw man with them. "You want to close our Virtual Schools because the Union is a gestapo and my kids are doing doing better than if they were in a brick and mortar School." Maybe the kids do better in Home School but it's no case for ignoring the statutes. One of them is that your kid(s) actually attends the district school that charters it. Not just appears in Virtual reality to a School outside your own district. This Wisconsin case will probably be a turning point for all public chartered Virtual Schools. It's interesting and conversation if anything. Plus I'd like to know if any of my tax money is going to one of these Virtual Classrooms, I'd rather see my school tax money stay at home and in my kids school. Not used to cater to families who are already more fortunate than me and could afford traditional Home Schooling, they need to go find their own money for that if that's what they want to do. |
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