ANSWERS: 4
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I am totally for homeschooling. I think home schooling gives you the option of chousing the morals and religion education that you want for your kids.
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Not much. Well, not if we're talking "exclusively homeschooled" anyway. It leaves kids vulnerable to whatever shortcomings their parents have (instead of spreading the risk over dozens of teachers), vulnerable to being taught complete nonsense at an age where they cannot tell the difference, they miss out on learning vital interaction skills that come simply by having to get along with other children (and adults) and generally are at far greater risk of hitting the outside world completely unprepared for it.
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sorry but I am not a fan , robs the kids from mingling with other kids ...stunts there emotional growth and relations with there peers and this intern will lead to problems in the work place
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Home schooling isn't for everyone, but for those who choose that route it can be an enormously rewarding experience. Locking a child up in a room with 20 or so similarly aged kids does nothing to prepare them for real life. For instance, think about where you work; are all the employees the same age? Does everyone in the company do exactly the same job, at the same time, in the same way? I’ll bet not. I’ll bet in a typical day you have to interact with people of various ages, and with people who have various backgrounds, who are tasked with performing various roles and functions. My kids learn about the real world in home school because they venture out into it with my wife and me every day. They routinely interact with people of all ages and backgrounds. We reinforce their school lessons with what they see when they accompany us to the store, or the bank, or wherever. A public school classroom could never hope to compete with that!
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