Saturday, May 31, 2008

Feed your minds for a good cause

Looking for an easy way to keep your kids sharp over the summer months and also help fight world hunger? Then FreeRice.com is for you. For each word you answer correctly, they donate 20 grains of rice through the UN World food Program. From its launch in October 2007 until May 27, 2008, Free Rice has raised 34,551,828,550 grains of rice and fed people in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Uganda and Nepal.

So what are you waiting for? Start answering vocabulary words and watch your bowl fill with rice. Your kids can spend the summer feeding their minds and feeding hungry people all over the world. Then, why not work it into your homeschool curriculum for next year? It's free, it's fun and it's a great cause!

Friday, May 30, 2008

+s and -s

One of the best and obvious advantages to homeschooling is the speed at which the children learn and the amount they learn. I have realised that, left to themselves, children learn a lot more than through a structured approach. In fact, is that not the case with all of us? That is why adults seem to make better learners. Because once they get out of structured learning, they find themselves more motivated to learn since they are doing it for themselves rather than being told to do so.
Another advantage that I have seen is that since the children are not under any kind of pressure, they seem to outsmart themselves all the time. In fact, they enjoy the competition from within. In a formal school environment, it is always an issue of superlatives. Who is the best! Here it is more comparative. It is 'have I done better than last time?' And, I think, that is so important.

If there is an offside to homeschooling then the only thing I noticed when we began learning at home was the lack of discipline. But, again, I was viewing discipline from my definition of it which is largely influenced by the school system and the educators therein. But it did not perturb me very much since I knew they were going through their period of adjustment to a new way of learning.

Do the kids enjoy this kind of learning? I think they do a lot. Humans hate structure even if we have accepted it as part of our lives. But we are always striving to fight it. So, the children too are enjoying the flexibility of learning what they want, when they want and in the manner that most appeals to them. But, being animals of habit, I have encouraged a schedule since, after all, one day they will need to fit into this world.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Getting started with homeschooling

We began homeschooling our children five years ago when our oldest daughter was 13 years old, followed by the second daughter who was 12 and our son who was 7. It was a well deliberated decision and we had taken 2 years over it before actually starting it. Believe me when I say that we have never looked back and regretted that decision. In an environment where competition is getting an ugly connotation and is undermining performance, it was the best thing we could have done for our children. Of course, it did come with its share of hiccups and are-we-doing-the-right-thing kind of emotions. The cross-eyed looks we got from family, friends and neighbours just made it worse. As time went by and all of us fell into a ‘routine’, we were glad we had the ‘guts’ and the ‘gall’ to ‘fight’ the system and take off on a path which was self designed and self motivated and not dictated by the phrase ‘the done thing’.
The children have become independent learners and responsible. Learning is no longer something that has to be achieved with someone else in the driving seat. They recognize the fact that learning is something which is the basis of all self-advancement and hopefully in the years to come will translate into success. Success as they perceive it. And hopefully as we perceive it. I will write the lessons that I have learnt and the questions that have cropped up in our short journey of homeschooling, maybe in a future post.