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The Homeschool Decision
Your children may have some very good reasons as to why they wish to homeschool their children. The motives causing people to homeschool are as varied as the people who homeschool. Your children may have a religious reason or maybe their school district is a particularly poor one. Perhaps they want to spend more time together as a family than school allows. Maybe one of your grandchildren has learning issues the parents feel would be better addressed at home. Whatever the reasons, chances are your children have done their homework before making the decision. Plus, there is far more homeschooling support and information than there used to be, and if you take the time to listen, you will probably be surprised at how much research your children have done.
Sharing the Decision The Gibsons had known in advance that Grandma wasn't going to be too happy about their decision, but preferred to make their own decision based upon what they felt was right for their children, not on how other people felt about their choice. When the Baxters* told their parents about their decision to homeschool, they received a decidedly mixed reaction. "We told my mom first, and she was very negative about it, saying that she didn't think that was a very good thing to do, they'd miss out on too much, etc.," says Laura Baxter*, mother of three from Trafford, Pa. "Then we told my mother-in-law. She was quietly supportive, just basically saying that as long as it was something we felt we could do, then it didn't matter to her."
Getting Involved Tamra Orr, author of Parents Guide to Home Schooling (Mars Publishing, 2002), agrees there are many things grandparents can do to support their homeschooled grandchildren, but first they must conquer any prejudices they have about this unusual form of education. "Older adults occasionally have a hard time accepting change or new ideas," says Orr, who homeschools her own children. "I also think that homeschooling is too non-mainstream for many of them to accept. Some grandparents also feel that it is an indirect insult to the fact that they had not homeschooled their own children." If grandparents could understand how important their contribution could be to their grandchildren's schooling, they might look at it differently. Homeschooling often is the perfect way for grandparents to get involved with their grandchildren in a very meaningful way. "Grandparents can offer to be involved," says Orr. "Teach a child how to knit. Discuss the past. Build a model plane. Go on a field trip. Share this special time."
In the years since, however, Orr's parents have become homeschooling advocates. "They now see how well the children turned out and have read enough of my books and heard enough of my presentations that they support homeschooling … and can often be found defending it to their friends and neighbors," says Orr.
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