Socialization and Why
You Don't Need It
by Carolyn Morrison
Socialization is what I refer to as "The 'S' Word". It scares
off potential homeschoolers, paralyzing their families with fear, and
causing their friends and neighbors to look at them with suspicion that
they must belong to some political-fringe militia.
In reality, everyone has a socialization problem. Public schools
are prime examples of bad socialization. When we took our
children out of the government education system, we left behind only the
people our children did not like playing with anyway. "Friends"
we felt were bad influences could easily be forgotten about. The friends
who remained were the ones my children saw most often anyway: church
friends, neighborhood friends, soccer teammates, etc.
For the first few years, my daughter got together with her favorite public
school girlfriends once or twice a year. That was as often as they all
desired to get together, and it was more than enough to show each one how
the three of them were drifting apart in their interests. As the girls
matured through middle-school age, the public-schooled girls became
increasingly "boy crazy" and focused on self-image. My own
daughter developed new interests based on her homeschool experiences:
reading historical Christian fiction and working with her collection of
antique clothing buttons. As we met other homeschooling families, the old
friends were gradually replaced with new friends with values similar to
ours. It became increasingly obvious to our daughter and to us as parents
that we held Family in much higher esteem than did many of our
acquaintances. Sibling relationships were considered sacred to us and
nothing or no one was allowed to interfere with them -- an opposite
attitude from the one held by most former-friends' families. Friends can
be highly over-rated; siblings will still be here long after friends move
away.
My husband has handled many "socialization" questions from
co-workers. Once, when asked, "What do you do about
socialization?" he began by simply asking the person if they were
referring to "good" socialization or "bad"
socialization. That was all he needed to say. The co-worker took that ball
and ran with it, saying, "Oh, I know what you mean! My own kid came
home the other day, and he told me about what was going on at his
school..." The question had been answered, and the distinction had
been clearly made in his own mind: there are two types of
socialization, and we have control over which type we subject ourselves
to.
The Socialization Myth,
Part 2
by Carolyn Morrison
All of you who have been asked why you chose homeschooling over
Christian school raise your hand. Aha! I see tentative fingers wiggling
all over the blogoshpere! The hopefully well-meaning friend or family
member posing the question probably assumed that Christian schools are a
desirable place to obtain an education. But ignorance can be fixed. (My
apologies to the wonderful, dedicated Christian schools that must
be out there somewhere.)
When we were first investigating the alternatives to government school, we
checked into the local Christian schools. I was as innocent as the next
moron and also assumed that the private schools were brimming with
shiny-faced cherubs as eager to learn about Jesus as to learn to multiply.
I had never stopped to consider what happens to the thugs, bullies, and
would-be drug pushers who manage to get themselves expelled from the
government institutions. They get put into Christian schools! Their
parents (often, parent -- singlular) consider themselves incapable of
dealing with Scarface, Jr. and want to "leave it to the
professionals." Must I be the one to remind them that
"parent" is also a verb?
Time for another show of hands. You have heard: "Your homeschooled
kids will grow up in a bubble and never know what the real world is
like." Wow, no hesitancy that time! Let's compare
environments. Scene 1: Thirty children all approximately the same age,
herded together in a crowded room, all doing exactly the same assignment
at exactly the same time to exactly the same instructions, day after day,
year after year. Scene 2: A handful of children of assorted ages, spread
out all over the house and yard, doing independent assignments as they are
capable, each lesson tailored to each student's interests and abilities,
with the routine broken frequently for running errands with Mom or
attending to family celebrations and/or emergencies. If Scene 1 appears to
you to be more of a sterile "bubble" environment and Scene 2
appears to be different every day, every month, every year, then we agree.
Homeschooled kids are the ones who truly live in the real world;
public schoolers hear about the real world, but do not really
experience it until they leave the institution.
Face it -- no one can love my child, care for my child,
understand my child, or teach my child better than I can.
Homeschooling adapts to the idiosyncrasies of life in a way no
institution possibly can.
Finally, I will quote from my favorite homeschool T-shirts: "When
you're homeschooled, there's no telling where you'll end
up." Now picture Mount Rushmore in South Dakota, with the noble faces
of Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and
Abraham Lincoln faithfully watching over the horizon of this nation.
"Mt. Rushmore: The National Monument to Homeschooling" -- 'nuff
said.
Copyright © 2004, 2005
Carolyn Morrison. All Rights Reserved.
This article was found at:
http://guiltfreehomeschooling.blogspot.com
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