Home > Education > Alternative Education > Homeschooling
Results so far:
| Beneficial | 75% | 61 votes | Total: 81 votes | |
| Harmful | 25% | 20 votes |
Created on: January 22, 2009
Participating in a homeschool co-op is great - once you find the one that fits your needs and expectations. Not all co-ops are created equal! Just because every parent in the co-op homeschools doesn't mean that you'll be fast friends, have the same educational, moral or social goals for your children or even have the same interests.
As an eclectic homeschooling parent to one, I have tested the waters of 3 or 4 homeschool co-ops over the last 4 years. Despite the fact that three of them weren't for us, I still believe that there is a beneficial place for them on the homeschooling calendar. Consider the following:
NEW SUBJECT MATTER
Do you detest history but have to teach it anyway? Not willing to have the big art project end up all over your kitchen floor? Can't remember anything about past perfect tense or gerunds? Does the thought of teaching geometry make you bite your nails like you were in junior high school all over again? Co-op to the rescue!
Many co-op offerings can fit your curriculum needs and you don't have to do the legwork collecting books, etc. or do the teaching. Either another parent (who actually LIKES the subject) will teach it or the co-op will hire a professional to teach the subject matter. A great opportunity to get chemistry under the belt and not worry that you'll blow up your kitchen!
OPPORTUNITIES FOR GROUP LEARNING
Regardless of the reason you choose to homeschool, the methods you use or the curriculum you choose, at some point in your child's life, they'll be subjected to group learning. Whether it's in church school, hebrew classes, t-ball, dance or some other activity you don't provde at home, the child will be with a group of his/her peers listening to an adult, who isn't you, teaching. We all know the challenges faced in classroom learning and they're not limited to the public school classrooms.
Group learning offered through a co-op can be a good learning experience and transition for a homeschooled child. Listening to other styles of teaching, listening to answers given by other children, experiencing behavior (good and not so good) in a small group setting is a good way to introduce classroom learning to the homeschooled child. In many co-ops, parents can participate WITH their child (especially younger children) to get the most from a learning session. If your child has ONLY been homeschooled, a co-op class can be the closest thing to a classroom experience he/she will get.
GROUP RATES
Homeschoolers are always on the go (I think that
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Homeschool co-op groups: Beneficial or harmful?
Beneficial
Harmful
View all articles on: Homeschool co-op groups: Beneficial or harmful?
Featured Partner
GROW Africa Mission: To provide wells, vaccines and food for farming in the remote villages of Africa to meet the most basic human needs of the villagers reducing death and disease while increasing quality and longevity of life. GROW...more