Schooling at home

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  • I was wondering if we have any parents here that do home schooling in Ohio. My daughter has decided that she wants to be home schooled. She will be starting 11th grade 2008/2009 school year. I have no idea how to go about this. I have looked at a few sites on line but still haven't found out exactly how I go about home schooling her. Any information would be appreciated.

    Thank you
  • Why does your daughter suddenly want to be home schooled? She has only two more years to go before she graduates high school.

    We had a discussion about home-schooling fairly recently, with people listing pros and cons. It might be a good topic to check out.

    http://www.3fatchicks.com/forum/showthread.php?t=139950

  • I don't live in Ohio, but I have been home schooling my children for 4 years now. I would really suggest for you to find a local home school group that can help you, as there are many options out there to consider. You can also check out the website for HSLDA (Homeschool Legal Defence Association). They have information regarding the laws and requirements for different states. I believe this would be a good place to start! Good luck!
  • Shy, I would also encourage you to discuss with your daughter regarding her motives. It is much harder to get accepted into some colleges if you have been home schooled. Different states do have different rules too. In MI, we do have some parents that home school their children in high school, but most parents send their kids to public school once they start 8th or 9th grade. So many requirements for college now - highly qualified (No Child Left Behind), foreign language, technology, communications, advanced math and science - it is daunting to even think about teaching all of those subjects to a high schooler.
    My SIL home schooled all of her children (5 of them) until 2 years ago. Once the oldest hit high school, she enrolled them in a Christian school.

    Does Ohio have SOC (schools of choice)? Maybe just changing schools will be a possible solution to whatever the issue is.

    While I KNOW you would be able to to this, and you would be an awesome teacher, really, really do the research to find out what the potential pitfalls are. Why not make an appointment with the counselor in your daughter's school. They will be able to give you some good advice.
  • SHY.... have I mentioned that my son in law was home schooled?
  • My niece home schools and I am a school district tutor
    for kids who can't be in school (for any number of reasons).

    I agree with talking with someone in your area, a homeschooling
    support group. Every state is different and has their own laws
    and regulations. You need to know what constitutes graduation
    in your state. If she plans to go onto college you need to
    know who they will accept into their program.
    Also check with your district. Some have wonderful partnership
    programs set up to work with parents. One of our districts has
    an online high school the kids do from home. Some have contract
    learning which allows minimal attendance.
    Not all children thrive in school and we are finally catching up
    with this fact and providing services to help them succeed.
    k
  • Darkblue
    It isn't all of a sudden. She has been asking since before she started high school. She is a Christian and isn't happy at all with the moral values that many of the people she goes to school with have. She has wanted to go to a Christian school since before she started high school but I just can't afford it. Thank you for the link.

    rnmom
    I have read about the laws for Ohio and it doesn't seem it is going to be very hard to follow them. I am just looking for how I go about filling the requirements. Thanks for the site.

    Counting
    The moral decay of our society is all over. Changing schools really isn't going to deal with that issue. I really wish we could afford the Christian school she has been wanting to go to but private schools are very expensive. You have to remember she will be 18 in October. As adults we decide whom we want in our social circle, the places we want to live, the church we want to belong to and so forth. While we have to deal with all kinds of people in our work environment, we choose the kind of people we want to be around us for the rest of our lives. I think at this age she has the right to decide this for herself. I did talk to the school councilor. My daughter has only a few classes left to take in the next two years. For next year she has to take English, math, science, gym ( her tennis lessons will count as her gym ) and I can give her home etc to fill in her elective ( she had planned to take a cooking class ). Her senior year she needs English, government and an elective. I have spoken to the Christian college she wants to go to. They have no problem with home schooling as long as it follows Ohio guide lines. For other colleges a GED will do just fine if they don't accept home schooling.

    ez
    There are many many people that have been home schooled and with all that goes on in schools today I would sure like to help her do this if I can figure out how to do it.

    Frog
    Her grades are fine, it isn't that she can't do well in school. I have an appointment next week with the superintendent to see if the school system has an at home program. She would do the same things they are doing in school but not have to go to the school. If that isn't possible then home schooling is an option.
  • Shy: My daughter and my husband are campaigning for the same thing. My daughter is in 8th grade and, literally, cries herself to sleep on Sunday night because she flat-out doesn't want to got to school anymore. She can't stand the girls with how boycrazy they are, the girl next door (that used to be her friend and is in her grade) told her on the bus how she's been smoking crack, her grades are plummeting, especially in math, and I asked her why she doesn't talk to the teacher about why she's not 'getting it' and she says its because the teacher only likes to talk to the 'popular' girls and when he talks to them, he talks about his ex-wife and how rude she is to him and they all go, "Ohhhh, you poor thing..." I'm hesitant to talk to the principal about it because I'm not there to see it happen and these are serious allegations (to me they are - in this day an age), but after getting her report card and seeing how its affecting her grades, I'm about to send an e-mail. My daughter doesn't want to say anything, understandably, because she doesn't want her name used.

    Anyhow...I understand what you are going through. I told my daughter that she has to finish middle school and we'll see about the fall. Our high school and middle school are in the same building and she said she just can't stand the idea of looking at the same walls, the same kids, the same library, etc, etc, etc for another four years. We're considering moving.

    Let me know what you decide!
  • check out this website
    Hi, Shy, I just have to say I support you in your desire to homeschool-we've been hs-ing since our middle child started school and he's finishing 10th grade now. Maybe you've already found this website, but it seems to have all the info you might be looking for. www.cheohome.org It's for the Christian Home Educators of Ohio. I'm not in Ohio, but we have a similar organization here in Iowa that I rely on for forms and information. Best wishes to you both. You can pm me if you have other questions. I just know that, despite the opposition, financial losses (only one income), and time required (sometimes I'd really like to clean the house in one day!), it's been the best thing for our kids--they are well-adjusted, respectful, and planning for college and life beyond. Let me know how everything works out!
  • Just wanted to add: The reasons I'm considering homeschooling my daughter include the fact that they are at school for SO long, I have no time to teach her the things I'd like to be teaching her at home, like cooking, home decorating, other responsibilities around the house, guitar, etc....If I thought I could pull off teaching her the science and math they learn in school AND have time to teach her the above things, I'd do it in a second, because of the next reasons...I LIKE the fact that my daughter has a sense to resist the 'in crowd' that is so boy crazy and has an opinion that it is creepy that the math teacher talks about his ex wife to the popular girls. I like the fact that she has red flags going off about this and I don't want her to lose that. Its a touchy subject. I LIKE the fact that she just wants to be home with me....as a single mom when she was little that worked two jobs, then as a stay-at-home mom to her and my son when he was a baby...my daughter and I never really had 'quality time' together and I could see this as being an opportunity for us to really get close. But...is it the right thing to do at this point in her life.

    Because...the reasons I DON'T want to home school her involve things like the crazy calculator I had to buy her for next year's math class - if she thinks I can teach her how to use that thing... Also, I have two ways of thinking of pulling her out of school. I don't want to teach her to be a quitter...on the other hand, if I had a job where I strongly disliked the bulk of my bosses and co-workers, I'd be in a job hunt looking for a place I fit in better. How many of us would stick to a job where we constantly felt like we were a misplaced orphan? So, why make our kids stick it out in a school that makes them feel the same way? One solution would be to try a different high school, if this is possible. Up here, where the cows FAR out number the humans, the high school we have in our neighborhood is it...no other choices.

    Our silver lining is that my husband may be being transferred to Michigan. I've been spending ALL of my spare time looking into schools/demographics/houses of all of the suburbs of Detroit. When I look at the high schools with my daughter (specifically, Anchor Bay High School), she gets totally stoked about being on their Marching Tars marching band. Instead of being one of three clarinetists in the band, she'd be in one of the five LINES of clarinetists and be in field competitions, etc.

    Of course, then I was watching Nancy Grace last night and had nightmares of moving my little peanut to a large school where the girls might kidnap her and beat her to a pulp. I swear...some of the things you see on the news is enough to make us ALL want to hide in a closet!!

    In other words, maybe a change of scenery would do your daughter some good. I wish you lived in my neck of the woods...it sounds like our girls would be great friends!!
  • Quote: Darkblue
    It isn't all of a sudden. She has been asking since before she started high school. She is a Christian and isn't happy at all with the moral values that many of the people she goes to school with have. She has wanted to go to a Christian school since before she started high school but I just can't afford it. .
    Check around with some of the schools - some Christian schools are willing to help if you are low income. Even if you aren't truly "low income". Have her come with you so she can explain why she doesn't like public schooling. That's what my parents did - the school I went to had special funding to help provide tuition for parents who couldn't afford it.
  • tamara
    Thank you I will do that.

    tech
    That is how I felt. Why make her stay at a place that is just intolerable for her. I not only can only go by what she has told me, I also have been in the school and the things I see and hear in the hall ways is more than should be tolerated in school. This is a little country school, my gosh, if this stuff goes on here I can only imagine what it is like in bigger schools. If I had to work around those kind of people I would be looking for another job. I see no reason not to look for another situation for her education. The classes she still needs are not hard. English, government and a general science. I think we can handle these lol. She has already taken all of her harder classes and already has two years of Spanish in.

    ronnie
    Thank you so much. I am a stay at home mom so I have plenty of time to do this.

    tech
    My daughter tells me all the same things. Why wouldn't I believe the things she says when I have walked in the building and seen the young teachers are dressed like they are going out on a date instead of there to teach our children. I have no reason to not believe the conversations she tells me they have in front of her. I would like to keep her education thru the school because it would be easier for her to just get the diploma thru the high school but if that isn't an option we have to go another route. There is no way I want to keep subjecting her to the kind of behavior I personally have seen in the school if she feels it is totally against her morals and doesn't want to be around it any longer. I also have to respect she will be 18 and has the right to decide how she wants to live her life and the kind of people she wants to be around.
  • One other thing that came to mind.
    Charter schools. I looked and Ohio has
    a virtual charter school.
    I am not *allowed* to post links yet
    but if you go to google and type in
    Ohio Charter schools you will find a
    link to Ohio Virtual schools.
    We have this program in our state.
    k
  • Just went and looked at replies.
    Tutoring, at our district, isn't for grades.
    I tutor students who can't be in school.
    This can run from students who are too ill,
    to students with anxiety disorders to students
    who are too violent or are in jail. And everything
    in between.

    Anyway, there may be all sorts of options for you
    and your daughter so good luck with your appointment!
    k
  • frog
    Thank you, I was just reading about that on line.