It takes about 2 hours of schooling at home to equal an entire day at your typical public school. And the schooling is reading, writing and arithmetic. We home schooled for children a total of 23 years.
I saw a post on that (might have seen it on Telegram or Gab) where these children studied about 2 hours a day like you said, and then the rest of the day they play and do stuff around a farm, sounds like an amazing and fun upbringing, very cool!
Sometimes my wife would accompany me on a business trip to another city along with my 2 youngest children. They would home school then it was off to a museum, art gallery or some historic site. We always had our 4 children tested at the end of the school year. They took the same tests as the public school students. They always did very well. In fact all 4 were able to land college scholarships. The most any of them owe for their college degree is $10K. Not bad.
Life > School
Not worth the risk.
School isn't even what it's supposed to be anyways.
It takes about 2 hours of schooling at home to equal an entire day at your typical public school. And the schooling is reading, writing and arithmetic. We home schooled for children a total of 23 years.
That's a really good point. And it's probably like 2 hours = 1 week in Detroit public schools or similar
If the homeschololing isnt teaching drivebys and holding their hands out for welfare checks, 2 hours would mean Detroits entire k-12 education
I saw a post on that (might have seen it on Telegram or Gab) where these children studied about 2 hours a day like you said, and then the rest of the day they play and do stuff around a farm, sounds like an amazing and fun upbringing, very cool!
Sometimes my wife would accompany me on a business trip to another city along with my 2 youngest children. They would home school then it was off to a museum, art gallery or some historic site. We always had our 4 children tested at the end of the school year. They took the same tests as the public school students. They always did very well. In fact all 4 were able to land college scholarships. The most any of them owe for their college degree is $10K. Not bad.
It's refreshing to hear about good things happening to good people.