From HSLDA – Getting Started Tips:
Homeschooling is rewarding, but hard work. You’ll need friends and resources along the way. Here are a few ideas to get you started on your homeschooling journey:
1. Get Plugged In
Join your local and state support groups, participate in local homeschool events, and talk with veterans who can show you the ropes. Our homeschool organizations listing is a good place to start.
2. Tune into your child’s learning style
Homeschooling enables you to tailor your child’s education to his unique style of learning. “Children’s overall learning style includes both the channel through which she/he learns (eye, ear, or hand) and the ways in which she/he is most motivated to learn—‘thinking style’” (Mary Pride’s Complete Guide to Getting Started in Homeschooling, pg. 121).
Other resources:
The Way They Learn by Cynthia Ulrich Tobias.
Help! My Child Isn’t Learning by Dr. Grant Martin.
Discover Your Child’s Learning Style by Mariaemma Willis & Victoria Kindle Hodson.
3. Select a type of curriculum & method of homeschooling
There are almost as many curriculum combinations and educational philosophies as there are homeschooling families. Many families find their teaching style and curriculum choices altering to meet their growing children’s changing needs. Here’s a nutshell description of some general categories: (See Mary Pride’s Complete Guide to Getting Started Home Schooling for a much more thorough description of curriculum types.)
- Traditional—textbook/workbook approach, emphasizing reading, writing, grammar, and spelling through drill and practice.
- Classical—following the medieval “trivium,” a child’s education progresses from fundamental facts and skills to logic and advanced language abilities. Students study the great works of Western Literature.
- Unit studies (instructor-designed thematic studies)—progress in several disciplines is woven around a particular theme.
- Unschooling / Child-directed / Delight-directed—allowing a child to learn by encouraging and equipping him to pursue his own interests (guided or unguided exploration).
One of the great things about homeschooling is that you don’t have to be limited to just one approach—you can mix and match, taking what you like from each approach, to maximize your child’s learning.
4. Attend a convention or curriculum fair
“At a curriculum fair, you have many of the homeschool publishers and their most popular products all gathered under one roof,” explains Beverly McCord. “You can really pick up a book and thumb through it—you can’t do that when you are trying to shop over the internet or through mail order catalogs. You can get honest consumer feedback. Just stand at a publishers’ booth for about 10 minutes and get an earful of what homeschoolers think about some of the titles of that publisher—which ones are the jewels that everybody’s using and which ones are really not that helpful. Many of these publishers actually wrote the materials they’re selling. I just love being able to talk to a live human being and really get my questions answered.”
5. Tap into used curriculum market
Save money by borrowing, buying, or selling second-hand materials and swapping with other homeschoolers in your local support group, at regional/state book fairs, or through used curriculum vendors.
6. Choose a place to do school
In the kitchen? Living room? In a school room? Each family finds solutions that work for them. For some creative ideas for streamlining and maximizing your space, check out these books:
Help for the Harried Homeschooler: A Practical Guide to Balancing Your Child’s Education with the Rest of Your Life by Christine Field, www.homefieldadvantage.org.
Clutter’s Last Stand by Don Aslett.
7. Be Creative with field trips
Start with nearby chambers of commerce, tourism offices, historical societies, town halls, craft guilds, fire/rescue companies, other support groups, and yellow pages. Next, try your local library or book store for family travel guides for the region in which you are interested . . . and then use your imagination!
The A to Z Guide to Home School Field Trips, edited by Gregg Harris, www.noblepublishing.com
www.yahoo.com/Science/museums and exhibits
www.fieldtrip.com.
Many parents have faced and overcome the same obstacles you may encounter in your homeschooling journey. In addition to asking homeschooling veterans for their advice, consider some of the following suggestions:
8. Winning over friends & relatives
If you have some skeptical relatives or friends, you’re not alone. Many homeschooling families have won the respect, and even changed the opinions of nearby critics through simply providing positive social interaction and allowing their children’s educational success to speak for itself. You can make a difference by explaining why you are homeschooling, having your child put together a scrapbook or portfolio showing samples of his best work for the year, reporting standardized test scores, having your child write articulate letters, or encouraging him to perform some voluntary service demonstrating strong language, math, and/or social skills.
9. Tackling the hard subjects like calculus or Latin
Maybe you could trade calculus for French lessons! Many homeschooling parents have found they can round out their children’s education by trading teaching time in their areas of expertise—usually referred to as co-oping. Other options include private tutors (could be a friend or coworker) and community college classes.
The Complete Guide to Successful Co-oping for Homeschooling Families by Linda Loeser and Lori Marse
10. Making a transcript
The key here is not waiting until just before college. Help your student start planning his transcript as he's getting ready to enter the high school years.
Creating Transcripts and Issuing Diplomas by Inge Cannon, EducationPLUS, www.edplus.com. Inge also teaches Transcript Boot Camps and offers a Home School Transcript Generator (computer software).
The Homeschooler’s Guide to Portfolios and Transcripts by Loretta Heuer, M.Ed.
Homeschooling High School: Planning Ahead for College Admission by Jeanne Gowen Dennis.
Homeschoolers’ College Admissions Handbook: Preparing Your 12– to 18–Year–Old for a Smooth Transition and And What About College? by Cafi Cohen, www.homeschoolteenscollege.net.
11. Adjusting to life on one income
Many families have faced this challenge and share the innovative ways they found to meet their goals.
Miserly Moms, Frugal Families, and Miserly Meals by Jonni McCoy, www.miserlymoms.com.
Get More for Your Money: Proven Tips for Thrift from a Single Income Family by Trish Garvis, www.grannysez.net.
Food Coops, www.foodcoop.net.
From the HSLDA website:
WHY SHOULD YOU JOIN Home School Legal Defense Assocition?
We protect your right to homeschool and defend your family. A lawyer is on-call 24/7.
We preserve homeschool freedom by promoting homeschooling and working at the federal level and with state homeschooling groups to get better laws and stop bad laws.
You are part of the cause. Not everyone lives in a state where it's easy to homeschool. It's important to stand together to keep homeschooling free, for this and future generations.
We have coordinators who can answer member questions and help you find resources for homeschooling through high school and meeting the special needs of struggling learners.
Other Valuable Benefits
Online Curriculum Market where you can save a lot of money buying and selling homeschool-related materials and books.
Weekly Updates and e-lerts on local, state, national, and international homeschooling issues.
Special discounts in our bookstore.
The HSLDA PerX program, offering members Xtra benefits that are substantial and practical.
The Home School Court Report, HSLDA’s bi-monthly membership newsletter.