Homeschool Super Heroes Week!

Homeschoolers:

I just got a private invitation to some fantastic Homeschool Interviews…that are free for you to listen. This is the perfect way to start the school year!

Kerry Beck is offering 2 weeks of homeschool interviews – to get your homeschool year off to the right start! She has interviews about homeschooling teens, homeschooling boys, teaching art, teaching history, relaxing as a mom, teaching writing, getting ready for college, what to do with preschoolers, teaching literature, balancing home, homeschooling & hubby.  She has an interview with yours truly about communication skills as well!  You name it, there is an interview for you.

Why is she doing this?

Kerry knows what it is like to be in the trenches as a homeschool mom. Sometimes you need a little encouragement or a few fun tricks from experienced homeschoolers. Real homeschool parents who have real experience balancing school, family, cooking, cleaning, chauffeuring.

So, Kerry is hosting interviews of 15 experienced homeschoolers that have practical advice for you to get started on the right foot this year.

================================
It’s called Homeschool Super Heroes Week!

================================

Actually, it’s the next 2 weeks and you can listen to the interviews each day for Free.

All you have to do is register for Homeschool Super Heroes Week and you will have access each day to practical tips & tricks for you to start your year right.

No traveling to your state convention. No hotel expenses. No registration fees.

Here’s where you can register: https://familyebiz.infusionsoft.com/go/hsh2011/jtabares/e1

If you are part of a local homeschool group or co-op, feel free to forward this email to them so they can listen to the interviews for free, also.

 

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

My interview on Homeschooling Buzz!

I was interviewed on the Homeschooling Buzz on the Homeschool Netcast Network YouTube channel last week.  I had a great time on the show with host, Gerald McKoy. We talked about homeschooling as well as communication issues.

Thanks Gerald!

The Homeschool Netcast Network is a fabulous resource for Christian homeschoolers!  It just started this year.  You all should check out the rest of the episodes!

X

If you liked this post, make sure to subscribe to our RSS Feed so you don’t miss one and SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter: for even MORE communication fun, FREE gifts, Book of the Month Club and exclusive excerpts and offers we don’t share with ANYONE else but our subscribers!

X

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

NEW: Interview w/a Communicator

We have a new feature here on Communication FUNdamentals called Interview with a Communicator.  We all communicate every day of our lives and communication touches every aspect of it.  So…each week, I’m going to bring you a blog interview with someone in a different ministry, business or time of life to share with you.  Each will share the mission God has them on and how effective communication plays an important role.  We begin with a friend I met online.

BeckyJoie Thombs Oakes is a “multiple hat wearer” and a free-lance writer. She spends her time volunteering to work with youth as well as lay-counseling ministries at a local Christian counseling center.  She has three sons.   She lives with her husband, two of her sons and their Yorkshire terrier in Leesburg, FL.  Always uplifting and gracious, she puts a smile on the faces of those all around her.  I know you will enjoy her.  Here we go…

 

1. Please tell us a little about yourself.

I like to describe myself as a multiple hat wearer. I am first and foremost a wife and therapeutic mom. By that I mean that I help children from abusive and troubled backgrounds. My husband and I have adopted two teenage boys through foster care and have an older son who is in college preparing for a law career. In my spare time, I am a youth worker, middle school Sunday school teacher, lay-counselor, health consultant and a health food business person.  I never have time to be bored. I love helping people. It fuels me.

 

2. What is a typical day in the life of Becky Joie?

Currently, I homeschool my two boys, ages 15 and 17 but during the day, I run my health businesses from home and do therapeutic respite for whoever the Lord sends my way. This includes dealing with a great deal of behavior management in troubled children so we keep very occupied with outdoors activities and routine household chores. It requires a stable schedule with a tiny bit of flexibility so my day is often planned from 6am until 11pm or later, depending on issues that come up during the day.

 

3. I love hearing people’s testimony! Please share how you came to know the Lord and how important The Great Commission is to a believer.

I was raised in a Christian home. My family had an evangelistic ministry performing puppets, music, chalk drawing and preaching. I am told by my parents that I gave my life to the Lord as a 5 year old but I really did not remember it, although I remember being baptized. When I was in the 4th grade, our family settled in a church that was very strong on keeping God’s law but not especially skilled in grace. Through a series of events and time in a restrictive environment,  I became hurt and turned away from the Lord for a brief while in my adulthood. I had been in an abusive marriage where I had my oldest son. My ex-husband was a pastor.  We divorced to due his abuse and unfaithfulness.  Even after we had been separated for a few years, I was still not over it.  I was very angry about this and ran from the Lord for a while. Then, I was invited to a Calvary Chapel home bible study. It was there I felt God’s love and mercy but was also convicted for sin in my life so I re-committed my life to the Lord.  Then I learned that God really loved me, that I was definitely a sinner in need of a Savior. I learned that God was not a bully waiting for me to trip up so He could hit me with a club of punishment but that He really loved me, wanted to forgive me and give me a new life. I gave my heart to Him and turned away from the world. It was one of the toughest things I ever did but I’m so glad I did it. That was about 15 years ago. I’ve served the Lord gratefully ever since. A couple of years after splitting with my ex-husband, I met my husband, Doug, who is a wonderful, godly man.

 

4. How many years have you been married and how important has effective communication been in your marriage?

As of June 2011, we will have been married for 14 years. We were put together by “Godcident”, we like to say. Paired up in a Christian musical, we became very good friends. We didn’t even know that we liked each other more. Other people had to point it out.  At one point, he tried to tell me that he liked me and said, “I’m so glad we are friends.” I was DEVASTATED. I had begun to realize I liked him as more and thought he was saying he only like me as a friend.  He saw a man kind of following me around and thought I was taken already.  This also did not help. We didn’t communicate about it at all. It took a mutual friend of ours to mend the communication gap. Thank God for friends! I would hate to think I missed out on a wonderful husband because we did not communicate how we felt to each other.

 

5. Share with us your greatest blessings and challenges you have had as a parent.

My type of parenting is a cross between therapeutic parenting and the “Love and Logic” style. I need to be very careful to keep my tone of voice mild and cheerful even when disciplining as tenseness can trigger fears of abuse or anger in the children that I help. I also have to be very cautious with humor as the children are sensitive and might feel ridiculed. With my oldest son, it was different. He was a rascal but he had a great sense of humor. He had a knack for embarrassing me. One time he hid inside an old pulpit at the base of the stairs in an old church building and waited for ladies to come down the stairs. He would jump out and scare them. Screams would echo across the church. That would be when I would find out what he did and want to crawl under a rock. Another time, he told a sharp looking single man that I went to the doctor to get a shot in my rear end. Humiliating! Sometimes working with troubled teens can bring embarrassment as well. When a teen throws a tantrum ( throwing things, yelling, stomping feet, cussing) in public because they don’t get the yogurt they want in the store and they won’t wait to discuss it in private  OR else when one has wild behavior and climbs atop a grocery display and I have to talk to them in a sweet, calm voice, it can be quite unnerving to wonder what people think of our family. I overcome this by telling myself that it does not matter what others think and that I need to parent my children and my temporary charges the way that they need me to parent them because I answer to God and not strangers who don’t know the circumstances. Of course, we use discipline but it looks very different from what others use so there is no way between the behaviors and our discipline style that we are going to look normal to anyone who does not understand these things.  My biggest challenge is parenting against normal logic because this parenting style is unique to parents who do what I do.

 

6. What is your favorite scripture and share what God is communicating to you personally through it.

I love Ephesians 3:14-21 which talks about knowing the love of God and being stirred up in Him. I think that is the answer to healing any hurt and motivating all Christian service. Love is the key. That is my prayer—that all who come into my pathway will know God and His love.

 

7. You have a unique ministry/business.  How important is effective communication for you as you go about your daily activities?

Communication is  24/7 job here. I must communicate in a way that can be received by hurting children. I must teach them how to communicate through words instead of poor actions. I must teach them how to express emotion appropriately. Most important is the modeling of how we communicate with our Lord for every need, every fear, every want, every time we need forgiveness or to tell Him that we love Him. They will see what a true parent is like if they see me trusting God. He is the ultimate parent.  In our home, prayer is a communication about trust/faith as well as communication with God. I am so blessed when one of my kids “gets it” and sees me with a headache. He comes and lays hands on my head and asks God to heal me. Other times, one child will be frustrated with the behavior of another. They will mimic my quiet, under the breath prayer before responding to the child who is irritating them. Then I know I’ve communicated faith and trust well to them.

 

8. What forms of communication do you use in your ministry/business?  Which one is your favorite and why?
I use many forms of communication with my kids, from letters, to songs, to stories and even signs on the wall. Storytelling is very helpful to relay empathy. If they can see how they would feel in a given situation, then they can learn to empathize with others.

With my health business, I use social media such as Facebook and Twitter. I have used blogging but lately I’ve just been too busy for that. Facebook is most effective because you can communicate with many more people and interact much more quickly. You are not just putting your message/product out there but you also get to develop relationships with your customers and provide much better customer service.

 

9. What are the challenges in communicating in other ways?

I’m not a phone person really. I like to see people’s faces or see their words in front of me. This could be because I am a visual person and have some auditory processing issues with noise. I prefer in-person or in written and electronic communication. That way I can mull over what is said more before reacting and I won’t miss something important.

 

10. If you could go back in time and give yourself advice about a misunderstanding you had in the past, what would you tell yourself?

That is a tough one. I think that in my past, I would have communicated more rather than clamming up. I think I would have thought more before reacting. There are so many things we can improve in communication. We are all students with so much to learn.

 

11. How can we learn more about you and your business/ministry?

Right now, I am in the development stages of the therapeutic parenting fan page.  https://www.facebook.com/pages/Christian-Therapeutic-Parenting/193811603983441

My business page for health food is: http://www.beyondorganicinsider.com/becomeaninsider.aspx?enroller=4382 The company will open in October of 2011 but I’m beginning to build the business beforehand because I believe in Jordan Rubin, the creator, and his ideas for health and nutrition .

I also sell Nature’s Sunshine Products. You may contact me via email at rjeremiah2911@embarqmail.com for information on vitamins, supplements and natural health resources.

 

12. Any final thoughts you’d like to leave us with today?

I just want to thank you, JoJo, for working so hard to teach people about communication. I feel that what you are doing is one of the most important ministries that the church could have and it’s also a business that could help others in their own personal and professional lives. Communication is not just telling people everything. I’ve heard it said, “People don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.”

Thanks so much for sharing with my readers, BeckyJoie!  You are a blessing and inspiration to so many!

X

If you liked this post, make sure to subscribe to our RSS Feed so you don’t miss one and SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter: for even MORE communication fun, FREE gifts, Book of the Month Club and exclusive excerpts and offers we don’t share with ANYONE else but our subscribers!

X

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

When to be “Specifically General”

On Monday, I talked about the need to be specific, even oddly specific.  Today, I’d like to talk about when it’s necessary to be “specifically general.”  While being specific can help you avoid confusion and frustration, being general has the advantage of not ruffling feathers and allowing you not to discuss personal issues if you don’t want to.

1. Say you get a phone call from a distant relative asking you to fill her in on all the details of a personal family matter.  She is not directly involved and is just being nosy.  You don’t want to give her any details, but you feel trapped as she has you on the phone.  What do you do?  There is no law that says you have to answer every question you are asked!  You could simply tell her you don’t want to discuss it.  You could ignore her question and move on to a more neutral topic.  OR…you could be specifically general.  You could tell her that it’s going as well as can be expected.  You can, then, feel free to change the subject or tell her you were in the middle of something (whatever it was you were doing before she called) and you don’t have much time to talk.

2. Facebook may not be the place to discuss personal issues so when someone posts on your wall and asks you something rather personal, what do you do?  Again, just because someone asks you something doesn’t mean you have to answer.  You could delete the post if you think it might open up a can of worms you don’t want to deal with in a rather public forum like Facebook.  You could reply to the question on the phone or in a direct message to the person who asked.  Or you could post a reply that is specifically general.  If Sally comments that she loves your new sweater and asks how your business did last year, you can reply only to the first part of her comment.  “Thanks!  My dd got it for me for Christmas.”  and you could add, “We did well, thanks!”

3. Aunt Martha doesn’t believe in homeschooling.  She asks how your son did this week with math.  Normally, he does well, but last week he had a big problem understanding fractions.  Instead of opening up a can of worms giving her the details of little Johnny’s frustrating week with halves and eighths, you could just tell her, “He just finished studying fractions this week.”

4. When leading a meeting or teaching a homeschool child there can sometimes come an obscure question that takes your conversation off track.  Just because someone asks a question that might be a good topic of discussion, doesn’t mean now is the time to digress.   It’s not rude to say, “That’s a great question, but we really don’t have time to go into that right now.  Let’s discuss it tomorrow.”

As you can see, being specifically general has its advantages as does being oddly specific.  Each according to its purpose for the communication at hand.  Got any stories about being oddly specific or specifically general you’d like to share?

*SUBSCRIBE HERE*: for More Communication Fun, FREE Gifts and Exclusive Offers!

X

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Yes, Virginia, there are dumb homeschool questions!

This is the 7th and final article in my homeschool series, “A Question of Homeschooling.”  Over the last several weeks, I’ve covered some important issues and questions about homeschooling.  You’ve heard it said that no question is a dumb question, but I don’t subscribe to that theory.  Some questions, though you may stretch their meaning to include something that really isn’t being asked, are indeed DUMB questions.

As I said in my first article, I have been homeschooling for over 10 years.  In that time I have had people ask me some valid, pertinent, and important questions about homeschooling. I have had folks express their reservations about homeschooling.  Hey, I had them too!  And I have had people ask the dumbest questions about homeschooling as well.  Here are a few:

1. Do you KNOW anything?

I covered this one here, but thought I’d bring it back as it really is a dumb question to ask of anyone.  Would anyone, ANYONE, think to ask a public schooled student this question–even if he attends a rather poorly rated public school?  Anyone?  Beuller?  Beuller?

I know some will say that they are simply asking if a homeschooled student really learns as much with mom at the helm than with an unbiased third party.  However, since studies show that most homeschoolers are rated academically higher than most public schooled students (and even higher than most private schooled students), this question really isn’t a valid one.  And in the cases where it might be a valid issue, it is a really DUMB way to ask, especially when speaking directly to a child.

2. Aren’t homeschoolers all weird?

And before you say nobody would ever ask something this rude, let me just say I’ve heard this one first hand!!  No, Mildred.  Not all homeschoolers wear 1800’s bonnets and lock their kids in a closet until they memorize their Latin roots.  And we don’t all wear denim jumpers and forbid smiling.  While many homeschoolers tend to hold conservative values, we also tend to be independent thinkers and come in many shapes and sizes.

3. What about all the homeschoolers who don’t teach their kids anything?

I’ve run into hundreds of homeschoolers in the last ten years from all over the world and I’ve never met a homeschooling parent who doesn’t take her children’s education seriously.  I’m not saying every homeschool parent is like this, but it certainly isn’t a widespread problem!  It’s so much easier to leave a child’s education in the hands of others than to take on the challenging task of doing it yourself.

And the folks who ask this question of homeschoolers don’t seem to wonder if the kids in public schools are really learning anything despite the statistics that show a percentage of public school children who are consistently passed to the next grade level without grasping the concepts of the past year.

4. Where do you go to homeschool?

Ok this one just floored me.  I mean, it’s called HOMEschool.  But, yes, I was asked where my daughter went to homeschool.  And I had a difficult time convincing the person who asked that she was, in fact, schooled at HOME!

5. Aren’t you afraid your kids won’t learn how to deal with bullies?

Yes, indeed, this question has come up and, yes, he was serious!

6. But how will your kids learn how to wait in line?

While I was never asked this question, I do know people who have been asked.  I wasn’t aware that this was a skill or that it was the function of public school to teach.  And…I guess the grocery store, department stores, Disneyland, Motor Vehicle Department, doctor’s office, and pizzeria’s don’t count.

7.  When will they talk to people?

I suppose that if you think homeschoolers are locked in their room all day studying for Spelling Bees, you aren’t considering all the family time, sibling conversations, homeschool co ops, extra curricular activities, church events, community involvement, and Spelling Bees where the contestants are required to actually speak their answers, sometimes ask questions for clarification and perhaps speak with other contestants along the way.

8. How will they ever find a husband?

Do most girls find their husbands in public school?

9. How will they learn that there are different people in the world?

Um…perhaps from talking with neighbors, relatives, reading about other countries and cultures, watching TV, listening to the news…

10. What happens when they get into the real world?

Is public school the real world?  Is college?  Is your home the real world?  Is your neighbor’s home the real world?  What is the real world, really?  As children grow up, their lives change.  That’s part of life in the real world.  And so it is for adults when they get married, change jobs, get a promotion, move to another home, become disabled, overcome a disability, have a child…  It’s all real, it just may be different than the real world you have experienced.

So yes, Virginia, there are dumb homeschooling questions.  And there are probably more where these came from.  If you’ve been asked a silly question about homeschooling, please share it and tell us how you answered it.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula, including Say What You Mean Defending the Faith.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

HS Question #3: What about Socialization?

Continuing my series of articles, “A Question of Homeschooling.”   Last week I answered the question, “Is homeschooling legal?”  This week I will answer the most common question homeschoolers are asked, What about socialization?

There are really two reasons people ask this question.  One is because they are truly seeking to understand how homeschoolers get along not seeing the same group of children each day.  The other is because they are under the false impression that homeschoolers lock their children in a closet until they graduate and by then, they are so weird, lonely and devoid of social skills, they are incapable of getting along in the “real world.”

First, I want to share some of the truths of socialization and then I’ll get into how to answer.   This is actually a very common question and concern for most people because the initial image of a homeschooler (I had this image too before I began homeschooling!) depicts a lonely child who is only with his mother and whatever siblings he happens to have all day long.

Actually, most homeschooled children are involved in more extra curricular activities than the average public schooled child simply because their time is more flexible.  While public school children are with their same age peers all day, they may only interact with them at recess, during PE or school sports, or after school when all their homework is done.   Some public school children are involved in a few after school activities such as gymnastics or piano.  The average homeschooled student is involved in several outside activities such as 4H, church activities, community events as well as traditional sports events and music lessons.  The fact that homeschooled children do not have a fixed schedule of 8am to 3pm classes, homeschooled parents often enjoy lower fees for these classes because places like gymnastics studios are hard pressed to find students that will be able to come to a class at 11am or 1pm on a school day.  Rather than leaving their studio vacant, they open it up to homeschoolers at a significant discount!

This past semester, my son was involved in golf, fencing, chess club, Young Marines, Track, PE Day, Theater, gymnastics, and children’s choir.  Not all these activities were at the same time, but he usually has about 4-5 outside activities going each week.  I think I read where most public schooled children are only involved in about 2-3 outside activities.

Another reason socialization isn’t much of an issue for homeschooled students is because, while most public schooled children only learn to interact with same age peers, most homeschooled students are involved in family situations with many age groups including adults.  They learn to relate to all age groups quite well and have their parents close at hand when and if they need discipline for dealing with someone inappropriately.  Additionally, most homeschoolers are able to learn social skills from adults who are much more adept at them than are their same age peers who have no more experience than they.

One final reason socialization is not much of an issue for homeschoolers is that there is much less of an opportunity for students to learn bad social behavior from other students due to the fact that their parent is usually at arms length at all times.  In a public school setting there is one teacher per several students.  During social times like recess, there may be one teacher overseeing many children on the playground.  That one teacher cannot be expected to view what every child is doing enough to discipline social issues.  In some cases, these issues have lead to arguments, hurt feelings, and even fights.

When you are talking with folks who truly desire to understand how homeschoolers make friends and get along socially, you may not have time to get into all these details and it may sound more like justification to do so.  I usually just say that I had been concerned about that issue as well before I began homeschooling, but that I found that we have so many opportunities to get the kids involved socially that I am often running ragged and we sometimes are relieved and excited to have a day when we DON’T have to go anywhere.  Then, if you are talking to someone who is interested in homeschooling, but has this question, you can go into more detail with them if they ask for it and have more time.

If I am asked by someone who is anti-homeschool, I usually give the same answer initially.  If they follow up their question with a comment about how this is not good enough, I will usually tell them that my children have never been accused of being socially awkward and have actually received many complements about their manners and articulate way in which they relate to adults.  If they continue to badger me about the issue, I will usually say that they certainly have the right to their opinion, but they might consider looking up the statistics for how well homeschoolers do after graduation both in their careers and in their personal life.

The truth is that socialization really isn’t an issue even for only children.  My son has plenty to do and many friends. He easily converses and makes friends with people of all ages and has quite a full life as a homeschooler.  Studies show that most homeschoolers do very well after graduation both academically in college and in their personal lives.  Contrary to popular belief, most homeschoolers are not weird, nerdy, social misfits.  Most are well-adjusted contributing members of society.  In fact, studies show that homeschoolers students and graduates are more politically and socially active in the communities than are their public schooled counterparts.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula, including Say What You Mean Defending the Faith.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com and hosting her weekly podcast, Communication Comedy Network.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

Stay tuned next Monday for more in my article series, “A Question of Homeschooling” when I will share another answer to a typical question homeschoolers are asked.

If you have a question you are frequently asked and would like me to include it in my blog series, please post a comment here or email me at jojo @ artofeloquence.com

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

HS Question #2: Is Homeschooling Legal?

I’m continuing my series of articles, “A Question of Homeschooling.”   Last week I shared the four best ways to answer the question, “Why do you homeschool?”  This week, I answer the question, “Is homeschooling legal?”

With all the buzz about homeschooling these days, not as many people believe homeschooling is illegal, but you do run into folks who question the legality of certain things when it comes to homeschooling.  This week I’m going to focus on the legal aspects of homeschooling.  This is not to be taken as legal advice and since homeschooling laws vary from state to state, I recommend visiting http://www.hslda.org for more detailed information on homeschooling in your state.  I found a very helpful resource on their website that has a summary of homeschool laws in all 50 states.

First I’d like to give you some background before I get into just how to answer these issues.  Homeschooling is legal in all 50 states, yet there are different legal requirements a homeschooler must adhere to in each state. I have homeschooled in two states so I can share some of the rules for homeschooling in those states as an example. In California, you are not really considered a homeschooler.  You are a considered a private school and must fill out a form each year (which asks you among other things to name your private school).  The form is found online for only about a month or so.  It’s available sometime in October and must be filed before some a specific date in November.  You must keep attendance records and conduct school for 180 days each year.  In Arizona, you are considered a homeschool and are required to file a form notifying the state the year you begin homeschooling.  There are no other requirements unless and until you want to stop homeschooling in which case you need to fill out another form.

While most folks these days probably won’t ask you if homeschooling is legal, they might ask you if it is legal for a mom who does not have a teaching certificate to homeschool.  Additionally, they may ask if a homeschooled student can get into college or get a job if they do not have a “legal high school diploma” from an accredited school.  I’m not an expert in the homeschooling laws of all 50 states, but it is my understanding that none of them require a parent to have a teaching certificate in order to homeschool her own children.

Most people don’t ask if I have a teaching certificate or if my children would have an accredited high school diploma because they are interested in the law as much as they are interested in the results.  Usually they are wondering how I can teach subjects I haven’t been trained in.  If you have more time, you can go into all the details, but usually I simply say that there are so many resources out there now for homeschoolers to use that help us to present the information easily and often we learn right along with our kids.  I may add that I know several public school substitute teachers who are not at all familiar with the material they are to teach and they often do a little quick research or rely entirely on the text books to teach the students.    Most traditional school text books are written with “Teacher’s Notes” or have a Teacher’s Manual that includes all the answers, lesson plans and additional resources.   That is why you may see a PE coach who is teaching a biology class.

Additionally, some homeschooling parents have a background in a particular topic and have written studies for homeschoolers.  I have a degree in Speech Communication and have a passion for teaching communication skills, so I have authored several speech communication studies for homeschoolers that require no preparation time for the homeschooling parent who is not familiar with the subject.

I want to address a secondary and quasi legal issue that comes up under this topic: what can a homeschooler do with a non accredited high school diploma?  While most of the after graduation concerns are not a real problem for homeschool graduates, some are of a little concern.

An accredited diploma simply means that the school a student graduated from is approved in a particular way by the state.  Public schools are accredited (though not all of them are as highly rated by college admissions boards).  Most private high schools are not accredited, though nobody questions whether a private school graduate will be able to get into a good college.  Though a homeschooled student may need to provide more or different information, there has not really been a big issue having a homeschooler accepted into the military, getting into a prestigious university, or when applying for a good job.  I have personally  known or interviewed homeschool graduates who have  gone on to work for NASA, become lawyers and been accepted to elite colleges like Harvard.  My own daughter attends Vanderbilt University.

The question of what a homeschoolers options are after graduation is a really easy one to answer these days because more and more prestigious universities and companies recognize what the studies have shown for many years now about homeschoolers.  Homeschoolers are well-educated, industrious, self-reliant and well-adjusted.  In fact, most prestigious or elite universities like Harvard, Princeton and Yale actually have a section of their college application for homeschoolers and are actively seeking them as students!

In the two years we took to prepare our daughter for college, we learned so much about what a homeschooler needs to know to prepare for college, that my daughter wrote it down in an eBook to help other homeschoolers understand what their options are and just how to go about it.  It’s called the Homeschooler’s Guide to Preparing for College and it’s a great resource for homeschoolers to help guide them during this time.  So you see that the information is out there to make it easier for homeschoolers!

Homeschooling is legal and it’s easier than ever before because of all the resources available to homeschoolers and the fact that homeschoolers are now sought after employees and college applicants.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
JoJo Tabares holds a degree in Speech Communication, but it is her humorous approach to communication skills which has made her a highly sought-after Christian speaker and writer.  Her articles appear in homeschool publications, such as Homeschool Enrichment Magazine and The Old Schoolhouse Magazine, which also endorses her Say What You Mean curricula, including Say What You Mean Defending the Faith.  You can also find JoJo on web sites such as Crosswalk.com and Dr.Laura.com and hosting her weekly podcast, Communication Comedy Network.  For more information on communication FUNdamentals and Christian-based communication skills for the whole family, please visit http://www.ArtofEloquence.com

Stay tuned next Monday for more in my article series, “A Question of Homeschooling” when I will share another answer to a typical question homeschoolers are asked.

If you have a question you are frequently asked and would like me to include it in my blog series, please post a comment here or email me at jojo @ artofeloquence.com

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter

Pro Homeschooling Documentary, Not so Pro Christian?

If you are a long time reader of Communication FUNdamentals, you will recall that about a year ago our family had agreed to be filmed for a documentary that a USC grad student was doing on homeschooling for a local cable TV and internet show.  I have to admit being a bit nervous about whether or not a positive image of my family and homeschooling in general would survive the cutting room floor.

Since we are members of HSLDA, I called and spoke with Michael Smith to ask his advice.  He shared a story with me about how his words had been twisted in an interview by the editing process but that, in his opinion, any publicity for homeschooling is good publicity.  He advised us to pray on it and, if we felt lead to, consent to the interview.   We discussed it and prayed over it as a family and decided to allow the camera to film “A day in the life of the Tabares homeschooling family.”

It was an exciting day where we met the producer who was also to be our cameraman.  She was a very nice young woman who asked us a great deal of questions, filmed each family member’s answer and even went with us to two different outside events.  She filmed my daughter going to her not-so-local public school for her AP classes in the morning.  She even went with us to film both of the kids at karate class where my daughter was one of the black belt instructors.

We felt she was, as they say on Fox News, fair and balanced.  She asked a good number of open ended questions as well as questions that might reveal any difficulties about homeschooling.  Overall, we felt it a good experience for the family.

Just the other day, we finally received a link to the online video segment of the show.  It is actually a very positive piece on homeschooling and I pray that theme reaches many, but we were a bit disappointed with the way our Christian family was portrayed in contrast to the other family that was interviewed. I’ll give you the link so you can judge for yourself.

First we noticed some obvious errors-one was a major typo at the end where they reported that my daughter is now attending “Vanterbilt” University.  That should be spelled  Vanderbilt.  Sorry all you Commodores!  The other was when the narrator reported the public high school where my daughter was taking a few AP classes was in Hesperia.  I wish it had been in Hesperia!  It certainly would have been a much faster commute and a lot easier on the old wallet as gas was at it’s all time HIGH then! ROFL  Granite Hills High School is in Apple Valley.

The disappointment, though, is due to the way in which they seemed to have made a conscious decision to leave on the cutting room floor all of the footage that shows our family as active in the “real world” outside of our family.  The producer told us she was interviewing a few families to compare them, but the way it was edited leaves the impression that a Christian homeschooling family is lonely and secluded from the rest of the world.  I guess it goes back to the age old question of socialization as if it may not be a problem in secular families, but may still be for Christian homeschoolers.

For example, in contrast to the active, bustling and colorful environment of the other family, they showed my daughter sharing about her frustration with her public school classmates for interrupting class to ask irrelevant questions. They never showed her teaching karate class where she was one of the black belt instructors for two years.  They never mentioned that she was in a performance choir that traveled and did concerts.  They never mentioned the schedule she kept with her friends or the times she was able to raise money to fly to Texas and D.C. to attend various leadership conferences and other events with young people from all over the nation.

They showed my son playing a game of pool by himself as he talks about a problem he had with a neighbor boy.  They never showed the footage of him at karate or talked about all the other activities he was involved in that year.  They also had no way of knowing  that this neighbor boy was a problem for many of the families in the neighborhood.

My daughter was upset for my son because they updated each of the homeschooled children at the end but never included my son.

Am I sorry we did the interview? No!  I think it was a good experience for the kids.  I also think it will help homeschooling.  It’s actually a very pro homeschooling piece.  But you judge for yourself .  Here is the direct link to the homeschooling segment of this show.

Please share what you think about it.  Do you think it helps homeschooling?  Do you feel they were at all biased against Christian homeschoolers?  Did it just come off this way?  Or are we being a bit sensitive?

What say you?

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter