Tag Archives: Home Schooling

Homeschooling Pros and Cons

Homeschooling Pros and Cons

Homeschooling is simply referred to the education that is provided to the child at home. Homeschooling or home education is nowadays made legal in several parts of the world which includes the UK, the US, and other countries. The assignment pressure, dissatisfaction over the curriculum, the methods of teaching, and religious concerns are a few reasons why parents choose not to send their child to a public school.

Teaching your child at home has its own pros and cons. These should be focused to provide the best education to your child. Listed down are some of the pros and cons of homeschooling:

Homeschooling Pros and Cons

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Pros of homeschooling

  1. One-on-one teaching

In a normal American public school, their average range of student in a class is about 19 -35, depending on the states. One teacher present inside the class has to keep an eye on all the children due to which s/he can’t always help when he or she needs it.

However, in homeschooling, the mentor mostly focuses only on one child or maybe two. Their whole focus is on the single child so the child is able to get help with the subject immediately. And also, the mentor has the freedom to elaborate the particular topic for longer, if the child needs time understanding it.

  1. Study to gain knowledge, not grades

In normal schools, the kids’ main focus should be on getting great grades so as to move up to higher classes. The ongoing competition inside the premises encourages them to do better than the others and score more to get into renowned universities. When they are learning the particular subject, the learning may not be enough for the sake of knowledge.

In homeschooling, as there is no presence of competition, the child mainly has focus on learning for the sake of knowledge and implementation.

  1. Time saving

When sending a child to school you need a lot of time as you need to take care of several things. There is wastage of time every day just in getting ready for school. Dressing up, traveling to and fro, waiting for the school bus, and much more.

Homeschooling actually saves your time. Adding more to that, you can make the child learn and remember what he or she learned during the study hours so that rest of the day can be further used to do other productive activities.

  1. Bonding of parent and child

For a parent, homeschooling can be the best option to spend more time with your child every day, and get to know each other better. Some productive time spent together can be the best ways to teach your child manners, social or public behavior, and personal boundaries.

  1. Learning in safe environment

There are some negative people in some corner that can considerably harm your child. Bullying, sexual assault, negative influence, and mental or physical abuse are some of the things that the child that a child has to face outside the world when staying away from home. Homeschooling helps you keep your child protected from the harmful environment too much of an extent.

  1. Less paperwork

It is quite obvious that if you are a student then you have to deal with projects, assignments, tests, and homework.  Also, the school adds the pressure of completing these tasks on time give more stress to the child or teenager.

Homeschooling involves no such paperwork, and therefore less stressful. Actually, as it is 21st century, you can use technology to teach your child at home like many online learning resources to deliver lessons on complex topics in math or science.

Also Read: Pros and Cons of Online Dating

Cons of Homeschooling

Homeschooling can be better than public schools in for some people, but not for everyone. Here’s why:

  1. Expensive

When you keep your child for homeschooling, you don’t have to worry about tuition fee, transport, food, and stationery costs which may make you think that it is less expensive when compared to public schools. But it isn’t.

When educating your child at home, the parent will have to put their careers, goal aside and shift all their attention on teaching the child. This means you have less paycheck in but more or less the same expenses.

  1. Presence of no skilled and trained teachers

In homeschooling, the mentors are not trained or skilled in providing education. In many cases, the parents themselves do not have first-hand education provides, and they are still learning the subjects. So for the most part, homeschooling is an experiment for all of them. The lack of experience may prevent the child from getting the quality education that trained and skilled teachers provide in public or private schools.

  1. No socialization

In a public or private school, there are many teachers and students. With them, a child can talk, play and socialize properly. When a child is educated at home, he has very less interaction with children of his age. Also, they are deprived from the experience of the school or class trips and projects, lunch with friends, those first crushes, and many more.

  1. Limited access to sports

A child studying at their own home is mostly found to be playing indoor games and a few sports. They have no chance of playing in sports team regularly. This ultimately limits their opportunity to get into the professional sports team, which can even get them into universities for higher education.

  1. Limited resources

The public schools as well as the private are more structured and have a planned curriculum for their students than home-schools. The school’s system tries and tests all teaching methodologies, credible sources of information, to provide the best for their students.

A homeschooling parent has very limited resources and also has to create the structure themselves to give the same vibe as that of the school which can be quite challenging.

  1. Justifying to family and friends

It is a very tough decision for a parent to choose to home-school over public schools, especially when no child in past generations in the family has been homeschooled before. You may always have to justify your decision to your friends and family on choosing home school over public schools and also may have to face social criticisms.

Homeschooling can prove to be both boon and curse depending on how you manage it. So, start at an early age if you are considering homeschooling your children and keep the records to check how you both fare. If it works, home-school your child all the way to high school or else shift the decision to good public schools again.