• @Vendemus
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    429 days ago

    The short answer is the ability to tailor the entire learning experience to one child’s specific needs and interests. For example: My sister loves cooking so for history and chemistry she got to do it from a culinary perspective.

    Extra curricular activities can help supplement public education but kids still need unstructured play time, so there is a limit to how much can be added.

    I know two people who thrived in a homeschooling environment, for them it was 100% the right choice. 99% of the time it is the wrong choice.

    Side note: Virtual learning has created a weird third option that isn’t quite public school but also isn’t homeschooling. This gets mixed in with homeschooling conversations but I think it confuses things and belongs in a separate category.

    • @Wrench
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      729 days ago

      Sorry for the cheap gag, but I can’t help myself.

      My sister loves cooking so for history and chemistry she got to do it from a culinary perspective.

      Those must have been some pretty dark lessons on the Holocaust.

      • @lennybird
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        English
        429 days ago

        haha that’s so fucked up hahah

      • @Vendemus
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        229 days ago

        Oh man did I miss that opportunity for jokes! Thank you, my mom and sister will get a kick out of that.