advice-any homeschoolers? uk
Hi I am still havin probs with my son age 14 going to school, resulting in rock bottom self-esteem, attempting to hurt himself and the school not recognising any of his underlying anxieties. I am researching the idea of homeschooling within the uk and wondered if anyone had any advice? He is in year 9 so I need to be considering GCSE preperation but I'm not sure how easy it is, how i go about it, what does it cost, any advice is desperately needed!! !! !
Google "gcse preparation", you'll find lots of resources.
There's probably books too.
The first thing you'd want to do, if it's like the SAT and GED, is try a sample test (many preparation books have them) to assess what your son knows already, what he needs help with, etc
How does homeschooling look for other 15 year olds? What happens if my son doesn't want to go to TAFE, and wants to go to University? Can he still homeschool?"
Homeschooling can be anything you want it to be, and for that reason it can look really different from one teen to another. A lot depends on the personality and ambition of the individual student. One young person may be working part time and studying at home, another may be focussing on performance and tailoring an individual curriculum towards getting into an arts academy, a third might still be 'playing'...
Because your son is starting year 9 this year, my advice is to work on his basic skills this year, especially study skills.
Don't worry about TER scores or anything like that until 2010, which is when he can pick a more specialised pathway. My experience is that most children going through school have weak basic skills in English and maths and poor study habits. A student needs these to be successful (and to enjoy) university.
There are some great 'test your child' work books you can use as a guide to see how you son is managing with basic skills.
In addition to improving basic skills I suggest you plan a general 'liberal arts' style education that covers local and history, geography (where things are in the world, and how people use the world's resources), take him to performances, read and discuss books, movies, and games together, make sure he keeps a personal journey and writes in it every day, maybe a 'natural history' journal (where he observes what is happening in nature around him - basic biology, geology, etc - science skills). Go on lots of outings,
especially to places of employment. This doesn't have to be formal excursions all the time - simply get out and watch how people work and what they do and talk about it.
It is worth researching what 'study skills' are: I found a great tutorial in the World Book encyclopedia years ago. They don't come naturally and are worth practicing, especially if you son is keen to go to university.
Use 2009 to consolidate and build on basic skills and by the time 2010 comes around your son will be in an excellent position to select the course he wants to do. Getting into TAFE at that age will be easy if he is competent in reading, writing and arithmetic and has good general knowledge and displays excellent study habits.
Keep a record of his homeschooling activities and write a report at the end of the year that summarises those activities and his progress in each subject throughout the year.
Here's one link I found for you...normally in most of the links you can contact someone and I have found that most homeschoolers are extremely helpful with this...
http://home-ed.info/
There is a discussion forum for home educating kids with AS in the UK
http://www.aspergersupport.org.uk
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