Kids I used to babysit for would stay up until whenever their dad got home from work, which was often 10pm or later, and they did OK. I don't know, I guess I feel like awake and home is different than out and about, but I guess it isn't so much for little kids, who can just drop off.
I still tsk tsk in my head at the little bunnies falling asleep on the subway late at night, though.
Nah, just wacky hard-core crunchy-granola Christians. I live in the south, yo. We got no Mormons. Christians, we got. The woman's parents were missionaries and she grew up in South America.
tommyrot: Yes. I'd get to Saint Paul earlier on a road-trip, but sure, that's my "into the city".
So what are the common reasons parents do the homeschooling thing? Religious beliefs? School system sucks? Mother is a teacher?
I just bought a bunch of Christmas presents. Huh. Something caught my eye on overstock.com, and I just did it! I never do stuff early like that.
t pops corn, waits for responses to tommy's last
So what are the common reasons parents do the homeschooling thing? Religious beliefs? School system sucks? Mother is a teacher?
I'd guess those are them, for varying definitions of each.
Jesse is a cruel bitca, which is why we lurves her.
Does anyone subscribe to
Science
magazine? There's a series of articles in the Nov 4th issue that I want to read.
So what are the common reasons parents do the homeschooling thing?
Mostly religion, but I did it for other reasons. Bobby was not doing well in school. He was border line on the calendar and I decided he needed to be pulled out and put back in the same grade the next year. I gave him one on one schooling for half a year then put him back in school.
I know parents of children with learning issues that home school because it serves the child's needs best. It works better for some super brainiacs that need more challenges and it works for children with special needs if their parents have the skill to do it.