Life, Love & Literature

Just another Home Education blog

Falconry at Portsmouth City Museum

Yes­ter­day we met up will lots of friends from our home edu­ca­tion group at Portsmouth City Museum for a fal­conry display.

Sam wait­ing out­side the museum

 

Watch­ing the display

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Catching Up

Long time since I’ve posted prop­erly but we’ve been busy catch­ing up with friends. Includ­ing spend­ing some lovely days with Jack’s old­est friend and her fam­ily who emi­grated to the US four years ago but have been home for the summer.

We’ve been push­ing on with Jack’s work­books in an attempt to fin­ish off all the cur­rent ones before hol­i­day, ready to start anew when we get back in Sep.  We had fun look­ing at electricity.

Using sta­tic elec­tric­ity to make a tis­sue paper man stand up

mak­ing and test­ing circuits

 

Sam’s been work­ing more on his Egypt­ian project.

Mak­ing an Egypt­ian collar

 

And we’ve been buy­ing too many books :-)

Books, Glo­ri­ous Books

 

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Socialisation?

Social­i­sa­tion. It is one of the first things you are asked about by any­one when you say you home edu­cate.  The com­mon response on home edu­ca­tion lists is that social­i­sa­tion isn’t a prob­lem, if there is a prob­lem it is fit­ting in all the social activ­i­ties.  But is that the full picture?

I went to school. Did it pro­vide a good social­i­sa­tion expe­ri­ence? Pri­mary I think so, sec­ondary I think not.  Has it effected me as an adult? definitely.

My Pri­mary school was fan­tas­tic. We mixed freely, boys, girls, dif­fer­ent school years, worked inde­pen­dently but had a good sense of group and worked well together, had good rela­tion­ships with teach­ers (I still see some of them some­times) and devel­oped a lot of self confidence.

Unfor­tu­nately, sec­ondary school did a lot to under­mine that self-confidence. Being a bit ‘dif­fer­ent’ the good natured teas­ing which I’d never minded (abil­ity to laugh at myself has got me through a lot :-) ) gave way to out and out bul­ly­ing.  I was never really badly effected by it though, or so I thought until recently. I cer­tainly never cried myself to sleep over it, or tried to alter myself par­tic­u­larly.  I had a few really good friends (still my core group of friends) and the rest I refused to let bother me, I never got upset over the bul­ly­ing because I shut myself down and stopped engag­ing with other people.

What has this meant for me as an adult?  I think I come across as quite self-confident, as long as it is about prac­ti­cal mat­ters. I’m quite happy to put myself for­ward as spokesperson/organiser, I find deal­ing with author­ity easy, I won’t say I like it but I don’t mind pub­lic speak­ing, I gave up on hav­ing any dig­nity a long time ago which means I never get fazed at mak­ing an idiot of myself, I can laugh it off.  One off inter­ac­tions over the years have got eas­ier and I’m get­ting bet­ter at, and even known to insti­gate, polite ban­ter with strangers. Where I strug­gle is that gap between stranger or casual acquain­tance and friend.  I’m not good at small talk, if it is of a prac­ti­cal nature I’m okay  I think my self con­fi­dence got dented so much at sec­ondary school that I pre­fer not to share much myself with oth­ers and in return I don’t ask that they share any­thing with me. It takes a long time for me to take down bound­aries in a group sit­u­a­tion (one to one I’m bet­ter) and there aren’t many peo­ple I feel com­fort­able chat­ting with.  I sus­pect I come across as stand­off­ish at times, and while I try to make the effort, the truth is it is a lot of effort and I can’t always be bothered.

What has this got to do with home education?

Well, obvi­ously school as a social exper­i­ment never worked for me. I never really con­sid­ered social­i­sa­tion that much when we started out, I started going to a local HE group when Jack was 3 and I assumed we’d get more involved and we’d add in extra groups as they got older.  I sup­pose if I con­sid­ered the social side of home edu­ca­tion it was to hope that the boys can have expe­ri­ences like I did at pri­mary school with out the neg­a­tive ones I had a sec­ondary school.

As a fam­ily I have no doubt we get on bet­ter because we spend more time together.  I think this is par­tic­u­larly true in rela­tion to the boys.  To some extent they are forced into being each oth­ers best friend. That is not to say they don’t bicker — the shock­ing amount of grey hair that I have for a 32 yo will tes­tify that they do, but I’m sure it would be worse if they were in school and they are gen­uinely close.

The boys are also both con­fi­dent and good at deal­ing with adults. They are very good at going into shops with­out me and are prob­a­bly as good as mak­ing polite small talk as I am.  How­ever being good with adults is one thing, I believe it is mas­sively impor­tant that chil­dren get to spend time with other kids, although I make an effort from time to time I can’t (and don’t really want to) play at their level and even when I do I’m see­ing it through adult eyes (or haze of nostalgia).

Despite the denials I have seen plenty of exam­ples of peo­ple hav­ing dif­fi­cul­ties with home edu­ca­tion and social­i­sa­tion.  Firstly there are prac­ti­cal dif­fi­cul­ties such as pay­ing for and get­ting to activ­i­ties.  We live in a small vil­lage with not much on offer and rely on pub­lic trans­port (which is non-existent of an evening) which makes some things expen­sive and rules out some activ­i­ties completely.

By home edu­cat­ing we are sin­gling our chil­dren out as ‘dif­fer­ent’. They go to groups such as cubs and they don’t have peo­ple from their class, they don’t have the shared expe­ri­ences of home­work nd school rou­tines. They start with a dis­ad­van­tage and they have to make them­selves fit by the strength of their own per­son­al­i­ties.  So far the boys have man­aged fine, touch wood, and the only times the issue of home edu­ca­tion has arose (asfaik) it has been as a source of curios­ity and envy.  I think where more prob­lems have arose is that until recently we didn’t have a TV or game sys­tem and still refuse to get a hand help one. These are sadly such a big part of cul­ture now-a-days that I know it did make Jack feel excluded and dif­fer­ent so we cracked and got TV and X-box, although sel­dom watch/play.

Then there is the prob­lem of what if they don’t want to do groups?  Sam isn’t both­ered and I feel a bit guilty that he doesn’t play with kids his own age much, but on the other hand I’ve only a few friends and Pete is the same but the ones we have are pure gold, so if Sam is happy play­ing on his own and hav­ing just a cou­ple of really good friends who am I to tell him that’s wrong. He’s got so used to play­ing with Jack and his friends, that he finds it dif­fi­cult to play with kids his own age anyway.

Third prob­lem is our rela­tion­ship with our kid’s friends. If they were in school they would make their own friends and we’d have noth­ing to do with it, we could have a say in who they invited home and saw out­side school, but who they mixed with in the school no.  As home edu­cat­ing par­ents we have a level of con­trol over our kids friend­ships that I’m not sure is healthy.  I was going to say I don’t like some of Jack’s friends but actu­ally that is not true at all. I don’t like Jack’s behav­iour after he’s played with cer­tain friends and I worry that he gets taken advan­tage of, and is likely to give in and do things that he knows are not right to keep in with the group.  But to what extent do I or should I inter­vene?  I sus­pect the cor­rect answer is not at all, you have to let them take the bumps, learn from them and sort things out them­selves.  Eas­ier said than done, when you have to put up with rude, obnox­ious behav­iour from your nor­mally very polite boy for days after­wards or when you hear their friends swear­ing (at the par­ents swear­ing at their own kids :-( ) and your kids pick up on it :-(  Still work­ing on find­ing a solu­tion to this, I don’t want to con­trol my kid’s friend­ships, but some­times these friend­ships have a neg­a­tive impact on our rela­tion­ship and we have yet to find the bal­ance that works.

On paper home edu­ca­tion groups sound like the per­fect solu­tion, cer­tainly gets around the ‘dif­fer­ent’ label.  Over the years we have enjoyed lots of won­der­ful days out with home edu­ca­tion groups and met lots of lovely peo­ple.  But we are still yet to find a group that truly works for us.

From the kids stand­point one of the prob­lems is con­sis­tency, peo­ple drop in and out of home edu­ca­tion and in and out of groups, which means long term friend­ships are dif­fi­cult to main­tain.  Also they strug­gle with the dif­fer­ent expec­ta­tions of behav­iour that come from mix­ing as fam­i­lies.  I am incred­i­bly strict for a home edu­ca­tor ( I don’t think I am really I’m just very keen on good man­ners) which means we end up with a lot of — but so and so did, well you’re not allowed — scenarios.

Then there is the prob­lem of activ­i­ties.  Any­thing too struc­tured doesn’t appeal, study groups doing lessons and lap­books leave us cold.  Because we adopt a struc­tured approach at home our rea­sons for meet­ing up with oth­ers is mainly social.  By this I don’t just mean friend­ship. I look for oppor­tu­ni­ties for my kids to work with other kids as I think devel­op­ing group work skills and co-operation are impor­tant skills which are dif­fi­cult to prac­tice at home.  But despite being part of a num­ber of groups for a quite a num­ber of years have found these oppor­tu­ni­ties thin and far between.  I have found that social groups always end up being pre­dom­i­nantly young kids and Jack’s out­grown them.

Also it is naive to think that home edu­cated kids always get on won­der­fully.  Yes I’ve spent many hours watch­ing large groups of mixed age kids play hap­pily, but the minor tiffs ‘so-and-so won’t play with me’ type sit­u­a­tions still arise.  More impor­tantly I’ve heard of more than a cou­ple of exam­ples of bul­ly­ing going on and I’ve seen entire groups come close to col­lapse over dif­fi­cult (and undis­ci­plined) behav­iour of one or more children.

The main prob­lems though with home ed groups from my per­spec­tive is that they require the par­ents to socialise!  As already said I find social­is­ing an effort, as a result I tend to dis­tract myself by tak­ing on too much organ­i­sa­tion.  I’ve met some lovely peo­ple over the years but still find that some weeks I strug­gle to face going.  Also I find most groups develop cliques around some­thing other than home edu­ca­tion; peo­ple who live very local so meet up more often, peo­ple with par­tic­u­lar reli­gious beliefs, peo­ple with par­tic­u­lar parenting/home ed philoso­phies.  We’re very laid back and find we don’t fit into any par­tic­u­lar group, which means we often feel awk­ward and uncom­fort­able even at times unwelcome.

So where does this leave us? Despite the neg­a­tives I still believe that it is pos­si­ble for home edu­cated chil­dren to have very good social lives.  I think par­ents need to be con­fi­dent at recog­nis­ing their child’s needs, some need lots of social con­tact oth­ers pre­fer a few good friends.  In school they are sub­ject to a cer­tain type of social­is­ing, at home you can focus on try­ing to meet the needs of the indi­vid­ual.  Mix­ing in home edu­ca­tion groups isn’t essen­tial many fam­i­lies exist hap­pily with­out them.  Nei­ther is home edu­ca­tion the right option for everyone.

I envy those who have found their niche, groups that suit them. But home edu­ca­tion is grow­ing in pop­u­lar­ity and I believe as times goes on it is becom­ing fea­si­ble for more and more groups to exist and becom­ing eas­ier to find like-minded indi­vid­u­als.   Effort is def­i­nitely needed from par­ents and if what your chil­dren need isn’t out there you have to be pre­pared to try and organ­ise it your­self.  It can feel very hard­go­ing at times, home edu­ca­tors can be very dis­or­gan­ised and very opin­ion­ated (often with con­trary opin­ions).  But when it comes down to it we all want the best for our kids.  I’ve spent many years work­ing on try­ing to lis­ten to other peo­ples wants and desires but over the years my patience has waned and I pre­fer to step away from things that don’t work for us rather than com­pro­mise and choose to focus on the pos­i­tive rela­tion­ships that we’ve built and spend time with the good friends and like-minded people.

Home edu­ca­tion isn’t per­fect, and for us the dif­fi­cul­ties in build­ing friend­ships is a down­side.  But effort and time have turned up good friends (home edu­cated and not) and the ease the boys find in mix­ing sug­gests that we’re not doing too bad.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Good day

Things have been dif­fi­cult lately. Jack is grow­ing up too fast and we seem to be con­stantly bat­tling one another.  Yes­ter­day though was a ray of sun­shine (lit­er­ally as well as metaphorically).

Work was done effi­ciently, well and with enthusiasm.

I think Jack might have a future as a speech writer. Here are some eulo­gies for Julius Caesar.

Bru­tus: On this the sad­dest of days we are we to mourn Gaius Julius Cae­sar. He was the great­est mil­i­tary leader we ever had. He was a good con­sul and the longest dic­ta­tor in that posi­tion. But it went to his head. He wanted to become king of the Romans. We had to kill him for the good of the repub­lic. Cae­sar was like a brother to me but he became arro­gant and power hun­gry. I wish we didn’t have to kill Julius but the repub­lic depended on it.

Mark Antony: What has just been said is a lie. I have come not to praise Cae­sar but to give him a proper funeral. What Bru­tus has just said is a lie. Julius never wanted to be king. He wanted to make the Roman expanse of land larger and to make the repub­lic a bet­ter and more pow­er­ful place. He was a hus­band, politi­cian and war­rior. He was what made the repub­lic such a good place. Bru­tus and Cas­sius took away all of that.

Then we had a very pleas­ant after­noon going over to see Lisa, Har­vey and Jamie for a cou­ple of hours.

On the way home we stopped and picked up some shop­ping, Stop­ping for ice­creams in the park.

Sam eating ice cream  Jack eating ice cream

Day ended with a table ten­nis tour­na­ment and then curl­ing up to read Jen­nings with Pete.

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Park

Mak­ing the most of the sun.


I chal­lenge you not to feel sick watch­ing this!

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Amberley Working Museum

Today I’d organ­ised a group trip to Amber­ley Work­ing Museum . Must admit at 6am when we all ‘awoke’ stream­ing with cold I was curs­ing myself. And I use the word awoke loosely as Sam had been awake most of the night cough­ing and I had been awake most of the night stroking his back.

How­ever, as ever once up and out we all picked up. Wasn’t the least stress­ful trip I’ve organ­ised, not recog­nis­ing most of the faces who were there and the museum being com­pletely ill-organised with the talks. That aside it was nice to meet so many new faces and catch up with some old ones. The boys best friends were along too so they were happy.
Museum itself was fas­ci­nat­ing full of old machin­ery and vehi­cles — lots of but­tons and knobs to press. We took a ride in a 1920’s dou­ble decker around the site and there was a small omnibus that took you from one side of the to the other.
Cam­era was play­ing up unfor­tu­nately so pho­tos are not the best.
Jack and an old fire engine.
Another old fire engine
Help­ing print cer­tifi­cates with their names on.

Engine that made lots of noise.
They liked that engine a lot!
Elec­tric­ity — com­plet­ing cir­cuits
Elec­to­mag­net­ism
Boys weren’t impressed but I liked this model of Stephenson’s rocket made out of keys and pipes and other junk.
Oh and the boys got a broom­stick each. No idea what they wanted one for but hey .
Arrived home 6pm ish hav­ing left house at 7.30am, sneez­ing, cough­ing, very tired but happy.
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Not Back to School

Yes­ter­day was Portsmouth Home Edu­ca­tion Group’s ‘Not Back to School Pic­nic’. We went along and caught up with some old friends and made some new.
Stole the pic­ture off Susie’s blog as was too busy try­ing to per­suade Sam to sit in a bet­ter place to get one myself.
Sam espe­cially had a fab time blow­ing bubbles

 

and play­ing with Oscar.

 

He had less fun with bal­loons after hav­ing 2 pop­ping on being blown up and another pop­ping as he tried to shape it, we left with 3 full size (not mod­el­ling) bal­loons. One blew away at bus stop in South­sea, one spon­ta­neously burst at bus stop in Gosport, third blew away out­side Chi­nese on the walk home. Pete hero­ically chased it into the road though and retrieved it earn­ing ‘super­daddy’ points!
As ever we were ridicu­lously early so even had time to visit Portsmouth Nat­ural His­tory Museum first.
A tir­ing but good day and thank you to every­one from Portsmouth for mak­ing us welcome.
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