Ok i want to be homeschooled but my mom and dad work so they could not be my teacher. who teaches you usually in home school i have no idea how it works. Do they like give you a packet that you have to finish or what? And is there a way you could hire a teacher?
Update:And i Live in Texas
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I "teach" myself.
Kids at school are taught, kids at home learn. It is a different mindset entirely.
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A teenager would mostly teach himself/herself, if he/she were serious about getting an education. Your parents would probably help you select curriculum and a course of study that would meet your state's requirements, and then you'd be responsible for learning the material. Hiring a teacher would probably be prohibitively expensive.
Homeschooling has lots of options: parents or grandparents teaching friends, older kids "teaching" themselves, home-school co-ops where parents take turns teaching subjects that they have experience with and online and correspondence schools. Occasionally a home-schooling parent may even teach a subject to a friend's child.
Homeschooling can range from very loosely-organized learning based on everyday experiences (unschooling) to very structured schooling that replicates a school-day.
If you're old enough to find these forums and post yourself, you're old enough to do research and learn on your own.
As a first step, find your way to the library (you'd spend a LOT of time there) and find the book "The Teenage Liberation Handbook." It's aimed at anyone about over the age of 12, I'd say, and does a really good job of challenging your ideas of what education is or could be. Maybe Biology is reading a textbook and answering questions at the end of a chapter. Maybe Biology is volunteering to gather data on local bee populations for a graduate student. Maybe it's taking the overnight shift at the local University's bio lab, and turning over the sea turtle eggs in the incubator. Maybe Biology is designing, organizing and spearheading a wetlands recovery project. Or maybe breeding fireflies. Or beekeeping. Or finding the right combination of mint and marigolds to make an effective mosquito repellent. Or purifying rainwater runoff from your neighborhood rooftops and rain barrels. Maybe it's setting up the perfect saltwater aquarium to raise and sell blue sea stars. It could be volunteering at the veterinarian office or a non-profit in exchange for getting to be there and assist during surgeries and procedures.
That kind of thing doesn't require your parents to stand there and read s*** to you out of a book; it may take their support and encouragement, but most importantly it takes your own maturity, interest and tenacity to make it happen.
Also know that there's a whole spectrum of what's called "homeschool." Some people sign up with an online version of public school. (That’s really technically not “homeschool,” since you're counted as public school student and the school district gets to keep the federal funds for you.)
Other people may choose to buy materials from companies and enroll with online schools, but they're "independent" of the school districts, and they don't owe anyone a darned thing...their test scores (if any; few homeschoolers in the traditional sense are obligated to take state standardized tests) are their own business, as is the pace, order or depth at which they choose to go through the material.
Other people make up their own curriculum, based on their own personal criteria. Some states want you to keep a portfolio of material to prove you're doing something there at home, other states want you to submit your curriculum for the year for approval, others may require testing that could send you back to public or private school if you fall below a particular percentile...just in case. Again, depends on the state.
Still other people endorse what they call "unschooling," and they throw out all books and tests altogether and simply follow what interests them. (See the writings of John Holt, or Google "unschooling" for more on that theory of education.)
college administrators have become an increasing style of compelled to insure that one and all educational time is truthfully packed with coaching. while a instructor chooses to take the class on a container holiday, he/she could finished some rather prolonged varieties describing in great factor the reason of the pass lower back and forth. the educational standards and aims could be nicely defined. Now that the colleges are under fire for practically each element they do, perhaps this instructor desires to verify that dad and mom are attentive to the educational nicely worth. Or probable she has had her fill of all this ridiculous varieties and is in simple terms being a smarta**!
If you are old enough to be home by yourself during the day, then you can most certainly be homeschooled. There are many companies that supply "school in a box", but many teens find this to be boring and do not follow through.
Please view the following link. It gives you a wide range of ideas for finding a method that would work best for your circumstance:
http://homeschooling.gomilpitas.com/methods/Method...
Of course, you will also want to know what the legalities are where you live:
http://homeschooling.gomilpitas.com/directory/Lega...
Good luck!!
Usually your parents, though many homeschoolers are also self-taught in some or all of their subjects. Hiring tutors might be possible but is extremely expensive. Additionally, your local regulations may require a parent to be home with you if you're under a certain age. Before you do anything, you need to check your local laws and and regulations.
your parents should take the step to home-school you, if your interested maybe speak to your parents about it. each state has laws about it, and there are some wonderful suppliers for books, almost each state has a group that will help you learn more about it just search it, and they also can help with suppliers for books...
If you are doing independent studies through a program like Penn Foster, you are on your own. You teach yourself everything.
There are many homeschooling curriculums available. I use Seton Homeschool.