This isn’t just a simple blog, here are some impacts of how difficult is homeschooling during COVID-19? It’s a complete guide to homeschooling, especially in this current pandemic.
A quick briefing on the topic:
For more resources, Eshoparchive is always available with more interest and related topics. Just one quick search opens you to a whole undiscovered world of homeschooling ideas and sources, especially during the coronavirus pandemic.
Everyone is well aware of what the term ‘homeschooling’ means, but for those of you who don’t, homeschooling is simply teaching your children at home what they would learn in their schools, colleges, or other institutes. Now, this can include any and all subjects and activities, from academics to home economics, from technical to creative. Whether it be STEM subjects, or sewing and cooking, or basic reading and writing, or even music and arts, everything can be taught at home if you are just capable and creative enough to manage it.
Although the concept of homeschooling has been around since anyone can remember, it finally started achieving the true recognition it deserved in the 1960s when educational reformists were dissatisfied with the quality of industrialized education and began a revolution. For forever, various cultures have supported teaching your children at home with their core belief that the child’s home is his/her first school. It is at home that kids first learn to walk, talk, and play. And it is at home where they should be taught basic life skills and academics. Even now, most parents opt for homeschooling as they believe it to be more effective than traditional education.
Now with the current global pandemic, homeschooling is the new norm and the need of the hour in this crisis. With the virus forcing people to stay holed up in their homes and attacking children and old people most, the entire world has enforced strict lockdowns, quarantines, and SOPs, which include social distancing. As a result, educational institutes have shut down worldwide, leaving children at the mercy of their parents to learn and parents at the mercy of their children to teach. Most educational institutes have turned to teach online, providing online classes through applications like Google Classroom and Zoom, but let’s face it; most of the world’s population lives under the poverty line and does not have access to technology that allows them to stay a part of this new system.
So what can these people do?
The answer is, of course, homeschooling! But then again, how to do it? Whether you are new to homeschooling or have been doing it for years, it cannot be denied that the ordeal is daunting, and everyone needs a little help, every once in a while, in the form of new ideas and techniques to keep going. And for that purpose, here is not just a guide for parents new to homeschooling to get you started, but also a list of creative ideas and resources that all parents (new or seasoned at the task of homeschooling) can use.
Children are tricky. It is an unwritten fact in the hypothetical rulebook of life that no two people, including children, are alike. Now you might be thinking, what does that mean, and how is it relevant to homeschooling? Well, for starters, it simply means that every person is unique in how they think, act, work; everyone has different interests and capabilities; everyone has different personalities and mindsets; and so forth. And how does this apply to coach children at home? Well, that’s obvious. Each child thinks differently, acts differently, and hence, has to be taught differently. What works for one might not for another; after all, all five fingers are not equal, are they? Moreover, every child has their own area of expertise and talents and hobbies.
Efficient scheduling is the first and foremost task of the process, but it is not as simple as it looks.
Firstly, you need to start slow, especially if this is your and your child’s first time learning at home. Additionally, as mentioned above, children get easily bored and frustrated by monotony. This means that strict schedules, especially those meant to replicate actual school systems and curriculum, will, more often than not, fail.
The key is to make it interesting and exciting. Following is a list of ideas on how to do that:
Still unsure of what to do? Search online for exciting homeschooling timetables for your kids; the Facebook page by the name of Croxteth Family Matters is a good place to start!
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