Teen Autism » Blog Archive » Getting in Gear

Getting in Gear

There are no bells, no forced schedules, no dress code. No busses, no other students, no anxiety. This is homeschool. And even though it is the ideal learning environment for some kids (like Nigel), it’s still school. And he’d rather not do it.

We’re relatively new to homeschooling, having started six months ago (and the past three months were summer vacation), but, knowing my son, I think that even if we’d been doing it for years he would still complain, as he did this morning. I pointed out to him that I was sure he’d rather be doing homeschool than be in a classroom with lots of other students bothering him. You’ve heard of fantasy football? Nigel wants to do fantasy school. He responded, “I want to do school on a video screen lying in bed.”

So, even for homeschoolers, it’s hard to get in gear. Maybe it’s because we don’t have bells and lockers and busses. I’m still working on our schedule because we’re waiting to hear back about the time slot for the social skills group meeting that Nigel will attend once a week at the middle school. And we’re waiting to hear back about checking out an eighth grade math book for the year.  So for now, we work with our tentative schedule, we do a review of last year, we go through the math and grammar workbooks, we discuss our plans for electives (Spanish, psychology, and judo), and wait for things to be ironed out. It’s our way of warming up and easing back into academia. Short of lying in bed with a video screen, that is.

This entry (Permalink) was posted on Monday, September 8th, 2008 at 1:09 pm and is filed under Homeschooling. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response , or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “Getting in Gear”

  1. osh Says:

    Evan would love fantasy school…

    We compromised and took the EBD label that allowed him a pass out of the traditional highschool into a CESA run school that has maybe 6 kids in his class…the trade off is these are EBD kids, but it is the only way Evan is guaranteed smaller class size, sensory breaks and a shortened schedule to fit his needs.

    We are too emotionally close that I couldn’t homeschool…I give you lots of support and credit for doing it!

  2. Bonnie Sayers (autismfamily) Says:

    Last summe we started early to get a jump, but the books were sent via UPS and arrived just last week the day we started. The teacher and student guides are late and not til end of month, so now I have to print out all the guides and need more paper and soon ink.

    Since Matt leaves at 7 AM we are starting earlier too and getting done early. We added Spanish this year and have to do art, so two more classes this year.

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