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hiphophomeschool · 25 days
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THIS PART:
-bullet journaling has turned into creating an extremely pretty notebook that has some function, but largely depends on complicated decoration and aesthetic function that takes more time to set up than is tenable for the people it was created for
HOWEVER {COMMA],
-RECLAIM THE NARRATIVE! Let's take it back. Period.
Still reeling from the realization that bullet journaling was essentially created to be a disability aid and got legit fuckin gentrified
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hiphophomeschool · 25 days
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one hundred percent
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hiphophomeschool · 1 year
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YouTube Channels Which Homeschooling Families Can Benefit ... Recommended by Homeschooling Families Who've Actually Benefited ... ?
Say Less. 💯 🤣 😂
5 YouTube Channels Homeschool Families Simply MUST Check Out
This Week's Curated Content is All About Some Really Dope (read: Interesting, Informative, and Generally Accurate) YOUTUBE Channels that Homeschooling Families (or Classroom Teachers) Can Use to Support Their Homeschool Curriculum.
(Looking for Podcast Suggestions to Supplement Your Homeschooling or Classroom Curriculum? Say Less! Check Out This Post Filled With Educational Podcast Recommendations.)
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MELANATED AND WELL-EDUCATED
New and Confused Homeschool Families Start Here! Talk about user-friendly. This channel is the perfect go-to site, especially for new homeschooling families.
The presenter, Erica, is well-informed and speaks with the benefit of first hand experience. She also podcasts, blogs, and vlogs (or something like that 😃) so you can consume her content in various ways.
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ThisBrownTeacher's Hot Take: It's a GO for Me.
These videos are clean! The recording and formatting is so well done. And getting insight from someone who's actually DOING what you're doing ... well, well, well ... you gotta love it when a great plan comes together.
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CRASH COURSE
Crash Course is a YouTube channel filled with science, social science, and historical content presented in fun, usually a mix of real people and animated clips.
Agreeing that the site is witty and fast-paced, CommonSense.org and other commenters are seemingly thrown off by the word 'course' in the channels moniker. CommonSense.org gives Crash Course a rating of 3 out 5 stars, deciding that anything labeled a "course" should be interactive and offer opportunities for students to "engage" with the content - something they claim Crash Course does not necessarily do.
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ThisBrownTeacher's Hot Take: Check it out. 👍🏾
Sometimes a video is just that ... a video. And most homeschooling or traditional school teachers will add their own spin on information curated from the internet regardless. The content is better suited toward older learners and families should preview the content first to ensure that all topic matter is copacetic.
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THE HANDMADE HOMESCHOOLER
With shoutouts to the "Homeschool Haters" (facts 😉) and videos titled THINGS I WON'T DO AS A HOMESCHOOL MOM and 6 THINGS I DON'T DO AS A HOMESCHOOL MOM, you know you are about to get the real-deal-truth-ruth when it comes to homeschooling. Mandy's channel -THE HANDMADE HOMESCHOOLER- is truly an internet fav. Plus, she runs a free Facebook Group and, even though I, personally, don't rock with a whole bunch of extraneous and miscellaneous purchases and fees related to homeschooling, if you need some early guidance, this channel has curriculum and other resources for preschool and upper grades at the ready.
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ThisBrownTeacher's Hot Take: Yes, Please! 💯
Besides the cute, little YouTube Shorts she does, as a classroom teacher, I REALLY appreciate The Handmade Homeschooler's approach to HS prep and organization. She seems to backwards plan and Year-At-A-Glance prep like the most veteran of school teachers. Her content is interesting and informative. And definitely the place to go for real talk, organization, preparation, and subject based ideas and information.
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ART FOR KIDS HUB
Art for Kids Hub is a great look for all homeschooling families because:
The channel is actually created and hosted by an actual family. With kids. Doing art.
Most of the projects are easy, uncomplicated, and do not require a bunch of supplies or skills. In most cases, pencils and perhaps crayons or markers will suffice.
My boy loves this channel for all of the cool HOW TO DRAW ... videos that provide easy to understand, step-by-step techniques for drawing everything from ants to a slice of lemon pie.
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ThisBrownTeacher's Hot Take: For sure! For sure! 👌🏾
While some of the drawing tutorials or subject matter (Bugatti anyone?) may frustrated younger or easily frustrated children, pre-viewing and pre-selecting a drawing or two you know your homeschooler can handle is the perfect addition to your Art or Creativity curriculum. For sure!
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Real Life Lore
What's cool about the Real Life Lore YouTube channel is, by far, the ... LORE! Featuring titles such as What's the Deepest Hole We Can Possible Dig? This channel is chock full of subject matter based topics that are arranged in way that makes what could be somewhat dry content (digging holes ... huh?) really engaging for elementary aged homeschoolers and up. Filled with science and history/social studies heavy themes, from comprehension questions, essays, drawings, map quests, experiments, and more, your learner can successfully interact with this content in so many ways and have fun doing it.
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ThisBrownTeacher's Hot Take: For sure! Say less. ✅
Top Fuel Dragsters Visualized and Telling Time on Mars. Sheesh. Say less.
💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡
Looking for more hip homeschool content? CLICK HERE or visit HipHopHomeschool.org.
Read more about why drumming can help neurodivergent learners … HERE.
Read more to learn why it's so important to advocate for atypical thinkers  … HERE. 
Read on about the benefits of helping children build their self-regulation skills  … HERE.
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hiphophomeschool · 1 year
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Because public schools are perfect. I mean, the internet says so. Duh.
(sarcasm)
So I received an interesting comment on one of my posts about homeschooling
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I was immediately blocked of course so I couldn't respond but I just thought it was strange that someone could honestly think wanting to educate your children yourself instead of sending them off to spend the whole day with strangers is in any way a bad thing.
How does loving my children and wanting to educate them make me a creep, cultist or pedo? What is the logic behind this kind of nonsense?
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hiphophomeschool · 1 year
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#bars 👊🏽
“Homeschooling facilities abuse.”
As if literally every public school kid wouldn’t be able to tell you of the resident pedo child rapist from the campus they attended.
As if the recent rise in the homeschooling debate wasn’t sparked by cases of grooming and CRT being taught at the elementary level in public schools.
As if bullying in public schools doesn’t traumatize an innumerable amount of children whose abusers frequently experience no consequences, and the victim is treated as the aggressor for fighting back.
As if teachers and administrators don’t get away with some heinous fucking shit in their treatment of students and mismanagement of their schools.
As if schools don’t treat students essentially as prisoners, and feed them worse.
As if schools don’t force children and teenagers to sit for 6+ hours a day prepping for standardized testing instead of actually learning.
As if there isn’t a well known problem with the treatment of neurodivergent and disabled children and teenagers in public schools.
As if students in public schools aren’t punished for the most harmless and asinine shit imaginable and made to feel guilty if they so much as ask to use the bathroom during class time.
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hiphophomeschool · 1 year
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How does homeschooling work?
Hello, anon!
Well, the short answer is that homeschooling is doing school at home! Most homeschoolers have the same subjects and assignments as students that go to a public school; the biggest difference is… well, again, doing it at home rather than in a larger building :)
Oh boy I’m gonna ramble about this aren’t I-
Typically, the people that teach homeschoolers are the parents/caretakers of the students. For example, my mom teaches me and my siblings (though my dad is the unofficial principal and sometimes also acts as a substitute teacher lol).
In addition, there’s a wide variety of different “styles” or types of homeschooling.
For example, one household might be very book-oriented, putting an emphasis on memorizing poetry and math problems.
Another household might put a greater emphasis on field trips/hands-on experiences/etc.
And other households put an emphasis on other things! There’s really no “right” way to homeschool—there’s just different ways to homeschool, none necessarily better or worse than another. It mostly depends on the learning style/personality of the student and teacher.
I hope this answered your question, anon! Feel free to ask any follow-ups about homeschooling if you’re still curious—and to anyone else who reads this, feel free to jump in with your thoughts!
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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On Behalf of Your Children ... What's Next?
For some of you, this is going to hurt. And for that I am sorry. But not sorry. More like sorry, not sorry. Especially in this age of wokeness, cancellations, and fear of speaking truth, to power or otherwise.
You see, these days, most can't handle the truth and believe their self-imposed fugue state is valid, is justified, and no one is allowed to penetrate it.
But penetrate it I must.
Hear me out for just a moment as I present a single question to the confused, the uncertain, the unsure among us.
What's next?
I see your questions. Your inquires. Your requests for assistance.
Which leads me to wonder. What's next?
You recant the stories of the awful things that occur in your child's classroom, their school building, within themselves, or amongst their peers.
You lament over the inequalities, the maltreatment, the mishandling effectuated by your child's teacher, their school environment, and society at large as they showcase their uncertainty about things that they simply do not understand.
You use words like heartbreaking, brutal, unfair. And as I read, as I listen, I can only ask but one question. What's next?
Our neurodivergent children, Our loves. The reason our hearts beat. Our children's behaviors can be intense. Their behaviors can be difficult. No. Not just difficult. Not only intense. Also complicated. Frightening. A lot.
All facts.
But I wonder, even more so when reading your words, or listening to your commentary here and there ... what is the alternative, and is that alternative any worse than your prevailing predicament?
Speaking from direct and actual experience, I assure you, your children are telling you something. The stories they tell you. The feelings they express. The pictures that they draw. Even the reports and write-ups from school. They are all painting a narrative. Telling a story.
So again I ask, what's next?
Auliq Ice speaks of pulling your own rope. But pulling your own rope is sometimes so hard. Pulling your own rope is sometimes too much. Rest assured. I get it. I, too, understand.
But what is the alternative? What is next?
Perhaps homeschooling is not your choice. (Though I wish you would reconsider.) But options exist. Alternatives abound. And most importantly, your children are asking a very hard question of you.
What's next?
Because what's currently happening is obviously not working.
So consider this, and again on behalf of your children I ask, ... what's next?
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“It's not about making the right choice. It's about making a choice and making it right.” ― J.R. Rim
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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What Is The Concept Of Home Schooling?
Home schooling is an educational option in which parents choose to educate their children at home, instead of sending them to a public or private school. Nevada Homeschooling Programs can be an incredibly rewarding experience for both parents and children, but it does require a significant amount of planning and organization. There are a few different approaches to home schooling, so parents should research different methods before deciding which one is right for their family. Home schooling can provide children with a customized education that meets their individual needs, but it is important to make sure that the child is receiving a well-rounded education. Parents should also be prepared to deal with socialization issues, as home-schooled children may not have the same opportunities to interact with their peers as children who attend traditional schools. Overall, home schooling can be a great option for families who are willing to put in the time and effort required to make it work.
One of the most beneficial aspects of homeschooling is one-on-one instruction. Smaller class sizes and more individualized attention from teachers are often cited as reasons why private schools outperform public schools. When you homeschool your child, they receive one-on-one instruction 100% of the time. This allows you to tailor the curriculum to their specific strengths and weaknesses and ensure that they are truly mastering the material.
In homeschool you have a more direct role on your child’s daily learning. You may be more hands-on with teaching methods, curriculum development, and even in the field of extracurricular activities. You can also better monitor your child’s progress and ensure that he or she is getting the most out of his or her education.
Is homeschooling better for mental health?
We know that homeschooling can have a lot of benefits, but what about the impact on mental health? Some people worry that homeschooling might be isolating for children and could lead to social anxiety or other mental health issues. However, there is no evidence to suggest that homeschooling has a negative impact on mental health. In fact, some research suggests that homeschooled children may be less likely to experience anxiety and depression than their peers who attend traditional schools. This could be due to the fact that homeschooled children often have a stronger sense of family connectedness and support from their parents. In Accredited Homeschool Programs in Nevada children typically have more control over their environment and daily schedule, which can help reduce stress levels. Overall, homeschooling appears to be a safe and healthy option for children, as long as parents take the time to create a supportive and nurturing environment.
Conclusion
If you are still on the fence about homeschooling, hopefully this article has helped to sway your opinion. Homeschooling can be a great choice for children who need more one-on-one attention or who struggle in a traditional school setting. Nevada is a great state to homeschool in, with plenty of resources and support available. Contact us if you have any questions about getting started with Homeschooling in Nevada!
Source URL : https://gethomeschoolnow.com/blog/what-is-the-concept-of-home-schooling/
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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How does loving my children and wanting to educate them …
✋🏽
aht-aht … it doesn’t.
Full stop.
So I received an interesting comment on one of my posts about homeschooling
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I was immediately blocked of course so I couldn't respond but I just thought it was strange that someone could honestly think wanting to educate your children yourself instead of sending them off to spend the whole day with strangers is in any way a bad thing.
How does loving my children and wanting to educate them make me a creep, cultist or pedo? What is the logic behind this kind of nonsense?
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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Just had this conversation with a student.
This post is FIRE!!! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Alright I’ll make the college post.
A lot of you are going to college now and I would say:
Please question everything that’s being sold to you, including credit cards and loans. Credit card companies target college freshman with astronomical APRs. Loan companies also target you. Some of them might be on your campus during your orientation. They’ll lure you in with a “free prize” wheel or a free hat or whatever. Don’t do it. They want to keep you under their thumb for 20+ years.
Be critical of Greek life. Sororities/Fraternities usually charge fees per semester. My sorority ended up being very toxic. I was hazed; you will likely be hazed as well. I made friends outside of it by joining clubs or just chilling with people in the food court. Not all Greek life is like this but a lot of it is.
Don’t pay $300 for a textbook that you can find online. A lot of the time an “updated” version of a textbook will just have a few words changed or the chapters switched around.
Check ratemyprofessors before you sign up for a class.
Take advantage of office hours.
Don’t overload yourself. Don’t take 20 units in your first semester. Your life is about to change. Please don’t do this to yourself. Take 9-15 units and see how it goes.
I have more to say but I don’t want to make the post super long. Just wanted to share some of my thoughts.
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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They actually prefer the little bit of downtime you give before they have to take the next order.
Source: I always ask, “I’m taking too long, right, haha?” Or “You wish I’d hurry up I bet?” And they alwaysssss say: take your time or this is my break or something like that. (And I don’t think they’re just being nice)
does anyone else get really anxious when the cashier hands you change and you’re hurriedly putting it away in your wallet so that the next customer in line can proceed or is that just me
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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data
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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They will NOT come out better for it
-SOURCE: public school teacher IRL
homeschool your children, i beg you. do not let them be educated by this degenerate world. they will not come out better for it.
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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#facts 💯💯💯💯💯💯
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Writing in a nutshell
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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Every Thing Is NOT for Every Body. #Facts!
HOWEVER ...
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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hiphophomeschool · 2 years
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Hello! My name is Lucy (or Sam), and my school year started Aug. 30th. I’ve been lurking around studyblr for almost a year now, and I decided it was finally time to start my own!
  Some things about me! • I’m 17 and use he/him, she/her and it/its pronouns
• I’m an autistic POC
• INFP
• US Homeschooler in high school (12th Year) 
• I’m the oldest of 7 children 
• I only speak English, hoping to start learning German and ASL soon 
• I’m trying to teach myself guitar, and how to skateboard, not having much luck 😅 
• I plan to go to college next fall, majoring in sociology. 
Classes I’m Taking 
• Precalculus • Physics • World History • Study of Science Fiction and Philosophical Literature • Creative Writing • Philosophy • American Sign Language • Study of Mythology, Folklore and the Occult • Sociology
 -
 My Interests • Anime • Video Games • Horror • Cosplay • Jewelry Making • Volleyball • Alt Fashion • Writing (Fantasy specifically) • Witchcraft • Mythology 
My Goals! 
• Hopefully better my handwriting! 
• Learn how to take notes 
• Be more productive, just generally 
• Start a bullet journal (and keep up with it) 
• Read more! After I hit 8th grade, reading started being very difficult for me; especially considering that I have an extremely hectic home life. I’d love to get back into it! 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Studyblrs That Inspire Me! @myhoneststudyblr @study-van @emmastudies @jeonchemstudy @sleepbreathestudy @starryuniversitas @vintage-lattes @athenastudying @accadamias
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