Re: Home education and extropians

From: Grant Sparks (grant@sparks.to)
Date: Thu May 21 1998 - 15:45:52 MDT


Grant Sparks
grant@sparks.to

-----Original Message-----
From: Technotranscendence <neptune@mars.superlink.net>
To: extropians@extropy.com <extropians@extropy.com>
Date: Thursday, 21 May 1998 20:57
Subject: Re: Home education and extropians

>At 06:14 PM 5/20/98 EDT, CALYK <CALYK@aol.com> wrote:
>><< << I'd be interested to hear (off-list if you prefer) if anyone else on
>>this
>> list are home educating their children or know of anyone who is >>
>> our daughter is only 2 1/2 so it isn't yet a big issue...but i'd like
too.
>>my
>> wife is concerned about the lack of social developement supposedly
associated
>> with home schooling... any thoughts or data on that, Grant?.. Cori
>> >>
>>
>>In addition to grant's post, you could also maybe put them in a summer
camp or
>>some funner kind of social group. Those seem fun, just not the religious
>>summer camps. I think there are benefits from a good pre-school though,
but
>>into higher elementary and beyond home school seems a lot better. I have
good
>>memories from Montessori school, but who knows what schools will be like
in
>>the near future, my old highschool just set up a graphic arts computer lab
>>with a lot of high-end programs, it also has a video lab and a photography
>>lab. Chemistry labs and that kind of thing are ok too, so perhaps access
to
>>things is what we're looking for.
>
>What we should really look for is whether homeschooled kids are better
>in social interaction than non-homeschooled kids. The socialization
>issue always comes up with homeschooling, yet I've seen no evidence --
>just anecdotes -- about whether kids are better or worse off with home-
>schooling.
>
>My gut feeling is that they are better or no different in this area, but
I'd
>like
>to see some studies done.
>
>Cheers!
>
>Daniel Ust
>



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:49:07 MST