YOU, of all people, were home-schooled, with the ACE curriculum to boot???

lordpasternack wrote:Yeah - I fuckin' love oppressin' ma wimmin, like I love chowin' on ma bacon and tuggin' on ma ol' cock…
Pappa wrote:God is a cunt! I wank over pictures of Jesus! I love Darwin so much I'd have sex with his bones!!!!
Lady, I take my hat off for you! With that kind of a starting point, where&how&who you have ended up being is even more awesome. Pappa is soooo lucky!rachelbean wrote:Yep (and that's the normal reaction). The math (along with help from my dad) and English/grammar/etymology were seemingly better than what my counterparts in public school got but the science and history were horrific, and the required reading was a joke. Luckily I was already reading all the classics because it's just something I loved doing, but the lack of science education was something I didn't catch up on until much much later.
That's incredibly sweet, and means even more coming from you, RonjaRonja wrote:Lady, I take my hat off for you! With that kind of a starting point, where&how&who you have ended up being is even more awesome. Pappa is soooo lucky!rachelbean wrote:Yep (and that's the normal reaction). The math (along with help from my dad) and English/grammar/etymology were seemingly better than what my counterparts in public school got but the science and history were horrific, and the required reading was a joke. Luckily I was already reading all the classics because it's just something I loved doing, but the lack of science education was something I didn't catch up on until much much later.
lordpasternack wrote:Yeah - I fuckin' love oppressin' ma wimmin, like I love chowin' on ma bacon and tuggin' on ma ol' cock…
Pappa wrote:God is a cunt! I wank over pictures of Jesus! I love Darwin so much I'd have sex with his bones!!!!
I plan on instructing my child in obsessive cleaning and sweary outbursts, two of my strengths.Coito ergo sum wrote:I harbor a presumption against home schooling for one main reason:
Most parents are themselves incompetent to teach almost any subject.
She Who Must Be Obeyed got me trained. Just last night, having arrived home a bit late, I walked into the kitchen to find a plate on the counter and some stuff in the sink, from SWMBO'd having made some food for herself in my absence. SWMBO'd was upstairs in the shower, probably having just finished dinner. I was shocked to find that I was unable to leave the mess (small as it was) without cleaning it up. Rinse dishes, put in dishwasher, wash out sink and wipe counter and table and put everything in place. I mean, it almost disconcerted me. I'm supposed to be a slob, and this wasn't even my leavings...rats! I've become neat!Bella Fortuna wrote:I plan on instructing my child in obsessive cleaning and sweary outbursts, two of my strengths.Coito ergo sum wrote:I harbor a presumption against home schooling for one main reason:
Most parents are themselves incompetent to teach almost any subject.
That is a form of home schooling, I think.Ronja wrote:IIRC, we have managed to counter the "But I don't know how!" protest, which Younger Daughter is sometimes prone to, with words to the effect "We know you don't - but we also know that you can learn, our smart and handy girl!" Sometimes that has needed to be followed with a bit of "Just try it" or "I really need help and there's nobody else to ask" but in general we have been able to talk both girls into doing pretty much every chore and trying out every activity that we have thought would be good for them. Doing chores as a team also helps: if all other family members are working, social pressure becomes pretty heavy for a 10 or 12 year old.
The blatant "I don't want to" or "I'm too tired" we have countered just as blatantly, though: "Den som inte vill arbeta, hon ska inte heller äta" = She who does not want to work, will not eat, either. We have never yet needed to make good of that threat, because already before they were old enough to do real chores they learned that if they did not eat what was offered, they did not get anything else. Cottoned on to that pretty quickly, both of them did...
Hmm - this is not about home schooling at all anymore
I had seen scenes a bit like that - though nothing quite as OTT as what you describe - before we had kids, and my first and fundamental reaction was along the lines "But I'm too lazy to not do the work of teaching my kids to eat what is in front of them!" I.e. I really did not want the repeated, possibly daily, bother of negotiating about food (neither did MiM), so we chose to take the confrontations that came when they first discovered the words "No" and "Won't." Sometimes that meant that one girl was carried away from the dinner table kicking and screaming and locked into the shower room, and had to have the same food cold for supper, but we did not have to do that very many times until they realized that there was no getting around the rule "we eat what's for lunch/dinner/supper" - especially as they saw that we follow that rule ourselves.Coito ergo sum wrote: You identified one of my pet peeves there - when parents let their kids choose what is for dinner, to the point of making individualized meals. I was at a friend's house some years back, and I sat there dumbfounded as she entertained games and tantrums from the children as to which foods they wanted -- "I want this - no I want that" - yes, no, maybe, this, that, I'm not hungry, yes I am... And, it went on...I kept my place and didn't say anything, but man....I learned what I would never do in my house.
Tero wrote:Tim Tebow
Evangelical home schooling poster child
I agree with you, for the most part-- "This is what we have for dinner. If you don't want it, you're not getting something else."Coito ergo sum wrote:That is a form of home schooling, I think.Ronja wrote:IIRC, we have managed to counter the "But I don't know how!" protest, which Younger Daughter is sometimes prone to, with words to the effect "We know you don't - but we also know that you can learn, our smart and handy girl!" Sometimes that has needed to be followed with a bit of "Just try it" or "I really need help and there's nobody else to ask" but in general we have been able to talk both girls into doing pretty much every chore and trying out every activity that we have thought would be good for them. Doing chores as a team also helps: if all other family members are working, social pressure becomes pretty heavy for a 10 or 12 year old.
The blatant "I don't want to" or "I'm too tired" we have countered just as blatantly, though: "Den som inte vill arbeta, hon ska inte heller äta" = She who does not want to work, will not eat, either. We have never yet needed to make good of that threat, because already before they were old enough to do real chores they learned that if they did not eat what was offered, they did not get anything else. Cottoned on to that pretty quickly, both of them did...
Hmm - this is not about home schooling at all anymore
You identified one of my pet peeves there - when parents let their kids choose what is for dinner, to the point of making individualized meals. I was at a friend's house some years back, and I sat there dumbfounded as she entertained games and tantrums from the children as to which foods they wanted -- "I want this - no I want that" - yes, no, maybe, this, that, I'm not hungry, yes I am... And, it went on...I kept my place and didn't say anything, but man....I learned what I would never do in my house.
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