December 1st, 2007

Socialization Standard: Fool’s Gold

On a board dedicated to homeschoolers, a mom was worried that her kids were missing something. Here is my response.

If you don’t know already, I have actually recently worked on the property of a public school (a split shift, not working for the school but for the YMCA providing before and after school care). And I have provided after school care for PS kids for years. I’m adding this so that you know I’m not just guessing at some of these experiences, for a staunch homeschooler, I do have a decent amount of current experience with the school system.

So………

You are buying into a culturally scripted and developed standard of socialization. For you to be concerned your children are “missing out on” these social events, you must, to some degree, believe that the socialization provided by the structure of building school settings is the standard by which we should evaluate the quality of children’s social life.

Over the years, I’ve been asked dozens of times about “socialization”. I used to quickly answer with a list of “stuff we do” that includes other kids.

“Oh, well we do church, a drama program, Little League, …….” Until one day I realized that I was trying to make my children’s social calendar a match to that of a ps’ed kid. I was operating with the assumption that the socialization that most kids do have in our culture is the best.

I encourage you to challenge this assumption. It’s an arbitrary standard, not an organic one. The socialization process and events that emerge from school settings are overwhelmingly the most common for kids; but are they the best? What evidence do we have, really, that most kids need, thrive on and desire that kind of socialization? During this evaluation, don’t assume that a child enjoying it means it’s a good thing. All humans can and do enjoy things that are not, in the long term, in our best interests.

What I’ve noticed in school settings (directly) and through critical evaluation with my after school clients:

1) Recess is often a challenging time for kids socially.

2) Recess is an event that ends very quickly in elementary school.

3) Kids are often undersupervised in school settings. This creates many problems:

a) Kids tend to teach each other more age-expected behavior. A group of 8 year olds undersupervised can only trade 8 year old behavior.

b) Bullying and teasing standards are low. Yes, ps’ed kids go through bullying awareness programs. But because of the nature of socialization in groups in school settings, much bullying flies under the radar. This bullying is still largely unrecognized at best and dismissed under damaging paradigms such as “kids will be kids” and “they’ve got to learn how to deal with it sometime” and “let them work it out themselves” and “don’t let them know it bothers you and it will stop”. These culturally accepted remedies and responses are so jaded that they are rarely examined for validity. In truth, they allow for a tremendous amount of everyday bullying that is not even recognized. This from normal, average kids that are not at risk. The bullied continue to get teased and the bullies never learn that what they are doing is unacceptable.

4) The social hierarchy is present in nearly every group of undersupervised kids. The popular by cool dynamic is present. The older kids are granted automatic reverence and preference. Popularity over character is chosen often. Again, this happens with average kids daily and is usually assumed so normal that it’s rare for it to register on people’s radar for the damage it creates.

Children need interaction with people, age peers included. But they bring themselves and their maturity to those settings. They therefore need the guidance and presense of adults to coach, guide and assist them. We tend to allow kids to fend for themselves socially far too early and with inadequate preparation.

Sure, schools have parades, celebrations, recess for the littles, parties, carnivals, etc. But at what cost?

I would give up any 10 of those celebrations to have not experienced some of the issues I documented above.

I’d give up both proms (Jr. and Sr.) to have had more adults teach us how to not bully and how to react to bullying (beyond the passive approach of “don’t let them bother you. That one = let them abuse you more).

My school social experience was not awful, btw. It was average. That is what is pathetic.

Develop your own crowd, rituals and standards by which you judge quality socialization. Your kids will benefit.

October 18th, 2007

Before and After

Pic of me at my highest:

Me at the Rodeo Last Year

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Today:

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

This is related to homeschooling. The Alamo is the background in one of them.

October 6th, 2007

Homeschooling, The Cops, Daytime Incarceration

Last Wednesday, I dropped my boys off at a local outdoor, free, county provided skatepark.

Not that it should matter, but they had both done a bunch of work for the week already. We have Wednesday morning off from “other kids” (I homeschool 2 kids in addition to my own for my income). They had Spanish class scheduled for later that day.

I get a call from my oldest that my youngest “landed on his face”. My oldest evaluates “It’s bad enough to come home but not bad enough to go to the hospital”.

I arrive to see my 2 boys engaged in conversation with 2 police officers (the park is adjacent to a police station). The Officers are not there because of the injury. They are there because “someone called in” that 2 boys were “not in school” and at the skatepark.

That was irritating enough, but one of the Officers then went on to say “I’m not sure, but I think homeschooled children need to be home during school hours.”

In my best Homeschooler for Political and Other Reasons Voice, I said “Officer _________, I *am* sure. You’ll need to check your ordinances because that assumption is incorrect”.

They wanted me to stay so that another Officer could arrive and take information to log the injury. Um, no? Kids get injured and into their parents vehicle all the time at that park without an incident report. I was not staying and making us late for Spanish.

On the way to get popsicles (my method of nursing for lip injuries), I called the Texas Homeschool Coalition, “just in case”. Officer __________ had called my home for “just a report” by the time I got home 20 minutes later. I did call him back. He asked if I “knew my driver’s license number”.

No.

“Do you have it handy?”

“Yes”

“Um, will you give it to me?”

“No.”

“It’s only a report for our log”

“If it’s only a report, my dl# won’t be needed”.

Isn’t there a *crime* they can be investigating?

September 26th, 2007

Brochure

I now have a brochure to print detailing my Parenting Coaching services.

I also have a resume that might interest you.

September 25th, 2007

Private Giggle

I now have GOYBP business cards. I gave out my first ones today.

The first went to my former therapist (I’d use her now, actually, but my health insurance doesn’t cover mental health).

The second went to my son’s therapist.

I find that very funny.

September 24th, 2007

New Place for New Stuff

I’ve added a new page to my discipline site for new items, tips, posts and ideas.

September 23rd, 2007

Phew.

A Day in the Life of the HappilyMarried Happy Homeschooler

I picked up my kids from a sleepover (one in trade since I’ll be watching her kids this week overnight) plus an additional.

Today, I was one of the organizers for the “All Church Birthday Party” after worship. We divided the year into quarters, decorated each quarter for a celebration using events that fall into their quarter, fed 100+ people, played trivia, pin the tail on the donkey, sang Happy Birthday.

Oh, and I reconvened my Contemporary Issues Adult Bible Study Class after our summer break. I introduced the curriculum (eclectic and budget friendly, just like I do at home) and got caught up on the life and prayer needs of my class. I used to teach in Chandler, AZ, using Faithlink. It’s Methodist, but us Presbyterians are pretty open minded. ;-)

Cleaned up after the after church event, went to Blockbuster in search of “Facing the Giants” to show tonight at my home for the kick off event of our new Jr. High Youth Fellowship. (Kick off …. get it if you’ve seen the movie?). Dropped one child home to be picked up later, met another one at my home to supervise until her mom gets home.

Located the missing headset since last night, found the one working remote so my oldest could “Watch the game”.

It’s 2:15. I have about 2 minutes before I’ll want to get the house in order so a bunch of kids can come over and mess it up.

September 20th, 2007

New Article and My Space

I cut and paste a new article from my space account to my discipline pages.

BTW, I started My Space to keep track of my son’s.