This is from Ruf's levels. I'm starting a new spinoff topic!
My gut-check back then screamed "Pull him out!" It was nice to have expert support for that.
I envy you homeschoolers in so many ways. Sometimes I wonder how much my kids could learn if they could move at their own pace every day for 3 or 4 hours, instead of just twice a week for an hour or so. But homeschooling just isn't an option for us. That said, I have high hopes for the new ability-grouped school this fall and for the local gifted school that starts at grade 6.
Lately I've been wondering if homeschooling and programs like the DYS and the talent searches will have a societal effect in the future.
I'm not sure of exact numbers (is anyone?), but the estimates I've seen indicate that there are a lot of very bright kids being homeschooled now, especially compared to the 70s and the 80s when at least a lot of us were growing up. Plus, there are the online programs, the DYS, and other things.
Obviously, the bright kids would be just as bright regardless, but I'm wondering if there will be an overall positive effect on their experiences in college and the workplace, mostly due to increased knowledge and better study skills.
I ask adult GT types I know if they had trouble developing study skills when they got older and coursework became more demanding. Many say yes; I had it but forced myself to get past it. This is one of the reasons why I present challenging work to my kids.
I don't remember a lot of talent-search-type things when I was growing up, past the National Merit Scholars. I don't really think that many kids were homeschooled in the 70s and the 80s when I was a kid. Parental involvement in education was also very different then where I lived.
I remember going through a lot of stuff that I read about here, namely the teachers never really knew what to do with me. Some of them tried and some of them didn't, and, well, that was it.
Anyway, I know that schools and education philosophies are a huge source of frustration for many of us, but I also wonder if homeschooling and afterschooling and all these programs will create a large positive effect down the road, for reasons that aren't fully apparent right now. Just the very existence of all these things, and the fact that they're starting to bring bright people out of the closet, may have effects that we can't predict.
Thoughts?
Val