In speaking to a homeschooling mom whose 18 year old homeschooler could really use one more year to be ready for college, but because of his age and the fact that he has done 4+ years at highschool level, he is determined to graduate and head to college, it dawned on my that we need a one-room school house mentality.
If you ever read Little House on the Prairie, you might remember that grade levels were not so cut and dry. The child finished school when they had completed the required work. It was not unusual to graduate young. It was not unusual to graduate at an older age.
You'd think that as homeschoolers, we'd have a little more flexibility where grade levels were concerned, but ...not so much if the goal is college. It is not possible to put a six year span on a transcript and call it high school. The goal college would call that a less-than-rigorous program and put them out of the running for competitive colleges.
To counter this problem, we can do this for younger grades up to grade 8. We can set a bar of where we want the child to be before they start high school level. For instance, they may need to be through Algebra in math, and their reading and writing would have to be at a certain level, as well as geography and basic science knowledge. Once they have reached those guidelines, the child is ready for a high school curriculum, which you can do in the traditional 4 years. If they are above average advanced, they can dual enroll in their senior year or use CLEP exams to accelerate their education.
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1 comment:
I agree with the post 100%. The industrial revolution had a profound effect on education. It puts students on the factory line and tries to box them up, package them, then market them to schools. This was perpetuated by "no child left behind" as it assumes that students are behind instead of meeting the students where they are at and developing them step by step.
Great Post.
Dave
www.socraticblogger.com
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