One the
few things that new homeschooling families may fear they will miss is
the array of
traditional school celebrations of holidays and seasonal
changes. As you will see though, when you join a homeschool group,
subscribe to a homeschooling magazine and/or peruse some of the
homeschooling sites online, the traditional holiday and seasonal
related school events can be easily replaced with just as special
activities you create or find in the community.
Remember,
homeschooling means more time to build upon and create family
traditions, and it also means that you can be more creative in
finding ways to celebrate the special times of year with others.
For
example, say one of your family's Christmas highlights was the
school's Christmas (or winter festival) program where the children
performed carols. An alternative, and a charitable one at that, could
be getting together with a few other homeschooling families for
caroling at a local nursing home or pediatrics unit. If you have
budding actors in the family or homeschool group, you could even put
together a play or skit to perform as well. Or your family could join
up with others for some old-fashioned neighborhood caroling. Churches
also provide many opportunities along these lines as well.
Other
Christmas activities could include crafts, making felt applique stockings and making and selling wreaths
to earn money for a special holiday outing or charity, collecting
toys for less fortunate children, etc. These can be family activities
or ones you do with other families, clubs or a church group. The same
would go for any holiday. Other holiday traditions like making
Mother's Day and Father's Day cards at school can be done at home
with the help of the other parent or a sibling.
Homeschooling
groups are great for organizing activities like this. One holiday
that is probably more painful than fun for many kids in formal school
settings is Valentine's Day. It's great for kids who are popular and
get their Valentine's bags filled with cards from their classmates,
but it can be crushing for the child who doesn't get many cards. Many
teachers now require everyone gets a card, but then that has its
problems too. Valentine's Day is a great day for building your own
family traditions. One fun activity is to pick up some old-fashioned
valentine making supplies (such as doilies and pink construction
paper) and make Valentine's to mail to friends and relatives. Trust
me; these will be much more treasured than an email greeting.
Celebrating
holidays without the constrictions of the school also means you can
celebrate them in ways that reflect your family's values, not school
regulations. You can also integrate holidays into the children's
lessons with both fun, hands-on activities as well as researching, at
the library and/or online, aspects such as history and worldwide
traditions.
The
changing seasons lend themselves to fun activities for homeschooling
families, and again you will find a treasure trove of information at
the library and online. When autumn approaches, for example, do a
search for children's fall activities or leaf crafts. Then, go for a
fall family hike and collect leaves and items to use in your craft.
Seasonal changes can easily become part of lessons. Actually you can
integrate seasons and holidays for that matter into just about any
subject, from history, literature and math to writing, science and
music.
But what
about the long-standing tradition of summer vacation? Homeschooling
doesn't have to be year round, although you may not want to take
three months off from learning. Summer's still a great time to take
things slower and to enjoy nature outings like camping, river rafting
or day trips to the beach. There's no rule about when or how you
celebrate summer. Some families like to declare a vacation from
school work for two or three weeks (or more), and then just spend a
little less time on school for the rest of the season, while savoring
the delights of summer.
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