In article <1cqlodhj9qana4k2dpslmciab75qk9jh0c@news.giganews.com>,
Russell Upsomgrubb <RusUps@FoodWest.com> wrote:
> On Sat, 01 Sep 2018 17:07:49 GMT, Bebub <Bebub@thegate.com> wrote:
>
> >While I agree that home schooling is good, and the right of every parent. It
> >unfortunately does not include one major Learning experience, Social
> >Interaction. That's a very important part of growing up, so if you choose to
> >home school, make sure your children find and make friends. The nice thing
> >about H.S, that is not included in regular school is the lack of bullying.
> >That's great, having no friends is not. Have a great day, and as a home
> >schooler myself I'll try to find some of my old books and make them
> >available to everyone here. (They are probably way out of date, but still
> >have some value, especially the History books that have been rewritten,
> >leaving out some very important issues this country faced, like they never
> >happened.)
> >
> My daughter homeschooled my grandson for a number of years, who had
> social interactions with other homeschooled kids in their community.
> He turned out to be a very intelligent and socially well-adjusted
> young man. Like many other homeschooled kids, he was able to complete
> his lessons in less than eight hour because there were no ignoramuses
> that needed extensive repetition in class to get the information
> learned. That left him sufficient time to socialize.
>
> Never had the urge to shoot up his school when he got into high
> school, either. Then again, my daughter didn't let him eat shitty
> "foods" when he was growing up, including today's MIchelle Obama-style
> wimp-assed school cafeteria stuff, ate lots of meat with it's 'deadly'
> saturated fats and 'deadly' cholesterol, so I suspect his brain is
> better developed than many kids who subsist on all the crap in the
> center aisles of the grocery, too.
>
> Russell Upsomgrubb
>
>
>
Yes, with homeschooling you can avoid interactions with people of
different races, cultures, religions and histories, as well as avoid
those subjects that require open minds and reasoning based on reality,
like science. So they grow up with people just like you.
--
Dobson
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