New Home Schooling Support Group: Gisborne

New Home Educating Support Group: Gisborne

There is a new support group being formed in Gisborne. If you live in and around this area then you will be most welcome to contact Tundi and the rest of the group. Come to one activity, some or all. Come to activities or be part of the group planning activities. Whatever best suits your situation.
Gisborne Home Educators
Contact Tundi Blank
Phone: (06) 8632027

THE 11th ANNUAL HOME EDUCATION CELEBRATION

STOP PRESS!!    STOP PRESS!!    STOP PRESS!!

Auckland Home Educators Inc

is pleased to announce that …

THE 11th ANNUAL HOME EDUCATION CELEBRATION

‘Unity in the Community’

IS RETURNING TO CORNWALL PARK!!!!!!

THURSDAY 3 FEBRUARY 2011 from 10.30am

Log it in the diary now for your family, friends, and supporters!

This date has special significance – schoolchildren will be starting back for Term 1 during that week and we’ll be celebrating our lifestyle in style.  It’s a great chance to kick off the year by bringing families together from across the whole Auckland region, meeting others from outside your own smaller area. In the past, we’ve also welcomed families from Whangarei, Coromandel, Waikato and Tauranga so non-Aucklanders are very welcome, too!

Although based on a BYO picnic, activities and workshops are also being planned by the main organising team as I write.  I know they’d love a few more hands to make light work of bringing together a successful event for the whole community..

For full details …

see the attached flyer

go to www.ahe.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/AHE-11th-Annual-Home-Education-Celebration-Promo-1.pdf

or visit www.ahe.org.nz

The Annual Celebration Team 2011 looks forward to welcoming you all for some sensational summer fun!

Auckland Home Educators Inc

www.ahe.org.nz

networking across Auckland’s region & beyond for current & prospective home educators

Young farm worker dies in tractor accident from Homeschooling Pioneer family

Please pray for the Pratt family. The Pratt’s were amoung the first families to begin home schooling in the Manawatu. They were very involved in the Manawatu Home Educators in it’s very early days.

Young farm worker dies in

tractor accident from home

educating pioneer family

A young farm worker has been killed after the tractor he was driving appears to have rolled.

22-year-old Samuel Pratt, from Ashhurst, had been using a tractor to turn over soil prior to planting at a farm off Huia Iti Road, Pongoroa.

At 9.30pm when Samuel hadn’t arrived back at the farmhouse a concerned colleague went looking for him. The colleague found Samuel’s tractor in a paddock on its roof midway down a steep hill. Samuel was deceased and trapped by the tractor.

Heavy machinery was used to lift the tractor unit to free Samuel from the scene.

The death is not being treated as suspicious but the circumstances are being investigated by Police on behalf of the Coroner. The Department of Labour has been notified.

Does home schooling work?

Does home schooling work?

Rotorua’s home schooling community is growing. The Daily Post education reporter Kristy Martin speaks to a couple of local  mums about the benefits of teaching their children at home.

Rotorua home schoolers include

Madelyn Skilton, 12 (left), Anna Pilaar, 11, Ellen Bethune, 12, Simon Scothern, Aimee Wolsey, 14, Alex Bethune, 9, and Michael Pilaar, 13.

Photo / Andrew Warner 251110aw13

Contrary to popular belief, not all home school families are weird and highly religious – not in the 21st century anyway.

Rotorua’s Denise Wolsey, who home schools her 14-year-old daughter, Aimee, says home schooling families are misunderstood.

She has the impression most people think they’re weird and religious.

“Most people think home schoolers are wrapped in cotton, but that’s far from reality,” she says.

Fellow home schooling mother Leslie Bethune says there’s now an increasing number of tertiary-educated professionals choosing to home school in a completely new way.

Both women are part of the growing home schooling community in Rotorua and say most people question it because they don’t understand it.

Legally in New Zealand, all children between the ages of 6 and 16 must be enrolled in a registered school.

Advertisement

However, they can get an exemption from enrolment with the permission of the Ministry of Education.

The ministry needs to be sure parents are able to educate their children regularly and as well as a registered school.

Home school parents are not obliged to follow the national curriculum or create a mini-school at home.

Denise believes her children are far better off being home schooled.

“I feel responsible for their education so I make sure I expose them to things.”

She says the main difference between home schooling and public school is that parents can teach their children at the level they’re at.

“The huge difference for us is that if they need extra help, you don’t have to worry about 20 other kids.”

While it is a bit more difficult for home school children to get qualifications, there are a number of options.

Some home school students are able to align with local schools and do internal NCEA assessments or sign up to sit external NCEA exams via the New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) website. Another option is to sit the Cambridge exams.

Despite that, Denise says being at home means her children can focus on things in which they’re interested and she never has to worry about them missing out on learning things they would in school.

She says one of the most common questions people ask is whether home schooled children are adequately socialised. She believes they are more socialised than children who go to school.

“They’re exposed to life – they don’t just sit at home.”

Home school lessons include maths, English, French, Spanish, history, geography, science, art, graphics, music, photography, drama, horse riding, swimming and more.

This year, some have also taken courses in kayaking, mountainbiking, computing, sewing, cooking, skiing and te reo.

Denise and Leslie say the Rotorua home school community often organises group classes and excursions.

Modern technology plays a huge part in the way they teach their children. Via the internet, home school children are able to take courses or qualifications from anywhere in the world.

Leslie says many of the classes are live in virtual classrooms with a real teacher and real classmates.

She likes the relaxed, flexible nature of home schooling.

“We do things at our own pace without having to compare with other students.”

Leslie says she has confidence in home schooling because she has a good idea of her children’s quality of work.

She believes home schooling allows her children to get a more well-rounded education.

View link here: http://www.rotoruadailypost.co.nz/life-style/news/does-home-schooling-work/3932114/

[Link: Home schooling myths and facts]

Keystone Magazine October 2010

Keystone Magazine October 2010

Edited by Craig S. Smith

38 page Journal.
The 21cm x 29.7cm (A4 sized), 38 pages

Contents October 2010:

Feature Family: Stephen & Andrea Thierry, from Geelong, VIC, Australia

The Faith of Us Fathers: 15 Things a Father Must Do with His Son, Part 4, Final by Craig Smith

Teaching Tips: One Myth & Two Truths: Nurturing Competent Communicators by Andrew Pudewa

Bits of Books: The Philosophy of the Christian Curriculum by Rousas J. Rushdoony – Humanism as an Educational World View

Home Education Research: A Revealing Review

When the Going Gets Tough: Outrageously Rebellious Children, Part 2 by Jenny Waldron

Over a Cuppa: Lies Public Schools Tell — Part 9 by Patricia Alspach

Parenting Tips: Preventing & Regaining the Rebellious Heart by Craig & Barbara Smith

Random Notes:  Everything We Think About Schooling Is Wrong, Part 3 (Final)

An Interview with John Taylor Gatto

The DARE Programme in Schools

Reviews:

DIANA WARING a veteran of more than 10 years as a key-note speaker to home school conventions said, We LOVE Keystone!! Its a fabulous magazine for Home Schoolers!

JOHN ANGELICO editor of the Australian Home Schooling newsletter Families Honouring Christ said, This top quality journal of international ranking comes out of New Zealand.

To order do one of the following:

send email to sales@hef.org.nz with visa number

(Individual copies $6.00)

(1 year https://hef.org.nz/about/keystone-magazine-only-1-year-sub/ and 2 year https://hef.org.nz/about/keystone-magazine-only-2-year-sub/ subscriptions)

post cheque or visa number to PO Box 9064, Palmerston North

fax: 06 357-4389

phone: 06 357-4399

Trademe (fees added): http://www.trademe.co.nz/Members/Listings.aspx?member=2366144

Sella (No added fees): http://www.sella.co.nz/store/4ym9qg/home-education-foundation/display-100/