June 1, 2023

Search Results for: Employers look for right attitude

Employers Look for Right Attitude

This Wellington Dominion survey is probably even more relevant today than it was back in 1995.

Almost half of all unemployed people hold educational qualifications but in a recent survey employers ranked qualifications at the bottom of a list of 20 desirable attributes for selecting potential employees, the Employment Service says.

In a survey of 500 randomly selected employers, qualifications came last in traits employers considered most desirable for employees. Top of the list was:

  1. attitude followed by:
  2. honesty
  3. tidy appearance
  4. amiability
  5. enthusiasm
  6. reliability
  7. communication skills
  8. motivation
  9. punctuality
  10. experience
  11. flexibility
  12. fast learning
  13. efficiency
  14. commitment
  15. knowledge
  16. education
  17. interest
  18. personality
  19. stability
  20. willingness to work
  21. skills AND
  22. qualifications

(From Wellington Dominion, 6 October 1995.)

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Please feel free to forward, email, share, etc – thankyou

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From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated: 30 September 2013:  One year on (Craig Smith’s Health) page 7 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

Information on getting started: https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

Information on getting an exemption: https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

Exemption Form online:https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-exemption-form-now-online/

This link is motivational:https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

Coming Events:https://hef.org.nz/2013/some-coming-events-for-home-education-during-2013-2/

Beneficiaries: https://hef.org.nz/2013/where-to-for-beneficiary-families-now-that-the-social-security-benefit-categories-and-work-focus-amendment-bill-has-passed-its-third-reading/

Beyond Covid

Home Education/Distant Education: Beyond Covid

Home Schooling/Home education/Distant Education 

We a need to keep our children safe

We have seen a huge increase of families wanting to educate their children at home since teachers have been mandated.

Educating a child at home can allow a parent to “light a fire in their hearts and minds” without competition or pressure. We want to give our children a love of learning, where they never stop learning. So how can we achieve this in our homes?

First of all according to the WHO, if your children are in school it is implying conformed consent for the jab because you could have prevented them from going to school on jabbed days. https://www.who.int/immunization/programmes_systems/policies_strategies/consent_note_en.pdf

Education choices
1. Public school
2. Private/Christian school (most receive State funding)
These two are out because they are no longer safe for our children

3. Distant education (possibly receive State funding, most probably don’t)
4. Exemptions/Registration for home education
These two are still possible because our children remain in our care. They are both still connected to the Government, so better to avoid if possible. (If home education is banned by canceling children’s exemptions/registrations or Distant education then we need to be prepared for…

5. Home educate/Distant Educate using Common Law/Sovereignty/Natural Law/Magna Carta/Equity Law/Law of Mankind/Constitution etc.
6. Home educate/Distant Educate (without State/Govt funding) hiring tutors – ? Setting up our own private schools (without State/Govt funding) where most Education happens at home (or the school if that is what the parent prefers).

7. Just begin educating our children at home

Now we are being told to expect the worse
But to hope for the best.

So the worst is that home education could be banned. There is NO talk of this at the moment in most Countries. We are just wanting to prepare for the worst and really hope that it doesn’t happen. Although Countries like Panama, Colombia, Latvia, and Ethiopia are facing increasingly unfavourable conditions. Along with Countries like Germany, Sweden and France it is banned or very restricted. So there is reason for us to be preparing for the worst.

Incase it does happen some of us need to be looking into our options in the Countries and States we live in. Most families are too busy with life and home schooling their children and just want to comply. We need to support them in this.

But I am looking for a few pioneers to find out about Law for Mankind/Sovereignty/Magna Carta etc in your Country and/or State and understand it. Then begin Home Education or Distance Education under this, and have the authorities come around, and leave you alone to continue Home Educating or Distance Educating.

Then we need you to come up with clear statements that you applied and were successful for two reasons:
1. For those other pioneers that want the Government out of their lives
2. If/when Home Education/Distance Education is banned then we need to share these statements around, far and wide, quickly, for others to follow, so they know they have an alternative to sending their children back to school.

I would love to have people looking into and studying groups like the Quakers, Amish and Mennonites. We are trying to get our heads around common law and Sovereignty etc. we want to find people already home educating like this to pick their brains.

There are several methods/styles/approaches that families have used over the years.

https://www.homeschool.com/top10/top8homeschoolingmethods-asp/

 https://www.nchenz.org.nz/homeschooling-approaches/

l would like to add to these approaches Beyond Covid as an approach. You may like to take one of the approaches above and expand on it, mix and match the approaches or start from scratch. So this approach would include the 3Rs – reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmatic. It only takes 2-4 years to teach these tools to our children. You teach a child how to read then they read to learn. Often boys learn to write a lot later than girls, they need to build their upper arm muscles  – so relax and let the boys guide you (less tears). Once our children have basic maths skills we can incorporate maths (and other subjects like science etc) in a lot of what we do. Some children will want to go a lot further in their maths (and other subjects) by taking on Algebra, Geometry and Trigonometry etc for their future careers.

So what will education look like Beyond Covid?

We can brain storm with our children on this. Some ideas are:

1. Sourcing an old diesel machines: generators etc
2. Learning how to make diesel
3. Growing herbs
4. Making salves, ointments, tinctures, oils, herbal remedies
5. Growing gardens and orchids
6. To think independently of their/our peers
7. To be empathetic to those in need
8. Basic survival skills
9. Learning how to cook from scratch
10. Learning basic first aid
11. Leaning what weeds are edible or useful
12. Finances/budgeting
13. Protection
14. Communications
15. World views
16. History
17. Problem solving skills
18. Research
19. Logic
20. Music/drama
21. Basic building
22. Homesteading skills
23. Bee keeping
24. permaculture
25. Hunting/fishing/home butchery
26. Sewing, hand crafts
27. Hairdressing
28. Mechanics/engineering

29. Memory work, poems etc

30. For Christians: Family Worship; Individual Worship; Corporate Worship; memorising verses and books of the Bible

In other words everything we will be learning include our children. As we do some of the above or come up with other things with our children we will be modelling these things. They will be keen to learn them because we are keen to learn.

Almost half of all unemployed people hold educational qualifications but in a (1995) survey employers ranked qualifications at the bottom of a list of 20 desirable attributes for selecting potential employees, the Employment Service says.

In a survey of 500 randomly selected employers, qualifications came last in traits employers considered most desirable for employees.

1. attitude followed by:
2. honesty
3. tidy appearance
4. amiability
5. enthusiasm
6. reliability
7. communication skills
8. motivation
9. punctuality
10. experience
11. flexibility
12. fast learning
13. efficiency
14. commitment
15. knowledge
16. education
17. interest
18. personality
19. stability
20. willingness to work
21. skills AND
22. qualifications

https://hef.org.nz/?s=Employers+look+for+right++attitude

The above attributes are what we want to see in our children and we can achieve these by working hard around our homes and in the community. As we bring our children home and in the circumstances we are in at the moment the above attributes maybe far more important than qualifications in the future.

Now some of our children will need to go on to get qualifications but the above attributes will help them to achieve their qualifications in a shorter time and possibly in new ways in the future.

Our three greatest tools when Home Educating and Distance Educating are:

1. Reading aloud to our children a lot during the day

2. Hospitality

3. Getting references whenever our children do work experience, help a neighbour or relative or any work, paid or volunteering. These references are like gold. Employers will often overlook qualifications for good references.

Things to consider:

1. Study the approaches above.

2. Fill out the registration forms/exemptions your Country or State require whether you send it in our not. It can be a helpful exercise for some.

3. Find others locally who will look into Law for Mankind/common law/Sovereignty/Magna Carta/Equity Law/Constitution etc. Study the issues, come up with clear statements you can use, apply them, see these tested by the authorities.
4. Then make a list of what you are doing, and what you did when the authorities came around, for families who won’t have time to do the study, and don’t want to put their children in school if Home Educators/Distant Educators is banned. Also add a couple of families and their testimony of how it worked for them.
5. Then if Home Education/Distant Education is banned send this statement to all Home educators/Distant Educators you know and to support groups – send it far and wide. It doesn’t matter if we double up in sending this to several people or several support groups. We will just need to get this information out, so people know they have an alternative to sending their children to school.

Helpful links to get you started studying the above:

Meet Your Strawman:

https://duckduckgo.com/?q=meet+your+strawman+youtube&iax=videos&ia=videos&iai=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DME7K6P7hlko

Another helpful link on the straw man: https://stillnessinthestorm.com/2013/08/yourstrawmancom-meet-your-strawman/

common law:

https://www.millnerknight.com.au/blog/answers/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-common-law-system/

Sovereignty:

Magna Carter:

Law for Mankind:

https://t.me/+atvPbjJXabQyZWQ1

https://thesovereignsway.com/

I would like people to contact me with what they have found works in their own Countries and States so I can add it here to help others.  Countries I have had zooms with so far:

Australia:

Constitution Act 1900 https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Senate/Powers_practice_n_procedures/Constitution/preamble

and https://www.foundingdocs.gov.au/resources/transcripts/cth1_doc_1900.pdf

Common Law https://commonlaw.earth/

New Zealand:

The Purple Thumb Community https://www.purplethumbcommunity.com

The Maori Rangers https://www.maorirangersecuritydivision.com

Te Wakaminenga o NGA Hapu O Nu Tireni/ https://nzhistory.govt.nz/media/interactive/the-declaration-of-independence

Ko Huiarau original Maori Parliament video 1999 presentation Mahinarangi Forbes https://youtu.be/Zj2fOpEIxKQ

Concerned PeopleLaw Counsel https://www.cplawcounsel.org/?fbclid=IwAR15fEoe_EXIFnJ7oLU7lui_bsd_A1SN4rL3sg0zW7JwRUpGqkN3SFY23h0

Philippines:

USA:

 

Suggestions for memory work to help with learning poems, Bible verse and whole books of the Bible: https://hef.org.nz/2003/training-childrens-minds/

 

Link to my book with links to most chapters: https://hef.org.nz/2010/training-our-children-by-craig-and-barbara-smith/

 

Barbara Smith

+61 4 29531588

hef.barbara@gmail.com

barbara@hef.org.nz

https://www.hef.org.nz

Facebook

Home Education in New Zealand: https://www.facebook.com/groups/174211400495/

Home Education Foundation: https://www.facebook.com/HomeEducationFoundationNZAus/

Families For Freedom Alliance: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1778347132355041/

Applying for an Exemption to Educate At Home

On specialexemption cover cheque_Page_1

normally $7.00

For October and November $5.00 by ordering through sales@hef.org.nz or ph 06 357-4399

Bulk orders October and November

5 or more $3.50 each

10 or more $2.50 each

(all prices include postage)

A snippet from the booklet:

A Collection of
Exemption Tips and Ideas

by Craig Smith

Introduction

Seriously considering the option to educate your own children at home, rescuing them from the state’s schooling institutions, is one of the best moves you will ever
make. Teaching your own children is taking the government of your children back away from the state. The state never had any Biblically valid claim to educationally govern your children anyway. Your family’s cohesion and integrity as a functional unit is set to be greatly and very profitably enhanced. All the studies that have been done in this area show that your children are about to excel beyond their peers in both academics and social skills. Instead of the politically correct curriculum of the current Ministry of Education, with all the special interest group add-ons, you are about to step outside the box and discover the whole entire universe of skills and knowledge that is available for you to pursue…and most of it is absolutely free of charge!
Be assured that most of the people in the Ministry who will be reading and assessing your application are fairly positive about home education: they’ve seen the results and they like what they see. They are professionals and do their best to eliminate any personal or even professional bias they may have toward or against any particular educational approach. Consequently, this exemption application is virtually a blank cheque being handed to you by the Ministry of Education! Yes!! You have before you an incredible degree of freedom and flexibility to hand-craft a curriculum tailor made to your child’s ability, maturity, interests, passions, aspirations, inclinations, aptitudes, his or her favourite/most efficient ways to learn and assimilates knowledge, as well as your own family culture and expectations.
What I mean is this: no one on this earth is more motivated for your child’s success than you. No one is more willing to spend the blood, sweat, toil and tears that may be required to see your child mature to full potential. No one knows your child better than you. No one has already done more for your child than you have. I mean, you couldn’t pay anyone to do what you have already done for your child. It is quite probable that no one else except your spouse is as close to him/her, has his/her trust as much, is the one with whom s/he feels most secure. No one else can see as clearly as you do when s/he understands, and when s/he is struggling. No one else is willing to be with him/her 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, which means no one else will ever be able to observe him/her as closely as you do. As I say, even the best teachers in classrooms can only dream about such advantages which you already possess by default.

You Can Do It!

First-time home educators usually want to have a look at someone else’s exemption, so they know what to do. It is usually best not to look at another’s exemption until after you’ve had a go at doing your own first. Otherwise all you can think to write is what you’ve seen in the other person’s example. Have a go at writing your own original after reading the material in this booklet and then have someone experienced with exemption applications to look it over and give you some advice on how to improve it if needed. After that is a good time to look at another person’s exemption application.
Some readers will find this material frustrating at first because I will not be telling you exactly what to do. “Please, just give me the recipe, Step 1, Step 2, etc….I can do that.” But the fact is, education is far more complex than that. But it is not complex in a confusing or hard-to-understand sort of way. It is complex in the same way that life itself is complex…it has many aspects to it, and all of these aspects relate to one another in various ways. To put it another way, to provide an education for your children is to follow and to concentrate on, for a sustained period of time, the road of common sense.
That is to say, you already instinctively know much of what you need to do. You know what things your children truly need to learn and what things they can drop. In ten minutes, and most likely a lot less than that, you could easily come up with a basic syllabus of subjects that need to be covered and skills that need to be mastered.
In fact, why don’t you stop right now and do just that.
So there is your content. The depth to which you will go in each of the content areas is pretty much up to you. Our family has been at this since 1985. We plan to continue to home educate until our current youngest is at least 16, which will be in 2021. That is a span of 36 years, and we saw some time ago that we needed to streamline this whole process of home education for the simple reason that we two parents need to survive and not burn out too early.
Here’s what we’ve done: all the academics (I’m not talking at this point about spiritual, social, moral, character, sport or work ethic education and training in this
example…only the academics) we divided into two baskets. In the first basket are the skills they must master. And you already know what they are: the 3 Rs: Reading, wRiting and aRithmetic. These three are non-negotiable, and the children must master them completely. Some folks would like to add a 4th R: Research skills. Go for it. In the second basket is everything else: history, science, art, P.E., geography, language skills, music, etc.
Now, do keep in mind, that what you write in the exemption application will hardly begin to cover the vast extent of educational subjects and experiences that you will have in your home education journey. There will be dozens of other things you will want to cover that you haven’t thought of yet or that don’t need to be mentioned in your exemption application. As an illustration, all our family ever put down on our applications were the subject areas: Maths, English, History, Science and Geography.
That’s it. No “Social Studies” or “Technology” which the Ministry of Education routinely ask prospective home educators to include. We have never included these because, in my personal opinion, they are non-subjects. And besides, there is no legal requirement to include any subject in particular, so the Ministry cannot require you to include it. More on that later.
You can easily come up with your curriculum content (subject areas), and you will determine the depth of coverage as you go along and gain more knowledge and
insight about what you’re doing. Next is your methodology…how will you actually teach these subjects; what will you do on a daily basis? Again, this will be
determined largely by trial and experimentation as you go along. And feel free to experiment. It is all part of the learning process. One thing that beginners to home
education really struggle with is the feeling they are not “doing enough” or not “producing enough” papers to pin on the wall and stick to the fridge. Forget about all that…you are first of all honing down your routines by trialling this and that and by experimenting with different ideas. Once you find one that really suits you all, the progress you will make will shoot you even further ahead. The fact is, because you are engaged in more of a tutoring or mentoring situation with home education (one-on-one for the most part) rather than the one teacher and 25 students scenario of a classroom, you already have tremendous logistical advantages that put you way ahead of even gifted teachers in expensively-equipped classrooms. Added to that, because you are operating with your children 24/7, and know them better than anyone else, and are more committed to their success that anyone else will ever be, and because your powers of observation, diagnosis and assessment are more intimate and are motivated by that superior power of parental love, you will also have relationship advantages that leave school teachers in the dust.

Getting the Big Picture

Education and schooling are two very different things. Schooling is what you and I and perhaps some of your children have experienced in a classroom of one sort or another. If you bring your children home and teach them yourself, you can give them a true education. We are talking of a lot more than just a certain body of head knowledge and a few skills. We are talking about the ability to use that knowledge and those skills in the proper way, for the proper purposes, in the context of the real world of the home, the market place, the community and the workplace. That is, you can pass on to your children what you know, what you know they really need to learn, as well as all those lessons in life (the most important ones of all) which I’m certain you will agree you did not learn in the classroom. You can pass on the attitudes, values, standards, concepts of right and wrong, good and bad, wise and unwise, that you are personally convinced about, rather than the ones that your children just soak up by being immersed in what they call the “hidden curriculum” at schools. You can train their character and build in the character qualities you know their future employers, their future spouses, their future children will want to see and need to see in them and that they will definitely need to possess. You can help them to see how the knowledge they gain fits into the “big picture”.
The most important and useful thing you can do for your children is both motivate them to learn and at the same time give them a vision for taking upon their own
shoulders, as appropriate, more and more of the responsibility for their own education. Once they see that the whole world is their oyster, you may have trouble
holding them back, not that you’d want to do that necessarily; but you will not have trouble filling in your day, wondering what to study and investigate next: your
problem will be that there are not enough hours in the day to follow up all the leads you want to follow.
Believe it or not, the law, the Education Act, does not require even schools to teach anything in particular: they have to be open for so many hours, and they must teach from a “secular” perspective (“with no religious instruction or observance”), and there is an expectation that they will be getting sex education, but that is as far as the Act itself goes. It does say the schools must teach according to the syllabus handed down from the Minister of Education (a career politician, please allow me to point out, as opposed to a career educationalist) in the Gazette from time to time.1
The original Education Act of 1877 did list exactly which subjects were to be taught in state schools: Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, English Grammar and Composition, Geography, History, Elementary Science, Drawing, Object Lessons, and Vocal Music. Most of these subjects have dropped off entirely from the Ministry of Education’s list of “Learning Areas” in its 2007 National Curriculum statement. In addition, “reading” has been downgraded to the same level as “viewing”, and “writing” has been downgraded to the same level as “presenting”.2 (And did you know that parents back in 1877, when faced with the above list of school subjects, could withdraw their children from one of those subjects? Can you guess which one?
History: it was not considered acceptable for children to be forced to sit through a version of the Reformation that would be contrary to the views of their own
denomination.3 Today parents sometimes have the right to withdraw their children from certain aspects of sex and sexuality education. Isn’t it interesting to compare what things were important to parents then and now?)
There is no recognised body of knowledge that young people need to know in order to succeed in the New Zealand of the 21st century. What the MoE pushes through the schools is merely their current (politically determined) guess. You, on the other hand, are not politically motivated, but have a much better grasp on the realities of everyday life in the real world. Run with that. There are many local home education support groups out there, many email discussion groups just in NZ, many networks for swapping ideas and curriculum materials. There are many educational philosophies out there, and various learning styles and various teaching styles. Yes, these things require a bit of investigation, but again, you have other advantages in a home education situation that mean you can relax a fair bit about the passage of time as you and your children together investigate these things. Actually the investigation itself is a very useful and practical educational project! These extra advantages I mean here, in addition to the ones I already enumerated, are those of the tutoring or mentoring situation you will have with just you as teacher/guide/mentor and your child(ren) as the student(s). One-on-one instruction coupled with a vigorously interactive format is the most efficient form of learning, full stop. Classroom instruction is the least efficient, but it is a logistical necessity if you are going to have one teacher to 25 children.
As I say, for simplicity, we normally think of all the academic objectives as sitting in two baskets. The first are the basic skills that must be mastered: the 3 Rs: reading, writing and arithmetic. These do take a fair bit of intensive tuition in order to master, not just become passable at.
Reading, being a form of information intake, includes listening. One must be an accurate reader and listener, comprehending as much as possible, and discerning the difference between reasoned debate and sheer propaganda, between an honest critique and a sales pitch, between fact and opinion, etc.
Writing is not just penmanship, spelling and grammar, but also composition of tightly reasoned, logical and well-constructed essays. Being a form of information output, writing also includes public speaking, the ability to face an audience of one or a thousand and deliver with confidence a prepared or an extemporaneous talk on a subject chosen out of interest or assigned by a professor.
Arithmetic would be to master all the maths that you as an adult use and need on a day-to-day basis: it probably doesn’t include trigonometry or calculus and may only include some very basic concepts from geometry and algebra.
I could add a fourth R: research skills. The child who has mastered these basic skills in this first basket can then teach himself virtually anything after than, with a bit of guidance from you.
The second basket contains everything else – science, history, art, PE, geography, physics, chemistry – and can be covered most effectively by simply reading good
books together, watching good videos and educational CDs, doing projects together and field trips and discussing them. This second basket can also be done with a family of several different age groups at the same time: simply expect more from the older ones, less from the younger ones.
Most of what we expect to be doing and producing as a “Home School” is counter productive: desks, blackboards, textbooks, lectures, assignments, home work,
marking, standardised tests. These are all logistical developments to cope with the school setting of one teacher and 25 children. None of these things are needed – or useful – to the tutoring / mentoring situation that you can have at home. Because of the distractions, interruptions, strict timetables, necessity to change subjects at every 45 minute interval, the necessity to move at a pace too fast for some and too slow for others and totally irrelevant to still others, the politicised nature of the subjects taught, the enforced recess breaks and lunch times, the length of time it takes to get 25 children sitting in the same room, focused and turned to the same page in the same text book, the boring nature of text books, the mixed abilities and mixed backgrounds and mixed worldviews of the 25 students, plus many other factors….because of all these, you can do at home in two hours what could easily take two weeks to accomplish in the typical school classroom.
The implication is, don’t even try to copy the conventional school approach to schooling in the classroom, but instead go for real-life education in the real world.
Yes, this takes a bit of climbing up a steep learning curve at first, but doing it together becomes a very profitable exercise in real-world education.
Education and Learning Is All Around Us There is formal learning: when parents directly teach, instruct or explain with or without text books or work books. This may more accurately be called formal teaching, for one is not too sure about the learning going on, especially if the children are not allowed to ask questions. If only the teacher asks questions, it is a good bet that little learning is going on.
There is informal learning: when you are discussing a book you are reading together or to them or interacting over the things seen along the way as you drive from A to B.
This is the heart of mentoring: reading and discussing and interacting together over all the issues of life as they come your way. Remember the three year old’s incessant “Why?” questions? You never want them to stop asking those questions, but instead you want to encourage and build upon and exploit that natural curiosity wired into every child. In free discussions, encourage questions, all questions, any questions.
They will not come at you in a logical fashion, starting with the alphabet and going step by logical step through all there is to know about English, and then changing to maths and taking it step by incremental step as one would find in a conventional school’s scope and sequence.4 I personally prefer this approach and have tried to force my children to follow a rigidly defined and logically progressive sequence of lessons. But your children are probably like my children: they would come at me with questions from all over the place. You will struggle with the relevance of many questions and may be tempted to disregard them and ignore them and even forbid them. But stop and think a moment: while you may not see any relevance, your child has made some kind of a connection between whatever you were previously talking about and the new question the child just asked. The children are making and will make their own connections and will naturally follow those links in their own minds with a lot more gusto. You can do the same thing, with some practise perhaps, and make links back to what you wanted to talk about or to other important topics that their questions have brought to your mind.
The fact is, while your ideal of progressing sequentially from step 1 to 10 in subjects A through E gets sidetracked by all these weird questions, the children are actually jumping around to other steps that are still on your curriculum, some further down the track and some you’ve already covered, but their questions also jump around to other subjects not on your curriculum. This is a real bonus! And because the children are asking the questions, they are learning, they are taking something in. It is particularly effective because they are making connections. Knowledge and learning experts tell us that it is the making of connections that really advances both rote memorisation and learning with understanding. The children have their own scope and sequence built into each of those “How?” and “Why?” questions.
One of the first things children in the classroom learn is that the teacher is the one who asks the questions, not the students. Nothing kills the spontaneous curiosity all children are born with quite as quickly as that. But you can encourage the questions, the more the better. If you don’t know the answer, fine, go look it up. That research is in itself a great educational pursuit. Listen, you want to organise things so that your children see you as the authority. Why? Because you are the authority, you are the authority, you are the authority in your children’s lives, under God, just as it should be, just as they need. You will either know the answer or how to find the answer, as well as explain how the answer fits into the big picture.
There is incidental learning: when your children just pick things up as you go about your daily business, things that are caught rather than taught. This includes much in the area of character training, which may be far more important and valuable to your children, when it’s all said and done, than their academic accomplishments.
There is self-learning: self-instruction that takes place when the children have free play, pursue hobbies, experiment on their own, are set tasks and put in charge or made responsible for regular chores, or when they just sit down and start reading for their own enjoyment and edification.
Then there is learning that takes place when you aren’t even there: when they join clubs, go to scouts, church groups, camps, sports teams, visit Uncle Ted up the valley and help milk the cows, etc. As long as they are awake, they are learning something.
The curriculum is all waking hours. Fairly flexible that, not necessarily organised to the last detail. In fact, most home educators who start off really formally soon
become rather informal. And those who start off really informally soon become even more informal, and may appear to outsiders to be goofing off all day. It is just that they are pursuing knowledge in a more effective method of reading, discussion, exploration and experimentation. There may be precious little “work” produced as in schools, but that is because “school work” is another one of those logistical requirements of schools to ensure the children are in fact doing “something”, for the teacher cannot possibly know where each child is up to.

To read the rest of this book go to: https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/applying-for-an-exemption-to-educate-at-home/

or order at the above special prices

““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““““`

Craig talks about this book less than a month before he died of stage 4 Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). He wrote this book 6 months before he was diagnosed with the tumour in his brain which caused him to go completely numb down his left side.

For more information or to buy this book go to: https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/applying-for-an-exemption-to-educate-at-home/

On special

normally $7.00

For October and November $5.00 by ordering through sales@hef.org.nz or ph 06 357-4399

Bulk orders October and November

5 or more $3.50 each

10 or more $2.50 each

(all prices include postage)

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 1 October 2014:  Three years on (Craig Smith’s Health) page 7 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

Information on getting startedhttps://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

Information on getting an exemptionhttps://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational: http://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

Exemption Form online: https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-exemption-form-now-online/

Coming Events: https://hef.org.nz/2013/some-coming-events-for-home-education-during-2013-2/

Beneficiaries: http://hef.org.nz/2013/where-to-for-beneficiary-families-now-that-the-social-security-benefit-categories-and-work-focus-amendment-bill-has-passed-its-third-reading/

Scoping Survey: Barbara Smith

Dear Jim, Sonya and Lucy

Thank you for this opportunity to discuss what is working, what is not working and what could be changed in the future between the MoE and home educators.

We have had a good experience getting exemptions in the past. The first couple were with a school Principal. Then the next few were with the Wanganui office before the Lower Hutt Office took over doing the last few. We have 8 children and my last exemption was my most difficult.

First because it was our 8th and last exemption we decided to take a bit of a different approach.

18 July 2011 I wanted to send this into the Lower Hutt Local Office:

Grace Ariana Timmins

Smith 2010March 2010

We have home educated 5 children completely and are in the process of home educating two others. We now need to apply for an exemption for Grace.  Our first five children have been very successful in their careers:

Genevieve is a fully qualified Legal Executive. She worked for many years for a Lawyer as a Legal Executive before getting married. She worked her way to the top of Air Training Corps to Warrant Officer and was part of the Squadron’s champion marching team. She was a Manawatu Representative Softball player.

Zach is Marketing Director for a multi Million Dollar business in the USA. He has many responsibilities with a number of staff under him. Zach did a paper at Massey and got an A. Zach was also an officer in the Air Training Corps and part of the champion marching team.

Alanson is an Avionics Technician for the RNZAF. He got the trophy for academic excellence at the end of boot camp. His graduating course had the highest point average for any Avionics course in recorded history. So Alanson handled his strenuous academic course with ease. He is now doing University studies while continuing to do Avionics for the RNZAF. He has also represented the RNZAF playing sports in England and Australia.

Charmagne Smith Dip.HND  can put her hand to anything and be successful. She is a brilliant seamstress, painter and paperhanger, plasterer and does floor and wall tiles too. She is also an expert furniture upholsterer, tiler, dressmaking pattern drafter, highland dancing teacher, International English Country Dance instructor http://ecdnz.weebly.com/, music teacher and language instructor including sign language. Charmagne has helped (was the Foreman for the job), build, clad, roof and floor a shed 35 x 14 meters, dropping 22 telephone poles into large holes for uprights, cementing them in, managing the project of building nine 700kg trusses (her pattern-drafting skills applied to boards 5.3 metres long as well as to lengths of cloth 53 centimetres long), driving a CAT 930 articulated dirt mover, arc welding, oxy welding, plasma cutting and a myriad of hand tools. She also does gourmet cooking for large crowds. http://www.photoblog.com/charmagne

Jeremiah has just passed all his exams and tests for getting into the Police Force.

Jedediah and Kaitlyn are still being home educated.

We plan to give Grace a similar education to our other children who have become very successful in the endeavours they have chosen. We have always had very good ERO reviews therefore we can confidently assure you that we will and can teach Grace as regularly and well as in a registered school.

This was all we were going to send in. Then Craig decided that he would like to add this to it:

Section 3 of the Education Act gives New Zealand children the right to a free education in state-funded institutions. But Sections 20 and 25 prove that neither the children nor their parents are legally free to choose whether they’ll make use of this right but are instead legally compelled by the state to do two things: 1) enrol the children with a state-registered schooling institution and 2) attend that institution whenever it is open.

So while the Act declares children to have a right to an education, the Act only quarantees that they will be compelled to be enrolled at and attend a state-approved institution. The children are not guaranteed, compelled or even required by law to actually learn anything at all, to actually become educated or to receive an education. They are only required to do their time in one of these institutions.

We praise God that Section 21 of the Education Act exists to give parents and children an escape from this futile scenario.

We cannot imagine what our forefathers were thinking of in 1877 when they passed the original Education Act compelling wee six-year-olds to come out from under the influence and protection of their homes and their parents to instead be intensively instructed in a politically mandated curriculum by agents of the state. This was a radical intervention of the state. It forced a radical re-organising of the family life of virtually every household with children. This radical and legal construct also compelled the focus of each community to shift from the church to the school. As many New Zealand authors and professional educators have said, one of the primary objectives for establishing compulsory, secular schooling in New Zealand was to socially engineer the population into a politically determined profile.

The Bible outlines the legitimate powers and duties of the state. Guaranteeing the right to an education and compelling separation from parents and attendance at a state-registered institution are decidedly not among these powers and duties. That is, the Education Act was Biblically illegitimate from day one. This is both highly significant and relevant today because the Parliament that passed the Act and the subsequent Parliaments that continue to administer the Act have all affirmed loyalty to the British Crown as part of their foundational functions and duties. The British Monarchs, from Queen Victoria in 1877 through to the present Queen Elizabeth II have all made certain oaths required of the one who would legitimately wear the Crown. To the question presented to every Monarch since 1689 by the Archbishop, “Will you to the utmost of your power maintain the laws of God, the true profession of the gospel and the Protestant reformed religion?” the Monarchs have responded, “All this I promise to do.”

In addition, a Christian prayer has been read at the start of each parliamentary session in New Zealand since 1854, when it was introduced by the first vote ever taken by the House of Representatives. Here is the prayer in its current form, adopted by Resolution of the House in 1962: “Almighty God, humbly acknowledging our need for Thy guidance in all things, and laying aside all private and personal interests, we beseech Thee to grant that we may conduct the affairs of this House and of our country to the glory of Thy holy name, the maintenance of true religion and justice, the honour of the Queen, and the public welfare, peace, and tranquillity of New Zealand, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.”

The prayer, the oath of the Monarch, the affirmation of loyalty by each and every MP to the Monarch and therefore to the oath as well, all combine to show clearly that the collective duty of Parliament lies is the maintenance of the laws of God according to the Protestant reformed Christian religion which has a very well-developed Biblical understanding of sphere sovereignty and separation of powers. Consequently, the radical declarations and interventions of the Education Act are both Biblically and legally illegitimate.

We give these background notes to justify and explain my declaration to you, with no disrespect meant to your respective persons or offices, that we do not acknowledge the Ministry of Education to have any legitimate authority over the education and training of our children. We consequently object in the strongest terms possible to the Act’s requirement that we seek from your office an exemption from the compulsory enrolment and attendance provisions of the Act in order to educate our children ourselves and stay within the law. But because the Ministry of Education has never endeavoured to prevent parents from fulfilling their responsibility before God to educate their own children at home but has only insisted that they register their intention to do so and give a credible written explanation of what they intend to do, and because of the Bible’s injunction to do all things decently and in order and to obey lawful authorities where possible, we do hereby register with your office, via the attached exemption application, our intention to educate at home our permanent foster daughter, Grace Ariana Timmins, over whom we have legal guardianship.

The local Lower Hutt MoE office wanted more information so Craig wrote this and we proof read it while we waited in hospital waiting rooms for tests:  CT scans, MRI, to talk with neurologists, oncologists, etc.

28 July 2011

Thank you for your letter of 22 July informing us that your office is not inclined to issue an exemption to Grace Timmins from the compulsory schooling institution attendance laws.

You note that the Act requires you to be “satisfied” that Grace will be “taught at least as regularly and well as in a registered school.” I note that “satisfied” is a somewhat subjective term. There is certainly enough objective evidence in our previous letter to generate a subjective “satisfied.” There is more evidence in this letter.

I note that a “registered school” includes any school that exists in New Zealand, from Auckland Grammar through Hare Krishna and Muslim schools and alternative schools to places like Tamariki and Discovery 1 in Christchurch. These last two hardly fit any traditional profile of a school: regular attendance is mostly voluntary; students decide what they’d like to learn, when and whether by play or other means. Porirua College Principal Susanne Jungersen summarised this very approach as the new state-school philosophy of teaching when she said of her profession that they are “not the sage on the stage but the guide on the side.” (Wellington Dominion Post of Friday 9 May 2008).  This philosophy is known formally as Social Constructivism, and according to the first paragraph of the executive summary of a research paper commissioned by the Ministry of Education and on the Ministry of Education’s own website at http://www.educationcounts.govt.nz/publications/ict/5927, social constructivism is the reigning philosophy of the NZ state classroom. That is, teachers no longer teach: they act as facilitators. They do not accept that there is propositional truth or an agreed-upon body of knowledge that must be passed along from one generation to the next, but they instead try to function on the axiom that bodies of knowledge and reality itself are social constructs rather than objective, historical, stand-alone entities that are available for anyone to examine and review. Consequently, a popular classroom approach is to get the children, as a group (socially) to construct their own bodies of knowledge and subjects which are to them (socially) worth studying.

We utterly reject this philosophy of education and can state categorically that we will not be teaching “as well as” that. Never. Neither will we endeavour to teach “as regularly as” Discovery 1 or Tamariki.

As we said in our earlier letter, “The prayer, the oath of the Monarch, the affirmation of loyalty by each and every MP to the Monarch and therefore to the oath as well, all combine to show clearly that the collective duty of Parliament lies is the maintenance of the laws of God according to the Protestant reformed Christian religion which has a very well-developed Biblical understanding of sphere sovereignty and separation of powers.” That is, parents, not the agents of the state (such as members of the Ministry of Education), have the responsibility to educate their children. Let us describe our understanding of our Biblical duty in this area. This is what we do. This is what the New Zealand Parliament should be promoting and encouraging, without the radical interventions of compulsory attendance at state schooling institutions.

God has revealed to us, His creatures, all the foundational truths, axioms and presuppositions we need to know about Him, about ourselves, the universe we live in and what He requires of us. He has made this revelation in two places. First, in a general sense, He is revealed in the universe He has created. Second, and more importantly, He is very specifically revealed in the Bible.  It is obvious, therefore, that God requires us to learn how to read and to comprehend what He intended to convey in His written word, not what we think it means. This requires a mastery of the skill of reading as well as a solid understanding of grammar, logic and the rules of hermeneutics. This is a far cry from what the current New Zealand curriculum suggests on page 18: “students are primarily making meaning of ideas or information they receive (Listening, Reading, and Viewing).”

Very early on in the Bible, Genesis 1:28, God delivers to us the overall task: “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the air and over every living thing that moves upon the earth.” All the hard sciences are required to carry out these tasks: animal and plant biology, chemistry, physics, mathematics, medicine, logistics, economics. These, then, are also essential ingredients to a proper education.

In Matthew 28:19-20, the Lord Jesus Christ adds to and expands upon this assignment: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.” Here again a large array of essential academic disciplines are needed: languages; teaching, discipling, tutoring and mentoring; communication skills of writing and speaking; Law, justice. These too are essential areas of academic training.

Furthermore, II Corinthians 5:18-20 says, “All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to Himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. So we are ambassadors for Christ, God making His appeal through us.” Again, look at all the skills required to fulfil this duty: communication skills and interpersonal relationship skills to handle both the message and the ministry of reconciliation between sinful people and an angry God. This is a message most people simply do not want to hear, yet we are assigned not only to deliver the message, but also to effect the reconciliation. Please note, this is not the same as conflict resolution, which is little more than a game of horse swapping. This is effecting true reconciliation, so one must dig deep and deal with core personality issues and emotions. And since we are to be as ambassadors, we must do all things to the highest standard of excellence, including our manners, our speech, our dress, our deportment, the accuracy and earnestness of the message.

Lest anyone be tempted to say that state schools can inculcate these skills and bodies of knowledge just as well, may I point out that these academic disciplines are all aimed at a particular goal: to equip us to serve the Lord Jesus Christ. He says in Psalm 111:10 that “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” One may have a head full of facts and a number of skills under one’s belt. But if one does not fear the Lord, he or she does not have the wisdom properly to use those skills or those bodies of knowledge. The secular clause of the Education Act ensures that the beginning point of wisdom – the fear of the Lord – will not characterise the teaching (or facilitating) of a state school. Consequently state school methodologies and curriculum subjects and educational philosophies are all antithetical to what we are required to do in the realm of educating our children. So while the Education Act may say we must teach “as well as in a registered school,” we will not be at all similar to it. In addition, we have little use for a registered school’s “regularity,” which is something like 9 to 3, five days a week, whereas we see education as a 24/7/365 occupation.

The 4th of the Ten Commandments tell us, “Six days you shall labour and do all your work. But the seventh is a Sabbath to the Lord your God. In it you shall do no work.” Which doesn’t mean we don’t learn. We congregate with others to worship the Lord. This includes listening to the liturgy of the Church and the Word of God preached. The object here is to understand its personal and social relevance and to make personal application. There is much singing and also much socialising.

We work according to priorities. Number one priority is our individual and also corporate walk with the Lord Jesus Christ (This includes personal reading, comprehension and application of the Scriptures, possibly note-taking or journaling, prayer and probably Scripture memory. This may also include other devotional, doctrinal or theological reading and discussions.) Number two is interpersonal relationships within the family. (Looking to see how we may help one another do chores or fulfil duties and meet deadlines is a good way to make sure no one is holding any grudges or bitterness.) Third is developing Christian character qualities. (Biographies and doing things for others outside the family really help here.) Fourth is developing a positive, energetic work ethic. (There is always plenty of work to do around the home, especially when all 7 of us are home most of the time and the family income is generated from this place, and three vehicles are needed for the four drivers and three non-drivers.) Fifth is the rest of the academic disciplines not covered in the foregoing. Each day we start with our number one priority, for it is always number one. If we actually do not get down to hitting the fifth priority, the other academic disciplines, in any one day well, that is most unfortunate. Next day we do not start where we left off. We start, as usual, at our Number one priority, our walk with the Lord, and we work our way down the list as usual.

The skills the children must master (Reading, Writing and Arithmetic) we find it takes a fair bit of one-to-one tuition. All the other subjects can be done with the entire age-range by simply reading and discussing good books together, expecting more from the older ones and less from the younger ones.

This has been our lifestyle for quite a few years now. Grace has already been absorbed into this routine since she was able to comprehend what was going on and respond cognitively…which she did via New Zealand Sign Language taught to her by our older daughter Charmagne. At this point I’d like to quote fellow home educator Craig Mortimer from Northland. He said, “We are supposed to teach as regularly and well as in a registered school. If that’s all I do, I’ll consider myself a failure.” Amen, brother. Amen!

Thank you for this opportunity to explain what we are about. We look forward to receiving an exemption certificate for Grace soon.

Craig wanted to emphasis that we would be “teaching” Grace more regularly and well than in a registered school. We want to give our children the best education that we can. The best education that we can give our children is a thoroughly Biblical Education and for it to be very broad. We want to teach our children how to think for themselves. We wanted to be honest in our exemption application to let you know what we are teaching our children not what we think the MoE wants to hear. We have a very unschooling/natural learning approach to the academic school subjects. But we also want to train up our children in the way they should go, so that when they are old, they will not depart from it.

I want to note here that I am writing personally the way that Craig and I wanted to home educate our children. Home Educators are all different and very independent.

On reflection now, I am disappointed that a MoE staff member could not see that we would be giving Grace an education which would far exceed “as regularly and as well as in a regular school”.  Just as the natural learning/unschooling philosophy is not understood by the MoE neither is a thoroughly Christian education. We want our children to be able to go as missionaries to the most backward Country and be able to be a “Jack of all trades” and help out in every way possible. To be confident in health care, agriculture, animal care, English, geography, history, music, art, horticulture, home economics (sewing, cooking), Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Spanish, French etc, Politics, note taking, book reports, letter writing, essay writing, grammar, drama, medicine, debating, reasoning, logic, research, creative writing, handwriting, spelling, calligraphy, worldviews, Psychology, Bible, critical thinking, farming, Industry, sport, dancing, Culture, nature, memory work, Apothecary, Kitchen Cosmetology, hermeneutics, animal and plant biology, chemistry, physics, mathematics, logistics, economics, languages; teaching, discipling, tutoring and mentoring; communication skills of writing and speaking; Law, justice  and all the other things Craig mentioned in Grace’s exemption.

Along with that our 5 oldest children had all graduated from being home educated and are all very successful in their own chosen fields. I feel that this more than anything showed that we were more than capable of teaching Grace as regularly and well as in a registered school. But our exemption certificate was declined at a very emotional time in our lives.

August 26, 2011 Grace turned 6

In the last week of September 2011

This exemption application was declined. We received the letter from the MoE the week before Craig died.

We were told to appeal to the Secretary of Education. Craig always advised parents not to go this way.

Craig died 30 September 2011

So I put in a completely new application based on our previous one for Kaitlyn in 2006. We received Kaitlyn’s exemption in less than 10 days with no questions asked. So I thought I would have no problems with Grace’s application based on Kaitlyns. Because Grace was already 6 and I had no intentions of sending her to school. I then added a bunch more to Grace’s 2nd exemption attempt.

As you will see in the next link I had to send back a book to the MoE when they asked for more information – almost a brand new exemption. So it felt like to me a grieving wife that I had put in 3 exemption applications for Grace. I thoroughly regret giving all the information to the MoE for Grace’s exemption instead of fighting it. But I put that application to the MoE in the first couple of weeks after Craig died as Grace was already 6. I didn’t have the reserves in me to do it after the 7 week battle we had with Craig’s health and then the grieving after his death. Now I feel that I let people down by shovelling more information off to the Lower Hutt Local Office instead of standing up for what was right.

Grace’s second exemption application

Grace finally got her exemption 1 November 2011 – 2 and a bit months after she turned 6.

So now is my opportunity to put things right so that no more people have to go through this. I have heard from several people who are upset with the unreasonable requests for more information. It is as if the people in the Lower Hutt Local Office do not even read the initial exemption application because they ask for information that is already in the initial information. Or they ask for information that is not necessary for a 6 year old.

Since writing to you last month about a couple of families I am still hearing about people who feel that they are being asked for too much information from the Lower Hutt Local Office. They are being asked for too detailed a timetable when the exemption form gives options. We don’t have to give a timetable at all – our choices are:  timetable or integrated curriculum description or description of typical routines used. Has Gail even read the exemption form properly? The Lower Hutt Local MoE office does not understand home education at all. They are expecting us to be like little schools – it seems keeping to school hours and packing in the academics – way too much for a 6 year old.

The majority of home educators do not have their children sitting exams – some do. Over the years we have been encouraged by this survey by the Dominion newspaper:

This Wellington Dominion survey is probably even more relevant today than it was back in 1995.

Almost half of all unemployed people hold educational qualifications but in a recent survey employers ranked qualifications at the bottom of a list of 20 desirable attributes for selecting potential employees, the Employment Service says.

In a survey of 500 randomly selected employers, qualifications came last in traits employers considered most desirable for employees. Top of the list was:

  1. attitude followed by:
  2. honesty
  3. tidy appearance
  4. amiability
  5. enthusiasm
  6. reliability
  7. communication skills
  8. motivation
  9. punctuality
  10. experience
  11. flexibility
  12. fast learning
  13. efficiency
  14. commitment
  15. knowledge
  16. education
  17. interest
  18. personality
  19. stability
  20. willingness to work
  21. skills AND
  22. qualifications

(From Wellington Dominion, 6 October 1995.)

This list above is another wonderful curriculum for home educators – something which is very easy for us to be working on on a daily basis with our children as we interact with them in our homes, activities we are involved in and in the community. In fact we are hearing stories about this more and more. In Te Anau employers are waiting (more like fighting over) for the next home education graduates. They would much rather employ home educators because of the qualities in the list above are seen more in home educators than in school children. Then today I heard of another young man who was commended because of the above qualities. This is something that home educators excel at because we don’t have to deal with peer pressure. Our children’s friends are of all ages from 99-0. We don’t need any curriculum to instil these qualities into our children – just our daily living, it all happens in a very natural way and something very hard to write out in the exemption form. In fact it happens all day – when we sit in our homes, when we walk by the way, when we lie down and when we rise.

Deuteronomy 6:4-7

“Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise.

I would also like to share with you a couple of verses that have been foundational to our home education over the 28 years that we have had an exemption to home educate our children.

Psalm 111:10-112:1-2

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom;
all those who practice it have a good understanding.
His praise endures forever!

112 Praise the Lord!
Blessed is the man who fears the Lord,
who greatly delights in his commandments!
His offspring will be mighty in the land;
the generation of the upright will be blessed.

I have attached 5 booklets that Craig wrote. He was the writer in our family and he expressed his thoughts and convictions much clearer than I can. I am also couriering you these 5 books so that you have them in hard copies as well.

These first three books are general books for everyone
1. Applying for an exemption to Educate at Home: I would love for you to read “You Can Do IT!” It is also here on our website  https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

2. An Introduction to Home Education in New Zealand

3. The Evidence Of the Superiority of Home Education Over Conventional Schooling

These next two books have been written from a Christian perspective
4. Your Worldview Has Implications

5. The Christian Imperative

5 Attachments

Preview attachment Ebook Exemption.pdf

Preview attachment Intro complete booklet.pdf

Preview attachment 24 pages of research quotes.pdf

Preview attachment YourWorldviewImplications.pdf

Preview attachment Why Christians Must Rescue.pdf

I would also love to have put everything that I mentioned in the Home Education Foundation Problem Scoping Survey in this survey.

Thank you for this opportunity to express the things that are working well between the MoE and home educators, the things that are not working well and what we would like to see improved for the future.

I look forward to seeing a copy of all the feedback and the summary of this collated feedback by the end of November 2014.  I look forward to being a part of, and being able to comment on, the feedback on this document to ensure you have accurately captured what is working well and what people would like to see changed.  I would love to be a part of the next steps and to comment on them as well.

Blessings

Barbara Smith

***************

MoE Problem Scoping Survey: please make it known and fill it out

Don’t forget to get your Problem Scoping Surveys into the MoE NOW. We have now run out of time. So please email your Problem Scoping Surveys now.

Addresses for sending the Scoping Survey back:

email: Home.Schooling@minedu.govt.nz

snail mail: Lucy Ambrose, 45-47 Pipitea St, Wellington

phone: 04 463 8946 | Ext 48946

or look for the addresses in Jim Greening’ letter.

Links:
Home Education Foundation letter which covers exemption form, beneficiaries, International home educators and Keystone.

– MoE/ERO issues

– Changes in the MoE

– MoE discussions introduction to the Red Tape Cluster Buster meetings

– Preparation for the MoE discussions with Red Tape Cluster Buster meetings andrelevant for the Problem Scoping Survey
– Discussions home educators had online at Clutter buster group or (for ease of reading as not everyone can get onto the Google docs) here…https://hef.org.nz/coming-events-archives-2012/red-tape-cluster-buster/ (Also a lot of very good information to aid you in filling out the Problem Scoping Survey)

– Record of Progress and Achievement (an example of the new National MoE office staff understanding home educators)

– Truancy and the Home Schooler/Home Educator (another success with the National Office in that Megan showed us alternatives)

– Scoping Meeting 15 July 2014 – Getting to know you

– 2nd Meeting 28 July 2014 – Red Tape Cluster Buster Meeting

– MoE scoping Home Educators – email

– Feedback Form (Problem Scoping Survey) on MoE website

– Email to the MoE about the Scoping Survey from a Home Educator

– Problem Scoping Survey: ideas and deadline

– MoE’s reply to Yumiko’s email about the Scoping Survey

– MoE Problem Scoping Survey: please make it known and fill it out

– The last of Craig Smith’s writings before he died 3 years ago

– MoE Problem Scoping Survey

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Please share/forward this link with other home educators.

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From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 1 October 2014:  Three years on (Craig Smith’s Health) page 7 click here

*****

Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

Information on getting startedhttps://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

Information on getting an exemptionhttps://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

This link is motivational: http://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-what-is-it-all-about/

Exemption Form online: https://hef.org.nz/2012/home-schooling-exemption-form-now-online/

Coming Events: https://hef.org.nz/2013/some-coming-events-for-home-education-during-2013-2/

Beneficiaries: http://hef.org.nz/2013/where-to-for-beneficiary-families-now-that-the-social-security-benefit-categories-and-work-focus-amendment-bill-has-passed-its-third-reading/

Home schooling – what is it all about?

The complete book now in PDF form for emailing $2.00 – now free

https://hef.org.nz/2012/applying-for-an-exemption-to-educate-at-home-now-an-ebook/

A Collection of
Exemption Tips and Ideas

by Craig Smith

Introduction

Seriously considering the option to educate your own children at home, rescuing them from the state’s schooling institutions, is one of the best moves you will ever
make. Teaching your own children is taking the government of your children back away from the state. The state never had any Biblically valid claim to educationally govern your children anyway. Your family’s cohesion and integrity as a functional unit is set to be greatly and very profitably enhanced. All the studies that have been done in this area show that your children are about to excel beyond their peers in both academics and social skills. Instead of the politically correct curriculum of the current Ministry of Education, with all the special interest group add-ons, you are about to step outside the box and discover the whole entire universe of skills and knowledge that is available for you to pursue…and most of it is absolutely free of charge!
Be assured that most of the people in the Ministry who will be reading and assessing your application are fairly positive about home education: they’ve seen the results and they like what they see. They are professionals and do their best to eliminate any personal or even professional bias they may have toward or against any particular educational approach. Consequently, this exemption application is virtually a blank cheque being handed to you by the Ministry of Education! Yes!! You have before you an incredible degree of freedom and flexibility to hand-craft a curriculum tailor made to your child’s ability, maturity, interests, passions, aspirations, inclinations, aptitudes, his or her favourite/most efficient ways to learn and assimilates knowledge, as well as your own family culture and expectations.
What I mean is this: no one on this earth is more motivated for your child’s success than you. No one is more willing to spend the blood, sweat, toil and tears that may be required to see your child mature to full potential. No one knows your child better than you. No one has already done more for your child than you have. I mean, you couldn’t pay anyone to do what you have already done for your child. It is quite probable that no one else except your spouse is as close to him/her, has his/her trust as much, is the one with whom s/he feels most secure. No one else can see as clearly as you do when s/he understands, and when s/he is struggling. No one else is willing to be with him/her 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, which means no one else will ever be able to observe him/her as closely as you do. As I say, even the best teachers in classrooms can only dream about such advantages which you already possess by default.

You Can Do It!

First-time home educators usually want to have a look at someone else’s exemption, so they know what to do. It is usually best not to look at another’s exemption until after you’ve had a go at doing your own first. Otherwise all you can think to write is what you’ve seen in the other person’s example. Have a go at writing your own original after reading the material in this booklet and then have someone experienced with exemption applications to look it over and give you some advice on how to improve it if needed. After that is a good time to look at another person’s exemption application.
Some readers will find this material frustrating at first because I will not be telling you exactly what to do. “Please, just give me the recipe, Step 1, Step 2, etc….I can do that.” But the fact is, education is far more complex than that. But it is not complex in a confusing or hard-to-understand sort of way. It is complex in the same way that life itself is complex…it has many aspects to it, and all of these aspects relate to one another in various ways. To put it another way, to provide an education for your children is to follow and to concentrate on, for a sustained period of time, the road of common sense.
That is to say, you already instinctively know much of what you need to do. You know what things your children truly need to learn and what things they can drop. In ten minutes, and most likely a lot less than that, you could easily come up with a basic syllabus of subjects that need to be covered and skills that need to be mastered.
In fact, why don’t you stop right now and do just that.
So there is your content. The depth to which you will go in each of the content areas is pretty much up to you. Our family has been at this since 1985. We plan to continue to home educate until our current youngest is at least 16, which will be in 2021. That is a span of 36 years, and we saw some time ago that we needed to streamline this whole process of home education for the simple reason that we two parents need to survive and not burn out too early.
Here’s what we’ve done: all the academics (I’m not talking at this point about spiritual, social, moral, character, sport or work ethic education and training in this
example…only the academics) we divided into two baskets. In the first basket are the skills they must master. And you already know what they are: the 3 Rs: Reading, wRiting and aRithmetic. These three are non-negotiable, and the children must master them completely. Some folks would like to add a 4th R: Research skills. Go for it. In the second basket is everything else: history, science, art, P.E., geography, language skills, music, etc.
Now, do keep in mind, that what you write in the exemption application will hardly begin to cover the vast extent of educational subjects and experiences that you will have in your home education journey. There will be dozens of other things you will want to cover that you haven’t thought of yet or that don’t need to be mentioned in your exemption application. As an illustration, all our family ever put down on our applications were the subject areas: Maths, English, History, Science and Geography.
That’s it. No “Social Studies” or “Technology” which the Ministry of Education routinely ask prospective home educators to include. We have never included these because, in my personal opinion, they are non-subjects. And besides, there is no legal requirement to include any subject in particular, so the Ministry cannot require you to include it. More on that later.
You can easily come up with your curriculum content (subject areas), and you will determine the depth of coverage as you go along and gain more knowledge and
insight about what you’re doing. Next is your methodology…how will you actually teach these subjects; what will you do on a daily basis? Again, this will be
determined largely by trial and experimentation as you go along. And feel free to experiment. It is all part of the learning process. One thing that beginners to home
education really struggle with is the feeling they are not “doing enough” or not “producing enough” papers to pin on the wall and stick to the fridge. Forget about all that…you are first of all honing down your routines by trialling this and that and by experimenting with different ideas. Once you find one that really suits you all, the progress you will make will shoot you even further ahead. The fact is, because you are engaged in more of a tutoring or mentoring situation with home education (one-on-one for the most part) rather than the one teacher and 25 students scenario of a classroom, you already have tremendous logistical advantages that put you way ahead of even gifted teachers in expensively-equipped classrooms. Added to that, because you are operating with your children 24/7, and know them better than anyone else, and are more committed to their success that anyone else will ever be, and because your powers of observation, diagnosis and assessment are more intimate and are motivated by that superior power of parental love, you will also have relationship advantages that leave school teachers in the dust.

Getting the Big Picture

Education and schooling are two very different things. Schooling is what you and I and perhaps some of your children have experienced in a classroom of one sort or another. If you bring your children home and teach them yourself, you can give them a true education. We are talking of a lot more than just a certain body of head knowledge and a few skills. We are talking about the ability to use that knowledge and those skills in the proper way, for the proper purposes, in the context of the real world of the home, the market place, the community and the workplace. That is, you can pass on to your children what you know, what you know they really need to learn, as well as all those lessons in life (the most important ones of all) which I’m certain you will agree you did not learn in the classroom. You can pass on the attitudes, values, standards, concepts of right and wrong, good and bad, wise and unwise, that you are personally convinced about, rather than the ones that your children just soak up by being immersed in what they call the “hidden curriculum” at schools. You can train their character and build in the character qualities you know their future employers, their future spouses, their future children will want to see and need to see in them and that they will definitely need to possess. You can help them to see how the knowledge they gain fits into the “big picture”.
The most important and useful thing you can do for your children is both motivate them to learn and at the same time give them a vision for taking upon their own
shoulders, as appropriate, more and more of the responsibility for their own education. Once they see that the whole world is their oyster, you may have trouble
holding them back, not that you’d want to do that necessarily; but you will not have trouble filling in your day, wondering what to study and investigate next: your
problem will be that there are not enough hours in the day to follow up all the leads you want to follow.
Believe it or not, the law, the Education Act, does not require even schools to teach anything in particular: they have to be open for so many hours, and they must teach from a “secular” perspective (“with no religious instruction or observance”), and there is an expectation that they will be getting sex education, but that is as far as the Act itself goes. It does say the schools must teach according to the syllabus handed down from the Minister of Education (a career politician, please allow me to point out, as opposed to a career educationalist) in the Gazette from time to time.1
The original Education Act of 1877 did list exactly which subjects were to be taught in state schools: Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, English Grammar and Composition, Geography, History, Elementary Science, Drawing, Object Lessons, and Vocal Music. Most of these subjects have dropped off entirely from the Ministry of Education’s list of “Learning Areas” in its 2007 National Curriculum statement. In addition, “reading” has been downgraded to the same level as “viewing”, and “writing” has been downgraded to the same level as “presenting”.2 (And did you know that parents back in 1877, when faced with the above list of school subjects, could withdraw their children from one of those subjects? Can you guess which one?
History: it was not considered acceptable for children to be forced to sit through a version of the Reformation that would be contrary to the views of their own
denomination.3 Today parents sometimes have the right to withdraw their children from certain aspects of sex and sexuality education. Isn’t it interesting to compare what things were important to parents then and now?)
There is no recognised body of knowledge that young people need to know in order to succeed in the New Zealand of the 21st century. What the MoE pushes through the schools is merely their current (politically determined) guess. You, on the other hand, are not politically motivated, but have a much better grasp on the realities of everyday life in the real world. Run with that. There are many local home education support groups out there, many email discussion groups just in NZ, many networks for swapping ideas and curriculum materials. There are many educational philosophies out there, and various learning styles and various teaching styles. Yes, these things require a bit of investigation, but again, you have other advantages in a home education situation that mean you can relax a fair bit about the passage of time as you and your children together investigate these things. Actually the investigation itself is a very useful and practical educational project! These extra advantages I mean here, in addition to the ones I already enumerated, are those of the tutoring or mentoring situation you will have with just you as teacher/guide/mentor and your child(ren) as the student(s). One-on-one instruction coupled with a vigorously interactive format is the most efficient form of learning, full stop. Classroom instruction is the least efficient, but it is a logistical necessity if you are going to have one teacher to 25 children.
As I say, for simplicity, we normally think of all the academic objectives as sitting in two baskets. The first are the basic skills that must be mastered: the 3 Rs: reading, writing and arithmetic. These do take a fair bit of intensive tuition in order to master, not just become passable at.
Reading, being a form of information intake, includes listening. One must be an accurate reader and listener, comprehending as much as possible, and discerning the difference between reasoned debate and sheer propaganda, between an honest critique and a sales pitch, between fact and opinion, etc.
Writing is not just penmanship, spelling and grammar, but also composition of tightly reasoned, logical and well-constructed essays. Being a form of information output, writing also includes public speaking, the ability to face an audience of one or a thousand and deliver with confidence a prepared or an extemporaneous talk on a subject chosen out of interest or assigned by a professor.
Arithmetic would be to master all the maths that you as an adult use and need on a day-to-day basis: it probably doesn’t include trigonometry or calculus and may only include some very basic concepts from geometry and algebra.
I could add a fourth R: research skills. The child who has mastered these basic skills in this first basket can then teach himself virtually anything after than, with a bit of guidance from you.
The second basket contains everything else – science, history, art, PE, geography, physics, chemistry – and can be covered most effectively by simply reading good
books together, watching good videos and educational CDs, doing projects together and field trips and discussing them. This second basket can also be done with a family of several different age groups at the same time: simply expect more from the older ones, less from the younger ones.
Most of what we expect to be doing and producing as a “Home School” is counter productive: desks, blackboards, textbooks, lectures, assignments, home work,
marking, standardised tests. These are all logistical developments to cope with the school setting of one teacher and 25 children. None of these things are needed – or useful – to the tutoring / mentoring situation that you can have at home. Because of the distractions, interruptions, strict timetables, necessity to change subjects at every 45 minute interval, the necessity to move at a pace too fast for some and too slow for others and totally irrelevant to still others, the politicised nature of the subjects taught, the enforced recess breaks and lunch times, the length of time it takes to get 25 children sitting in the same room, focused and turned to the same page in the same text book, the boring nature of text books, the mixed abilities and mixed backgrounds and mixed worldviews of the 25 students, plus many other factors….because of all these, you can do at home in two hours what could easily take two weeks to accomplish in the typical school classroom.
The implication is, don’t even try to copy the conventional school approach to schooling in the classroom, but instead go for real-life education in the real world.
Yes, this takes a bit of climbing up a steep learning curve at first, but doing it together becomes a very profitable exercise in real-world education.
Education and Learning Is All Around Us There is formal learning: when parents directly teach, instruct or explain with or without text books or work books. This may more accurately be called formal teaching, for one is not too sure about the learning going on, especially if the children are not allowed to ask questions. If only the teacher asks questions, it is a good bet that little learning is going on.
There is informal learning: when you are discussing a book you are reading together or to them or interacting over the things seen along the way as you drive from A to B.
This is the heart of mentoring: reading and discussing and interacting together over all the issues of life as they come your way. Remember the three year old’s incessant “Why?” questions? You never want them to stop asking those questions, but instead you want to encourage and build upon and exploit that natural curiosity wired into every child. In free discussions, encourage questions, all questions, any questions.
They will not come at you in a logical fashion, starting with the alphabet and going step by logical step through all there is to know about English, and then changing to maths and taking it step by incremental step as one would find in a conventional school’s scope and sequence.4 I personally prefer this approach and have tried to force my children to follow a rigidly defined and logically progressive sequence of lessons. But your children are probably like my children: they would come at me with questions from all over the place. You will struggle with the relevance of many questions and may be tempted to disregard them and ignore them and even forbid them. But stop and think a moment: while you may not see any relevance, your child has made some kind of a connection between whatever you were previously talking about and the new question the child just asked. The children are making and will make their own connections and will naturally follow those links in their own minds with a lot more gusto. You can do the same thing, with some practise perhaps, and make links back to what you wanted to talk about or to other important topics that their questions have brought to your mind.
The fact is, while your ideal of progressing sequentially from step 1 to 10 in subjects A through E gets sidetracked by all these weird questions, the children are actually jumping around to other steps that are still on your curriculum, some further down the track and some you’ve already covered, but their questions also jump around to other subjects not on your curriculum. This is a real bonus! And because the children are asking the questions, they are learning, they are taking something in. It is particularly effective because they are making connections. Knowledge and learning experts tell us that it is the making of connections that really advances both rote memorisation and learning with understanding. The children have their own scope and sequence built into each of those “How?” and “Why?” questions.
One of the first things children in the classroom learn is that the teacher is the one who asks the questions, not the students. Nothing kills the spontaneous curiosity all children are born with quite as quickly as that. But you can encourage the questions, the more the better. If you don’t know the answer, fine, go look it up. That research is in itself a great educational pursuit. Listen, you want to organise things so that your children see you as the authority. Why? Because you are the authority, you are the authority, you are the authority in your children’s lives, under God, just as it should be, just as they need. You will either know the answer or how to find the answer, as well as explain how the answer fits into the big picture.
There is incidental learning: when your children just pick things up as you go about your daily business, things that are caught rather than taught. This includes much in the area of character training, which may be far more important and valuable to your children, when it’s all said and done, than their academic accomplishments.
There is self-learning: self-instruction that takes place when the children have free play, pursue hobbies, experiment on their own, are set tasks and put in charge or made responsible for regular chores, or when they just sit down and start reading for their own enjoyment and edification.
Then there is learning that takes place when you aren’t even there: when they join clubs, go to scouts, church groups, camps, sports teams, visit Uncle Ted up the valley and help milk the cows, etc. As long as they are awake, they are learning something.
The curriculum is all waking hours. Fairly flexible that, not necessarily organised to the last detail. In fact, most home educators who start off really formally soon
become rather informal. And those who start off really informally soon become even more informal, and may appear to outsiders to be goofing off all day. It is just that they are pursuing knowledge in a more effective method of reading, discussion, exploration and experimentation. There may be precious little “work” produced as in schools, but that is because “school work” is another one of those logistical requirements of schools to ensure the children are in fact doing “something”, for the teacher cannot possibly know where each child is up to.

To read the rest of this book go to: https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/applying-for-an-exemption-to-educate-at-home/

The complete book now in PDF form for emailing $2.00 – now free
https://hef.org.nz/2012/applying-for-an-exemption-to-educate-at-home-now-an-ebook/

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Needing help for your home schooling journey:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/needing-help-for-your-home-schooling-journey-2/

And

Here are a couple of links to get you started home schooling:

https://hef.org.nz/getting-started-2/

and

https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/

Craig talks about this book less than a month before he died of stage 4 Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). He wrote this book 6 months before he was diagnosed with the tumour in his brain which caused him to go completely numb down his left side.

For more information or to buy this book go to: https://hef.org.nz/exemptions/applying-for-an-exemption-to-educate-at-home/

To order do one of the following:

send email to sales@hef.org.nz 

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From the Smiths:

https://hef.org.nz/2011/craig-smith-26-january-1951-to-30-september-2011/

Updated 30 January 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 click here