Home Educator gets 3rd in the Olympic Games

Well done Jack!! We are all very very proud of you
Yet another success in the home education circles! — Raewyn Shand

King for three seconds

MARK GEENTY IN LONDON

Jack Bauer

LAWRENCE SMITH/Fairfax NZ
NOBLE: New Zealand time trial cyclist Jack Bauer briefly takes the third-place throne at Hampton Court Palace, just outside London, after the men’s time trial at the Olympic Games.

Golden Bay’s Jack Bauer spent “all of three seconds” on a royal throne at Hampton Court Palace, a final, surreal experience of a satisfying Olympic debut.

The Nelson cyclist finished 19th in the men’s time trial amid chaotic scenes as Britain’s Bradley Wiggins delivered the gold medal his nation demanded.

Bauer was the 12th of 37 competitors to take off on the 44km ride, and his time of 54min 54.16sec had him momentarily in the top-three. Fittingly in the regal surroundings, the top-three sat on thrones in front of King Henry XIII’s former residence until incoming riders bettered their time as they arrived at 90sec intervals.

The 27-year-old from Takaka was soon moved on, but could hold his head high after he finished 10th in Saturday’s brutal road race when he was primarily Greg Henderson’s designated backup.

“I hope I did New Zealand proud. I gave it my all. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It’s been the biggest honour I’ve ever had to be selected for my country and bear the weight of cycling’s expectations back home. I’m really proud to be here and be flying the flag.”

Bauer had plenty of Kiwi support and got a rousing ovation as he pedalled back through the palace gates. Among them were his parents, Hans and Caroline, who had missed his road race as they were at his cousin’s wedding in Germany.

“A clash of priorities there,” he said with a laugh.

Expectations were not huge of Bauer today and he almost did not make it after misjudging a sweeping turn around the 15km mark.

“There was a big right hand corner and I had my head down and came in at 55kmh, I thought it was a roundabout that I was going straight through. I don’t know how I kept the bike upright but I did. I lost all my speed. It takes a big effort to get back up to pace and I panicked a bit and I guess things fell apart from there.”

Bauer now returns to his Spanish base to continue racing for his Garmin Barracuda team. His contract ends this year but he hinted he would sign with another team, although he could not reveal details.

He would love to be considered for the next Olympics in Rio de Janeiro in four years’ time.

“It’s something different wearing your country’s colours. It’s something I’ve always wanted to do since I was a young kid. And Olympics level is the pinnacle.

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

From the Smiths:

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

Updated  28 July 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 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:

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

and

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

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

Home of learning: Home school parents passionate about role

ADAM ROBERTS

Dawson Family

STITCHED TOGETHER: Peter Dawson, left, Karen Dawson, Hannah Dawson, 7, Matt Dawson, 15, and Rebecca Dawson, 17 in front of a mural the children created while being home schooled in Richmond.
Home-schooling is a pathway many families pursue, but for outsiders it can be hard to imagine how it works. Education reporter Adam Roberts met three families who are passionate about learning in the home:

Once you get Raewyn Shand talking about her children, it’s hard to get her to stop.

This is partly because she is so proud of them, but also because there are so many.

This is also because, like the more than 250 home-educators in the Nelson region, she has had a direct role in their successes.

Starting from the top then, we have: Jesika, 32, a functions manager at Veneto Club in Melbourne.

She’s followed by Sunni, 31, a financial administration and property investor in Auckland.

Daughter Catriona, 29, is a climbing technician and rigger with Kordia.

Anson, 26, is a wool harvester, working all over the world six months a year, and a farm manager at home.

Brianna, 24, is a registered drug and alcohol counsellor, and a Bridge Programme case worker, doing everything from brief intervention to group education to comprehensive assessment.

Sebastian, 21, is a second skipper in the aquaculture industry.

Nathan, 16, is studying Professional Restaurant, Wine & Bar Service at the Nelson Marlborough Institute of Technology and works at a local restaurant.

At home, Mrs Shand teaches Shoshannah, 14, Mahalia, 12, and Azzan, 9. For those not keeping count, that’s 10 children.

She’s telling me all this, and a lot more besides, outside the Tahunanui Library one day, where Mahalia is waiting for her harp lesson, taught by fellow home-educator Annemieke Harmonie, who we’ll get to later.

Mrs Shand has been home schooling for 30 years at her home in Port Ligar, initially because of the area’s isolation but also because the family took to it so well.

At first, she used material from The Correspondence School and the Accelerated Christian Education course, but quickly burnt out with the rigid course structure, and eventually moved to an “integrated thematic unit” curriculum.

The whole family completes tasks based along a theme, using a “bus-stop” approach allowing younger ones to work for as long as they can manage before stopping and letting the older children continue.

The children can study whatever they want – one chose to learn the intricacies of taxidermy – with specialists in even the most obscure subjects proving easy to find.

The more rigid courses had led to difficulties with her children. One daughter had not learned to speak until she was 3, so any expectation that she would be able to read and write at 5 was unrealistic, Mrs Shand says.

“She wasn’t dumb, she wasn’t stupid, she wasn’t ready. A child is ready when they are ready, not when the state says they’re ready.”

Her other children have continued this trend, with one son not reading until he was 9 . Most started between 7 and 8 years old.

The children are taught until the age where they would leave a mainstream school. “By the age of 16 most have grown wings and are starting to fly. Some fly quicker than others,” Mrs Shand says.

Learning at home has also helped her children realise that they can learn anywhere, and from anyone, rather than having the attitude that learning is something done at school, she says.

Harp teacher Annemieke Harmonie is similarly passionate about her experiences as a home educator.

Since moving to New Zealand from Holland, after travelling the world playing her harp, the trained primary school teacher decided home schooling would provide the best education for her three children, son Miro, 12, and daughters Ester, 10 and Lisa, 6.

They start their school day by spending 2 hours working hard on reading, writing, maths, music and art, then eat a nutritious lunch, and then spend the afternoon exploring a variety of interests, ranging from drawing to karate, cheese-making to weaving.

One of their favourites is chess, and in 2010 Miro and Ester were part of a team of home schoolers who won an Otago intermediate school chess championship, despite being much younger than the other competitors.

“I don’t really want to compare them, they do what they do. But I do find that when I do compare them they are pretty good.”

Part of her motivation to become a home educator was to avoid giving her children a school experience similar to her own, Ms Harmonie says.

“I went back into my memories of my youth, thought what were the best memories, when did I learn the most, when was I inspired.

“I saw that 99 per cent of my learning experiences didn’t happen in school,” she says.

A common refrain from high schools is for students to keep their options open by gaining as many qualifications as they can, even if they don’t intend to use them.

Ms Harmonie says she’s open-minded about this.

“When they know what they want to be doing, they will make sure that they find a path in the road to do so. If that is university, or if that is a carpenter, whatever really.”

For those considering becoming a home educator, she advises them to do their research and determine whether it is for them.

You sacrifice a part of yourself, she says.

“You become very intimate with your children, you know them so well, that you know what they enjoy, and you know their strengths and weaknesses.

“My daughter is not very good at spelling, so we spend more time with her, and my son helps her and they start helping each other.

“They really like helping each other.”

They work hard to make sure there are no gaps in the children’s learning, making sure each topic is revised, she says.

“You have your moments, everybody has their moments.

“I can’t say it’s the perfect system, neither is anything else I’ve been able to find.

“This is the closest I’ve been able to find that suits my ideals.”

Next I talk to Peter Dawson who is on the leadership board of Nelson Christian Home Educators group, with a membership of 55 families.

He and his wife, Karen, elected to educate their children at home partly because his own education was so good, but also to provide them with a strong Christian world view and a classical education.

He was educated in a Catholic private school in South Africa, receiving a rich classical education in small classes.

“My view of education comes from that world view,” he says.

“When I look at what NCEA offers, I can’t see that it offers anything close to the richness of that education.”

The only alternatives were to either send his kids to expensive private schools or home educate them.

Home schooling allowed them to tailor the curriculum to the skills of the particular children, whether it was science or English, offering a degree of flexibility that Mr Dawson thinks is unavailable at most mainstream schools.

“Quite often, in my view, the schools have to teach across a wide range of abilities, have to strike a medium between the clever high performers and the low performers. What they are obliged to offer is a generic education, rather than one tailored to the specific needs of the individual,” Mr Dawson says.

So for the past 14 years, Karen, a trained teacher, has taught their four children – Rebecca, 17, Matt, 15, Pippa, 12, and Hannah, 7 – at home, following the Sonlight programme, a Christian curriculum.

The children spend the morning hard at work, starting with chores around the house, then moving to a timetable incorporating key disciplines like maths, English, science, and Bible study.

That last subject is particularly important, as it gives the children a worldview and a context in which to live their lives, he says.

“I’m afraid schools don’t, which is reflected in the high rates of teenage pregnancy, suicides and all the other social ills that we are regularly confronted with.”

A Christian world view obviously affects the content itself, particularly in subjects like history, geography and science.

“If you don’t believe in a creator and believe that the universe started with the Big Bang then that is the context through which you will present science,” he says.

They still teach them about scientific theories they do not necessarily agree with, and leave the children to decide what they believe.

They do the same with other religions and belief systems, showing the children what others believe and getting them to view Christianity in a wider context.

“It’s training them to think,” he says.

Mrs Dawson says home schooling has allowed her to make sure her children are taught by someone who loves them, wants the very best for them and can tailor a curriculum with God at the centre from the best international sources.

“Within schools you get very talented teachers who are brilliant. You also get those who are there to pay the mortgage.

“I have yet to meet [a home schooler] who isn’t passionate.”

But now their two eldest children have elected to go to mainstream colleges, Garin College and Nelson College for Girls, to make it easier to gain access to university to study medicine and dentistry.

Home schoolers who go to university can generally gain acceptance by presenting examples of their work but, with these subjects, the admissions process is a lot more competitive, so the family decided to play it safe.

With a foot in both camps, she says the choice to home school is up to every family.

“Each child is different, each family needs to prayerfully work out what’s best for them and for their children.”

Rebecca says she enjoys the social side of college, particularly the “hustle and bustle” of the school.

She already had a lot of friends at the school thanks to her sports and music hobbies.

The only thing she found odd was spending the majority of the time with people her own age – a situation she had never experienced in real life.

The academic side also initially took some getting used to, with less one-on-one study time, and a lot of time “wasted” – walking between classes, for example.

In English, they study only one book a year, rather than the one book a fortnight she read while being home schooled.

It has also been tough to adapt to the vagaries of NCEA, with markers looking for specific answers.

But being in school did have its academic advantages, including access to specialist equipment such as laboratories.

Matt likewise enjoys his time at Garin, with his classmates and teachers alike friendly and encouraging.

But following the pace of the whole class was sometimes difficult, after so many years learning at his own speed.

“It’s a bit frustrating at times.”

Peter Dawson has strong views about home schooling, and was quick to contact the Nelson Mail after a story featuring local principals suggesting the sector needed to be brought into line with the strict accountability faced by schools.

The Education Review Office ceased regular reviews of the sector in 2009.

The principals also said home schooling could lead to children with a narrow world view, gaps in their education and a below-standard education – criticisms that home schoolers say they hear all the time.

Mr Dawson says the principals did not put their views forward in a considered way.

“You can express opinion, but if you express an incorrect opinion based on limited facts in a public forum you must be held to account.”

He had come into contact with some home schoolers in the past who were not discharging their responsibilities properly, but the comments from the principals had tarred every home schooler with the same brush.

There are students who were not keeping up in the mainstream system as well.

Mrs Shand says she doubts parents who were not interested in teaching their children well would become home schoolers.

Those struggling to teach complex subjects could always get help from specialists.

“It’s been a very successful and steady environment here in Nelson. Why rock the boat?”

Ms Harmonie says the comments seemed very fear based, and did not jibe with her experiences.

“Home schoolers are pretty good the way they are, I think they should leave them alone really.”

Academic studies of home schooling generally support this notion, with a famous 1997 study, “Strengths of Their Own: Home Schoolers Across America”, showing home schoolers in the United States outperforming their mainstream counterparts by an average of 30 to 37 percentile points.

This performance jump was independent of race, gender, income and government regulation.

Hampden Street School principal Don McLean was one of the principals who expressed concern in the original story, and since then he says he has been contacted by several people both critical and supportive of his stance.

He says he was never “having a crack” at home schooling itself, but was raising the issue at a time when mainstream schools were more accountable than ever.

It would only take one or two home-schooling families to do a poor job to “let the side down”, and there was no-one monitoring the sector to catch that.

He could understood why it was not a priority for the Education Review Office, but suggested making standard assessments used in schools available for parents to access if they wanted.

“You want children to know that they will be able to finish school with a certain level of reading, generally accompanied by writing, and also want to know that they can do basic maths.”

Undoubtedly there would still be kids who fell behind in the mainstream system, but schools had mechanisms in place to pick up those kids who fall through the gaps.

“We all try our hardest to get our best out of what we do.

“All I’m saying is accountability is the name of the game with what we do.

“It may be useful for them, too.”

A few weeks after first meeting Mrs Shand, we go out to visit the Dawsons early in the morning, to grab a photo of the family before some of them leave for their days at work and school.

Rebecca and Matt are in their respective school uniforms, and Pippa and Hannah are dressed for the cold morning.

As we pull out, Matt begins his walk to Garin, and Rebecca starts her own car, on her way to Nelson College for Girls.

Mrs Dawson, Pippa and Hannah head inside the house.

To school. To learn.

– © Fairfax NZ News

For more on this Subject:

Biased reporting, unprofessional comments

and a radio interview

Benefits of homeschooling

 

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

From the Smiths:

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

Updated  28 July 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 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:

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

and

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

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

Glorious harmony at home

Nicola Gray sits in her cosy kitchen, warmed by a large Sweetheart stove smouldering as the winter sun trickles through pink stained glass windows, creating patterns on the wooden walls and cupboards.

Meat defrosts slowly on the bench for the evening meal that Nicola will prepare for husband Randal and children Samalah, 23 and Daniel, 21. After dinner, there is no television to distract from evening activities, conversation or a good book at the kitchen table.

A humble space, the kitchen is clearly the heart of this Renwick home, reflecting the lifestyle and beliefs the Gray family hold, beliefs based on traditional Christian values and a determination to retain close family bonds in a fast-paced world.

The Grays took seven years to build their ideal home, which began life as part of St Mary’s Catholic Church in Blenheim.

Nuns taught singing and music underneath the sharply pitched roof, the sound tempered by acoustic tiles almost 5m high.

An elderly nun once told Nicola that among the many voices that rang out between the old walls were those of the Vienna Boys’ Choir, which gave a private performance for the nuns.

In the late 1980s the music room, along with two other buildings, became surplus to requirement and were put up for tender to be moved off the site.

For Nicola and her husband Randal, the timing could not have been better. They had bought a patch of bare land on the eastern end of Renwick’s High St and were looking for a way to build within their financial constraints. Those constraints were severe, as the Grays do not believe in mortgages, so everything they bought came from money already earned.

When Nicola and Randal inspected the music hall they found an empty, unfurnished building that was long and narrow and would certainly provide a challenging layout for a family home. They put in a tender and sat back to wait for the answer in a manner so fitting for the building: “We’re Christians so we left it up to the Lord really,” says Nicola.

To their surprise they won the tender and were given a time limit to move the building off site.

Randal prepared the foundations in Renwick and organised house removal specialists but when it was almost moving day, the company owner desperately needed a holiday and told Randal he could not do the job.

Unperturbed, Randal sourced a truck and crane and used friends’ help to brace the music hall for its big move up State Highway 6.

It was then the Grays discovered that the wooden structure had stood loosely on its foundations without being tied down for more than 80 years, unshifted by floods, earthquakes and whatever else nature had thrown its way.

Yet once in Renwick the house needed to be tied down properly and “beefed up” with concrete in the corners to comply with council rules.

During the move the Grays found a piece of wood in the attic bearing four or five signatures of the carpenters who had built the music room, dated June 28, 1902. They have kept the wood, a simple documentation of the building’s history.

Once the music room was solidly in place on Renwick soil, the Grays were faced with the challenge of turning the tall, empty, echoing expanse into a cosy family home.

“We looked at it and we said it’s like building a boat or a caravan or a house truck,” Nicola says.

“We just thought well, we’re fairly unpretentious, we’re not going for bells and whistles, we’re not trying to be better than anyone else. We just want a comfortable home with good storage.”

It would take seven years for them to realise their dream home, only doing the work as funds allowed to avoid debt.

As owners of Dashwood Timbers, naturally the Grays were determined to use only solid wood within their home and would not go near MDF or gib board.
“We don’t like what we call Weetbix board (MDF); it gets wet and it swells and it’s hopeless,” Nicola says.

As a result, the Grays used about 14 different woods in their home, most of it match lined in pine. The sitting room was match lined in a beautiful deep rimu, though Nicola says perhaps it soaks up the light a bit too much.

The Grays employed, on a cash basis, an elderly woodworker who was delighted to find something he could get his teeth into in an age of increasing use of gib and plaster, says Nicola.

Warwick Hall built dormers in the 56 degree pitched roof to make the upstairs usable.

The Grays are tall and wanted ceilings higher than average. This ended up being a 2.7m stud with beams that reached down to 2.4m. Cupboards were built high for Nicola’s comfort.

“I can walk around most modern houses and wipe the fly spots off the ceiling. It’s too low,” Nicola says.

Original features of the music hall such as its stained glass windows were retained where practically possible, though some glass was replaced to let in more light and sash cords were renewed.

The main outside door was moved from its less than practical position in the corner of the kitchen to the living room opposite the wooden stairs.

Knowing space was limited, the Grays carefully assigned each nook and cranny of the house a functional role. A small toilet is tucked away under the stairs, where the remaining space perfectly houses a desk and chair.

A hallway behind the kitchen became the laundry with two tubs, and contains handy shelves for Nicola and Samalah’s preserves and canned fruit.

The deep master bedroom wardrobe sports two rails, one behind the other, creating more secret and ingenious storage space.

Though small, the kitchen is the obvious place to gather, the wooden table and chairs close to the large Sweetheart wood stove that heats the house and the hot water.

The centrepiece of the kitchen, the huge stove with its shiny “bells and whistles” was not what Nicola and Randal had envisioned in their simple home. During the build they bought two other stoves but ended up selling them on as they did not quite fit the design. Having seen the Sweetheart in a Blenheim shop window for nearly five years, as nobody wanted it, the Grays finally went inside and came to a deal with the owner, who was keen to move it on.

The wood stove and the safe, cosy family space was something Nicola and Randal enjoyed growing up and were determined to provide for their children.

“We wanted that  I suppose people would call it old fashioned now but we think that a lot of people have thrown old fashioned out. They’ve thrown out a lot of the good stuff that sort of bound families together, and the kitchen table, sitting around the fire, reading, talking to each other, spending time with each other, we wanted that sort of home.

Our daughter’s now 23 and our son is now 21 but they still work with us and they still live with us. We’re all together still. And we all just get along.”

As such, homeschooling was “part of the journey” for which a wooden shed was built in the garden. Eventually the “schoolroom” shifted to a caravan at Dashwood Timbers where the children helped their father after lessons. The shed became Nicola’s work room, the computer room and creative space, a room that kept work and home life separate.

For the Grays, the house will not be home for much longer: It is for sale as the family prepares for a new project.
While Nicola is sad to be leaving the home she and Randal put so much thought, work and love into, she refuses to dwell on it.

“We’ll never find anything that matches here, we won’t. I think sometimes you have to make hard choices but you cannot keep looking back and wishing that you’re not where you are now because life goes on.”

– The Marlborough Express

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

From the Smiths:

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

Updated 8 July 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 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:

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

and

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

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

Homeschooling right choice for family

HOMESCHOOL

LAURA WALTERS/FAIRFAX NZ
FAMILY AFFAIR: The Prior children have all been homeschooled by their mum Lynne, who believes the flexibility and options of homeschooling makes it the right choice for them.

Feilding Herald

In a society where time and resources are scarce, the flexibility and opportunities presented by homeschooling are an attractive solution.

Feilding woman Lynne Prior homeschooled her six children for the past 15 years, with two children still learning from home.

Liana, 19, Alyssa, 16, Aiden and Celese, 14, Rehum, 11, and Livinia, 7, were all homeschooled during their primary and intermediate years.

Lynne, who was on the board of Manawatu Home Educators Group, said she decided to homeschool her children so she could be more involved in their lives.

“This way I have a little bit more input in their education and little bit more input in their lives.”

Lynne said the student-to-teacher ratio was another factor in the family’s decision to keep the kids at home.

“They can get lost in the system.”

A child did not have to be enrolled in school until the age of six.

At this time parents could apply for an exemption, and anyone could teach their children without any qualification.

“Anyone can homeschool,” Lynne said.

“You don’t have to be a teacher.”

There were a variety of reasons why people chose to homeschool their children.

It could be for the flexibility, the child might not have done well in a mainstream school, or parents might want the opportunity to tailor the curriculum to their child, Lynne said.

The Prior family had a large Christian component in their school work, which would not be taught in mainstream schools.

Despite staying at home with their family, rather than going to school with other children, the Prior family were not shy, or socially challenged.

The Manawatu Home Educators Group, which had up to 100 member families in the past, set up an annual athletics days, and a home and country show, to get homeschooled children from around the district interacting with each other.

The group also organised regular outings, and field trips, like any other school, Lynne said.

As well as group outings the Prior family also play seasonal sports, take dancing lessons, and attend Boys’ and Girls’ Brigade.

Despite the interest in the annual events it was hard to gauge how many children were being homeschooled in the area.

“There are a lot of opportunities, but not everyone takes advantage of them,” she said.

Homeschooling was also popular in Northland and Whanganui, Lynne said.

Despite the stigma attached to children who had been homeschooled, when Lynne’s children moved onto Feilding High School the teachers were impressed at their forthcoming natures, and willingness to ask questions, she said.

“The teachers are impressed at their level of maturity.”

There were always people, and teachers, who judged the Priors for being homeschooled, but the children learnt to ignore the comments, Lynne said.

The children did really well at school because they had a good work ethic, and were focused. Lynne said a lot of homeschool children did well at school, but not all of them were as self-assured as the Prior family.

Liana, who was 19, was starting Lincoln University this year to study landscape and architecture, and Alyssa, 16, was in year 12 at Feilding High School and taking a year 13 subject.

Alyssa said the transition to high school was an easy one. Lynne said it was important to get out and about with the children.

And she wanted other homeschooling families to know there was support and activities available to them.

If you want to know more about homeschooling, or for how to order resources phone Lynne Prior on 06 323 4708 or Robyn Beals 06 355 0721.

– © Fairfax NZ News

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

~~~

From the Smiths:

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

Updated 2 June 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 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:

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

and

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

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

Truancy and the CBD area of towns

AHE Statement on Truancy

Below is the AHE statement on Truancy. It may or may not be revelant to your area:


Please ensure your Auckland based support group has this message posted on its email loop.

This issue affects us all.


Auckland Home Educators has become aware of an incident in which a 13 year old home educated student was recently picked up by the Police as ‘truant’ because she was outside during school hours.

Having discussed the issue with the Ministry, the Police and Truancy Services over the course of the last 24 hours, we can confirm the following:

  • This is an isolated incident caused by an over-zealous and uneducated Police Officer
  • There is no legal requirement for home educated students to remain at home or indoors during school hours because “there is no requirement for set hours” (MoE wording)
  • An informal apology has been received over the incident
  • Local Police have been informed about the issue
  • Truancy officers will continue to operate as previously – they are familiar with home educated and correspondence students
  • While our students may carry ID cards to prove they are home educated, this is not a legal requirement

On further discussions with two Truancy Office supervisors (central and south Auckland) today, the normal course of events would run as follows:

The student may be questioned by the Police or truancy officer as to why they aren’t in school. The student’s response should be to simply explain that he/she is home educated. The officials would confirm this with the parents, the tutor (if applicable) or the Ministry of Education. If an ID card is carried, this may be shown. No further information needs to be provided.

It is AHE’s recommendation that you talk to your families about this incident and come up with a series of suitable responses e.g. “I am a home educated student. My phone number is xxx xxxx and you are welcome to call my parents to verify this.” Or “I am a home educated student. Here is my Student ID card.” It might be helpful if they know to answer any other questions with, “I’m not legally obliged to answer that question.”

The Ministry was keen for our community “not to over react to things…”, stressing that truancy is a huge issue at present, especially in South Auckland and the officer would have most probably felt (even if he were misguided) that he was doing a good thing.

If you have any questions, please email off-list – GovtLiaison@ahe.org.nz .

Kind regards,

Erena Fussell

AHE Government Liaison – your regional support network

www.ahe.org.nz

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

From the Smiths:

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

Updated 25 March 2012: Life for Those Left Behind (Craig Smith’s Health) page 6 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:

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

and

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

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