About GFHS
Guilt-Free Homeschooling is comfortable, it's relaxed, and it fits your family's lifestyle.

GFHS is run by Carolyn Morrison, an 11 year veteran of homeschooling her two children, from leaving public school in the elementary grades through high school graduation and into college.

Whether you have a specific question, want some general advice, or just need a dose of encouragement, Guilt-Free Homeschooling is the place to be! GFHS offers help, comfort, and advice to new or struggling homeschool moms, assuring them that homeschooling can be manageable, successful, guilt-free, and glorifying to God.

Contact
Email questions or topic suggestions to:
Carolyn Morrison

Subscribe to my feed GuiltFree Atom site feed

Disclaimer

MAC USERS can view this site best by using Internet Explorer or Firefox.

Enter your Email


Preview | Powered by FeedBlitz

Recent Comments
Timeless Treasures

Click HERE to Return to the Main Page
  • Activity: Felt Shapes
  • Math Awareness: Tactile Counting
  • Top 10 Ways to Salvage an Interrupted Day
  • Top 10 Benefits of Homeschooling with Grace
  • Top 10 Dress-up Items
  • The Activity Jar
  • What Do You Do with a Smart Kid?
  • Guilt-Free Homeschooling Means Freedom
  • From the Mailbox: Pregnant and Homeschooling
  • A Day Without Lessons
  • Top 15 Mottoes to Get You Through Your First Homeschooling Year
  • 10 Ways to Ease into Homeschooling
  • So You Think You're Not Smart Enough to Homeschool?
  • Top 10 Signs You're Doing a Good Job as a Homeschooling Parent
  • "Test Drive" Homeschooling
  • From the Mailbox: Troublesome Students
  • From the Mailbox: Read-Aloud Disruptions
  • From the Mailbox: Disrespectful Kids
  • Am I Doing Enough?
  • Common Mistakes Made by New Homeschoolers
  • Applying Learning Styles with Skip-counting
  • Curriculum Choices and Shoe Shopping, an Analogy
  • Homeschooling and Hotel Management, an Analogy
  • Tactile Lessons from Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan
  • When Is Reading NOT Reading?
  • Redeeming a Disaster Day
  • Homeschooling Kids Blogroll
  • A Homeschooler's View of Education
  • People Who Nearly Scared Me Away from Homeschooling
  • How Did You Learn to Write
  • Teach Your Children the Art of Amusing Themselves
  • Top 10 Things I Did Not Need for Homeschooling
  • We're Not Raising Children -- We're Raising Adults
  • Looking Back on the Bad Days
  • Should Everyone Homeschool?
  • 50 Reasons Why I Could Never Homeschool
  • The Forgotten Role Model: Spouse
  • Shopping Trip Bingo
  • Reschedule, Refocus, Regroup
  • Sample Transcript & Diploma
  • The Value of Supplemental Activities
  • Second-hand Attitudes
  • Taming the Laundry Monster
  • The Socialization Code
  • Homeschooling Is a Choice
  • Surviving the First Year of Homeschooling after Leaving Public School
  • Start with Reading,Handwriting, & Arithmetic, and Save the Rest for Later
  • Questions from a First-time Homeschooler
  • The Beauty of Logic (and Sudoku Puzzles)
  • The Importance of Play in Education
  • Homeschooling the Neighborhood
  • A New Approach to Spelling-Word Lists
  • Limiting "Worldly" Vocabulary
  • "Mystery Boxes" and the Scientific Method
  • What Makes a "Bad" Co-op Class?
  • Co-op Classes: The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly
  • Are You Ready for a Challenge? Pan-states!
  • Homeschooling Is Hard Work
  • How to Come Up with Co-op Classes
  • Homeschooling High School
  • How Long Should I Homeschool?
  • Rules and Disciplinewithin the Co-op Group Setting
  • Possible Pitfalls in Homeschool Groups
  • Ideas for Special Events
  • Ideas for Field Trips
  • Ideas for Co-op Classes
  • StarWars Goes Homeschool
  • Co-op Classes: A Primer
  • Homeschool Support Groups & Co-op Classes: The Basics
  • Stereotypes Proven (in reverse) at College Orientation
  • Disadvantages of Homeschooling
  • Homeschooling an Only Child
  • When Good Kids Become Not So Good
  • The Ideal Homeschool Atmosphere
  • The Never-endingQuestion: Whyyyyy?
  • Can You Convince My Husband to Homeschool?
  • Standardized Testing
  • The Know-It-All Attitude
  • Social Skills -- What Should I Teach My Preschooler?
  • Homeschool Gadgets: An Investment in Your Future or a Waste of Money?
  • Easter Story Cookies
  • Involving Dads in Homeschooling
  • Teaching Decision-Making
  • Rainy Day -- A Post-Homeschooling Perspective
  • Time for Kindergarten Round-Up?
  • Full-Bodied Education: Mind, Body, & Spirit
  • What Is Your "Best"?
  • Our Reasons for Homeschooling
  • Teaching Spelling (and Grammar) Through Reading and Listening
  • Should Children Be "Witnesses" in Public School?
  • Common Homeschooling Myths Dispelled
  • Ladies -- What Day Is It?
  • Why Aren't You in SCHOOL?
  • Mundanes, Too-days, and Woe-is-me-days
  • Sick Days, Snow Days, and Other Interruptions
  • Dropping the Drama
  • Is This "Acceptable Behavior"?
  • Respect Must Be Earned
  • Number and Letter Recognition
  • The Bible Is Relevant to My Life Today?
  • The Wise Man Learns from the Mistakes of Others
  • Current Events 101
  • Where Do I Begin???
  • Sorting Toys Is Algebra, or How to Keep a Clean Room
  • Screening -- Paying Attention to Red Flags
  • Transcript Writing
  • If You Have Children, You DO Homeschool
  • Ignorance Is Not Forever
  • People LIVE in This House
  • Discouraging Families
  • You and I Drive Different Cars
  • Any Dead Fish Can Float Downstream
  • Start Homeschooling for One Reason, but Continue for Another
  • Choose Your Battles
  • A Valuable Jump-start in Math
  • Spoken Destinies and Learned Behaviors
  • Help! My Student Finished the Book Too Fast!
  • Life Is Black and White -- There Is No Gray
  • Is Learning Limited to Books?
  • Homeschooling Failures I Have Known – and What Can Be Learned from Them
  • When Children Mispronounce Words
  • "Parent" Is a Verb
  • The Myth of Age-Mates
  • >Standing Up Against "The Lie"
  • Looking for the Hard Part
  • Your Children Will Not Always Be Like This
  • Teach Your Students to Teach Themselves
  • Using Your Household Staff
  • Teaching with Preschoolers Around... and Under... and on Top... and Beside
  • Bells on Their Toes and Other Methods of Keeping Toddler Safe
  • What Didn't Work for Today Can Be Changed for Tomorrow
  • Guilt-Free Lessons Plans and Scheduling
  • Role Modeling: Who's Who -- Otherwise Known as Teaching by Example
  • Junior High (Middle School) Is a Waste of Time (Yours and Theirs)
  • Kids Will Be Kids
  • Do the Best Job You Can and Pray for God to Clean Up the Rest
  • Biblical Model of Discipleship
  • Homeschool Beginnings -- A Child's Point of View
  • A Homeschool Success Story: Teaching a Fifth Grader to Read
  • Meatball Education: Filling in the Potholes of Public School
  • Siblings as Best Friends
  • Family Is Spelled T-E-A-M
  • Who Wrote This "Rule Book" and Why Do I Think I Have to Follow It?
  • Summer – A Help or a Hindrance?
  • Who Taught This Kid to Walk, Talk, and Potty?
  • Living Your Life with No Regrets
  • Learning to Walk -- Seen as a New Lesson
  • The Story of Two Buses
  • Driving My Minivan Is the Closest I Get to the “Homeschool Uniform”
  • The Socialization Myth, Part 2
  • Socialization and Why You Don't Need It
  • Too Much, Too Fast = Burnout
  • Classic Literature Is Not Necessarily Good Literature
  • Give Credit Where Credit Is Due
  • Mastery vs. Perfection
  • I Give One Grade: 100% -- But You Get to Keep Trying Until You Get It
  • Name This Figure, or Are There Really Any Wrong Answers?
  • Knowing How to Find the Answer Is the Same as Knowing the Answer
  • If You Can Present Your Case with Facts and Logic and Without Whining, I Will Listen with an Open Mind
  • Reminding Myself of My Ultimate Goal
  • Tests, Book Reports, and Other Un-necessities
  • Educide
  • What Is the Problem with Homeschooling?
  • Lunch Will Be Served When the Math Lesson Is Finished
  • Every Day Is a Learning Day, and Life Is Our Classroom
  • If This Is HOMEschooling, Why Are We Always in the CAR?
  • Yada, yada, yada…
  • But Public School Is Free...Won't Homeschooling Cost a Lot?
  • No More Dyslexia?
  • Are We Homeschooling or Schooling at Home?
  • Introduction
  • Welcome
  • Quick Link to TITLES Index
    Quick Link to TOPICAL Index
    Click HERE to RETURN TO THE MAIN PAGE

    Homeschooling... Guilt-Free

    Friday, May 13, 2005

    Homeschool Support Groups & Co-op Classes: The Basics

    My offer to write a series of articles on support groups and co-op classes is being well received: many of you would like to start support groups or expand your groups to offer a few classes. Some others, however, are new to both of these concepts and have asked for clarification -- a good idea, since readers of this site cover all parts of the planet and local phraseology does not. I will attempt to define my terms, especially for our home education partners in Great Britain and Australia whose online journal entries can leave me puzzling over our common language. For those who have not experienced any of these efforts and for those who may have experienced them but called them by different names, here is what I mean.

    Homeschool Support Groups consist of like-minded families meeting to encourage each other, share ideas, form playgroups, fellowship together through picnics or potluck dinners (each family bringing a couple of dishes to share with all other families), field trips, sports teams, etc. "Like-minded" in this case refers to families who participate in educating their children at home, regardless of which homeschooling method is used. Children can also be encouraging to each other, not just the adults, since all of the children share similar (though not identical) homeschooling situations. Some groups may wish to specialize further by focusing on a particular method such as "classical homeschooling," "unit studies," or "the Charlotte Mason method.' [Groups may also wish to differentiate themselves by specific religious affiliation: Christian, Jewish, LDS, pagan, etc. More on this here.]

    Co-op Classes are a cooperative effort among several families or a support group to supplement their children's home education by working together on large group projects. These may range from simple to elaborate and may meet only once or on a regularly scheduled basis, but the topics covered should involve areas that are difficult to do at home with only one family. Some activities (such as knitting) are best taught at home with only a few students participating; others (team sports, for example) often do not work best in the home, needing a larger space or more participants to present the subject matter in the most effective manner. Cooperating with other families for certain endeavors can bring together a larger group of students while still maintaining the spirit of homeschooling. This is not forming a private school but applying homeschooling methods to a group larger than just one family.

    Moms' Meetings are monthly business meetings for the purposes of discussion, planning, fellowship, and sharing ideas. Nursing babies were always welcome in the groups I attended, but other children and Dads were occupied elsewhere, giving the mothers time to share each other's burdens and offer helpful advice or plan future group events. Some meetings included devotional time or a member sharing a brief topical presentation of interest to the group (such as Motivating Reluctant Students). Meetings were usually held in the evening; some were held in homes (for a small group), while a rather large group met in a church meeting room. Refreshments were as varied as the members: some provided ice water only, others had multiple desserts, coffee, and tea. (Since many of us are often limiting our calorie intake and the meetings took place after the evening meal, simple beverages were usually all that was desired.) Note: I do not intend to offend or exclude the fathers who homeschool their children and often find themselves in the minority at group events almost exclusively populated by women. For simplicity, I have let the majority rule prevail.

    Gym Nights required securing a local gymnasium for use by our group, and the Dads took turns organizing simple games for the children and supervising a period of playtime while the Moms were occupied at their meeting. Sometimes the older children were separated from the younger children (for safety's sake), and outdoor activities were provided when the weather allowed. Other times the entire group was divided into balanced teams for games. My son was a big fan of "Capture the Flag," a game where strategy was often more valuable than athletic prowess, and players of all ages and sizes could be valuable assets to their team. Since many Dads were present, there were always plenty of eyes to supervise little people and not just the one or two Dads who were in charge of planning that night's events.

    Field Trips mean going to a location for a tour or demonstration. Examples: arranging a visit to a bakery, printing shop, or small factory where the owner tells the children a little about running his business. [more ideas here]

    Group Events may present the results of a class. Examples: art fair, vocal music performance, or drama performance. Other types of special events hosted by the group may include standardized testing, taking individual "school" photos, or a sports tournament. [more ideas here]

    Any of these events may occur only one time, or they may be repeated on a regular basis -- as often or as seldom as your group desires. I have participated with four different support groups; one group met twice a month for co-op classes and one evening each month for the Moms' Meeting/Gym Night. Another group held one special event day per month, but did not do formal "classes." I recommend planning each spring for the next year's group schedule. Many families may want to work the group schedule into the theme of their own lessons, so advance planning is very important for them. I have heard of groups that meet once each week, but our curriculum plans would have made it difficult for us to participate weekly. As with all other scheduling, be sure you (the parents) are governing the schedule for your family, not in submission to it. Participate in events outside your home when they are convenient or beneficial to your family, but do not allow them to become more important than your family unity. When putting your family first, you are allowed to say "no" Guilt-Free.

    Our April Moms' Meeting was an idea session where we took suggestions for classes, events, and field trips from all members of the group. Then very dedicated planning committees (separate committees for classes & field trips) met once or twice during the next four weeks to organize the schedule and delegate responsibilities, and the final results were announced at the May Moms' Meeting. One of the Moms had a friend who raised ostriches; she suggested a field trip to learn all about them, scheduled a date, and made the arrangements with the owner for a visit to the ostrich ranch. Another family had a son with a very successful hobby of raising tropical fish, and he offered to teach a two-session class on aquarium basics. (Students who taught classes got the added benefit of public speaking experience in a friendly, informal atmosphere.) Each family has something to share with the group, whether it is organizational skills or a hobby they can demonstrate. Ideas can range from a one-time, one-hour presentation to a semester of coaching drama rehearsals, culminating in the performance of a play.

    Once I took up the challenge of working with another Mom to organize a very involved science-themed event that brought together families from four different support groups and covered homeschoolers in ten counties, a radius of approximately 50 miles. Response was so tremendous that we actually had to split the entire group in half and plan the two separate events simultaneously. It was a massive organizational triumph of multiple classes and field trips that came off nearly perfectly, but the grand scale was nothing I wish to repeat in this lifetime. The biggest lessons I learned from the undertaking were a) I am capable of much more than I had suspected, and b) never get involved in planning something with Mrs. I-can-do-it-all-and-more. (My daughter has reminded me to add c) how much I appreciate my daughter's computer savvy for databases and spreadsheets!)

    Now that you all understand what I am talking about, I will address deeper aspects of support groups, co-op classes, field trips, etc. While you are waiting for the next article to appear, you can begin brainstorming and write down your own ideas of things you would like to do with your own children or in combination with other families. Happy thinking!

    [For more information on cooperative classes and group activities, visit our Topical Index section on Co-op Groups.]

    Posted by Carolyn M @ 1:15 PM | 1 comments



    Copyright (c) 2004-2008 Carolyn Morrison. All Rights Reserved.
    Do not duplicate without written consent.

    Quick Link to TITLES Index
    Quick Link to TOPICAL Index
    RETURN TO THE MAIN PAGE
    Indexes
    TITLES Index
    Chronological Index
    TOPICAL Index
    Return to the Main Page
    Considering Homeschooling?
    Start Here!
    First-time Homeschooler?
    Start Here!
    Leaving Public School?
    Start Here!
    Stuck in a Homeschool Rut?
    Start Here!
    Co-op Group Questions?
    Start Here!
    GFHS Extras
  • NEW!
    Guilt-Free Homeschooling
    STORE!

  • Speaking of Education (quotes)
  • Locations of visitors to this page

    MySpace.com/guiltfreehomeschooling

    Link To GFHS
    Please upload these images to your own server

    Comfortable, relaxed, fits your lifestyle

    Homeschool Blog Sampler
    Recommended Curriculum Links
    General Sources
    Christian Book Distributors
    Rainbow Resource Center
    Vegsource HomeschoolResources
    Used Homeschool Stuff
    The Book Habit
    Math
    Saxon Math
    "Key To..." Workbooks
    Miquon Math
    Paper Models of Polyhedra
    English
    Bob Jones University Press
    Phonics
    Alpha-Phonics
    At Last! A Reading Method for Every Child!
    The ABCs and All Their Tricks
    Don Potter's FREE Phonics Downloads
    Ball, Stick, Bird
    Handwriting
    Handwriting Without Tears
    Reading
    Elsie Dinsmore
    Detective Zack
    Bible
    Children's Bible Lessons
    Creation Science
    Dr. Dino
    Answers in Genesis
    Intitute for Creation Research
    History
    Sower Biographies
    Uncle Eric Books
    White House Kids
    Preschoolers
    Michelle's Preschooler Activities
    Preschool Activities
    Other Homeschool Links
    Homeschool Legal Defense Association
    Practical Homeschooling
    Donna Young's Printables and Resources
    The Home School Digest
    FamilyMan Ministries
    Miscellany
    CSN Radio Webcast
    Whitehorse Quilting Studio
    SET Daily Puzzle
    Magnetic Games Online
    How Do You Spell "Potato"?
    Classic Kiddie Records (downloadable)
    Daisyland
    Above Rubies
    Credits & Associations

    This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

    Solid Bible teaching

    Women at Home ministry

    Monthly Archives