- In years past, homeschooling was limited to extremely conservative families who had no other alternative to public education. Currently, homeschooling has become popular with parents who do not wish to expose their children to the problems and issues that continously plague public and private schools.
- When you homeschool your child, you are able to instill your own values and beliefs on religion, culture and society. The focus can be on your child and her education. Curriculums are well planned and designed in a grade-appropriate manner for your child. Curriculums are easy to follow because they are specifically designed to meet the needs of homeschooling parents who otherwie have no formal training in classroom instruction.
- Homeschool curriculums feature a school year itinerary, showing you the progress that should be made by your child throughout the year. Curriculums give you pre-planned daily lessons and classroom instruction. Some even provide you with dialogue prompts to enable you to explain a concept or to discuss a subject with your child. Homeschool curriculums come with workbooks, text books, tests and answer keys. Commonly, homeschool curriculums even provide their users with a teacher help-line as well as a tutor for your child.
- Correspondence homeschool programs are designed to work on your own by preparing a lesson yourself and presenting it to your child. Usually, the school that provided you with the curriculum requires you to mail in tests and other grades in order to keep an official record of your child's academic progress. Online homeschool programs are usually pre-recorded lessons prepared by a teacher, requiring you to be with your child only as a means of assistance when needed. Online classes commonly provide tests, quizzes and assignments to be turned in via email to the online teacher.
- If you homeschool your child, consider involving him in extracurricular activites such as music lessons, sports or special interest clubs so he can interact and socialize with kids his own age. This is an important aspect of development.
- It is a common misconception to think that by homeschooling your child, you are keeping her from interacting and forming bonds with her peers.












