I attended public school for about five years before I was homeschooled by my parents. In that time, I had ten different teachers, four …show more content…
As a result, homeschool students have more free time to do learn new things or explore the outdoors. Though the doing school in PJs stereotype is partially true, we don’t have specified lunchtimes or recesses. A downside to homeschooling is that we don’t have snow days or structured schedules. When being homeschooled, it’s tailored to the convenience of the teacher (parent). For instance, if my Mom works during the day, she can teach me at night. Or if my Mom is too tired to homeschool at night, she can teach me during the weekend and I do my schoolwork during the week. So, as a homeschool student, you have to be more flexible and independent than in public …show more content…
I enjoyed homeschool because I had the freedom to finish homework early so I could do other fun things. Homeschooling teaches responsibility and independence, preparing you for other aspects of life. One advantage public school has over homeschooling is legitimacy. In some cases, there are homeschool parents, who do not teach their children anything and fail the year-end tests. As a result, when the student is enrolled in public school, it becomes a large adjustment. Or on the other hand, homeschool students work really hard and get good grades while at home. When that homeschool student enrolls in colleges, most colleges question the legitimacy of their grades and usually don’t accept report cards. If a homeschool student is bad at test taking, they could be scrutinized during the college admission process. Since public school students graduate with a diploma, their college admissions process isn’t as