This article was submitted to Amerikaner by Mrs. Saxon – check out her work on her telegram channel, t.me/dissidenthomeschool
“I do not have what it takes to homeschool my child. I am not a teacher; surely, I cannot homeschool my child. I am bad at math. I cannot homeschool my child. I went to public school and I turned out all right. If I homeschool my child, they will be weird.”
These are some of the wrong things parents tell themselves when they consider their unworthiness to homeschool their child. Consider this: you have been homeschooling your child for their entire life, what makes the age of five so special that they need a break from you or cannot be taught by you? If you are pondering the option of homeschooling your child, do not give this too much thought. If you have been a semi-decent parent (read: a White parent), then you have already been educating your child in your own home. You just need to continue doing that.
If you wonder if you have what it takes to live an educational life with your children, let me tell you this: as long as you do not stifle your children’s curiosity and do not try to recreate school at home, you are just fine.
When your child asks why the days are shorter in the fall, rather than saying “because it’s fall”, explain the Earth’s axial tilt and its orbit around the sun. Look at a video online, or read a book about the subject. When you homeschool your child, do not expect them to sit and study at a desk for eight hours a day, five days a week. In those early years, you can be done with sit-down bookwork in an hour for four days per week. You simply venture outside, explore, and learn.
Being a teacher is not required to educate your child, in fact: being a teacher-parent enables you to slow down when your child needs it, to speed up when your child understands the material and to expand on the interests of your child. Teachers typically do not have the time or the dedication to go slow, fast or to do miniature deep dives on your child’s fascinations.
You will want to find out your state’s legal requirements for homeschooling your child, and make sure you are in compliance with those requirements. Don’t fret: you don’t need to look at the laws and figure things out on your own. Look at the Homeschool Legal Defense Association (HSLDA) and see what you have to do to be in legal compliance. HSLDA will tell you everything you need. Some states are a little trickier to navigate than others, and if that scares you off, consider becoming a member of the HSLDA and they will hold your hand throughout the entire process.
If you are bad at certain subjects, here is your solution: the teacher’s manual. This book comes with most subjects and it explains to you how to teach things to your child. It often explains it in different ways, so at least one of them will stick. Some teacher’s manuals explain in verbatim what to say to your child. If math really is not your favorite subject, there are online curricula that allow your child to work individually without needing parent intervention.
Are you worried your child will be “weird” if you homeschool them? You should hope so if you’ve seen what passes for normal in this gay-jewish-negro empire. In this Current Year, weird is straight, White and knowing that diversity is code for anti-White.
That school that treated you so well in your teenage years has since been filled with mullatos, beaners and child predators. If you live in a grand, Midwestern area where the mullatos, beaners and alphabet people have not yet settled, then at least the common core schoolbooks will be filled with subjects that enforce negro worship and White guilt.
Great article, heil victory!