by Phyllis Wheeler

Perhaps you are not happy with your other options, and you are starting to toy with this idea. But you can't imagine yourself doing it. After all, doesn't it take a superwoman to juggle lessons and all the other things moms have to do?

Take it from a homeschooling veteran, you can do it IF you love your kids. That's the only qualification. As you move through the homeschooling journey, you will develop the skills you need, as you need them. That's how jugglers start--juggling just one thing. Then they add another, and after a while another.

And here's another secret: homeschooling can actually be easier than the standard soccer mom routine. Soccer moms are everywhere but home, juggling same-age activities that are different for each kid (unless you have twins). In contrast, when you homeschool, you focus on what you can all do together.

Instead of spending evenings helping with homework, you will spend mornings going over academic subjects, using curriculums that are tailored for self-study. Your evenings will open up.

Large families often enjoy doing unit studies. These are large topics, for instance ancient Egypt, which can be treated differently for various ages.Your read-aloud could be a book called Mara, Daughter of the Nile. A young child might write sentences about it; an older child might create a paper. They all might work on an art project, such as a scroll with hieroglyphics. Math can be worked in too--figuring the height of a pyramid using similar triangles. The unit could be capped with a visit to the art museum. Such unit studies might last a month, and are commonly available for purchase.

Other options include using workbooks and curriculum so that each child has something to work on that is appropriate for his age. These all come with an answer key--you don't need to be a college graduate to make sure your kid is getting the right answer. In fact, many homeschoolers do almost no direct teaching--their kids learn from the book or workbook. (This is a great study skill for college!)

Correspondence schools will teach your child, too. These can take the form of videos, workbooks, or online.

Structuring your day is a question for you to ponder. Many homeschoolers get all their less-fun schoolwork done in the morning, leaving the afternoon for projects, goofing off, housework, or whatever. If you want to include your child in an organized activity, you can join regularly schooled children in their sports teams in the late afternoon. But there are daytime activities too. You can also ask around--some of these activities providers are creating daytime classes (in gymastics, for example) for homeschoolers. You do have to be careful to avoid burnout here, though.

How about socializing? Staying home all the time may be easier for you, but it may not make your kids happy. You may decide they need to get out and about for socialization. But here's the best part: you get to choose whom your child socializes with. You don't have to worry about bullies. You can make sure that socialization is well-supervised. You can choose adults, too. Homeschooled kids are usually very comfortable talking to adults, unlike schooled kids, I have observed.

Your kids will enjoy a homeschool co-op. These might meet once a week for classes, or go out for field trips periodically. Kids learn appropriate social interactions because they are well supervised. You can find a co-op by networking with other homeschoolers. Your local homeschooling convention might be a good place to start. Keep networking until you find the co-op that is right for you--or start one.

Something else you will need is support. You need someone to talk to who is going through the same challenges. The Internet has been quite a blessing to homeschool moms, who can support each other online. There are many discussion forums attached to homeschooling Web sites, for instance, www.welltrainedmind.com. There are email groups for homechoolers too--look through the groups at groups.yahoo.com.

Here's the answer to the homeschooling question: You can do it!

About the Author:

Home schooling is an expensive proposition. All the curricula cost money while some of them are pretty expensive. If you opt for online, then too it is expensive. Like most home schoolers you too could be a single earning family. One of the two stays back to teach at home. If you opt for home schooling material from onlines scources then it could be highly affordable.

You would be interested in finding online home schooling at affordable prices! Donna Young's website is among the best out there. Her site has many lesson plans and lessons for free. This is the best place to look if you have tight budget. Her site has many lessons for free that impart math to science to handwriting to history. There are just not free lessons but also free activities.

The site has lessons on how a chicken mummy can be made! This part comes in handy when learning about ancient Egypt. is where her lesson can be taken.

The Finally Fun Home Schooling Curriculum is another great website that gives online homeschooling that's affordable. This is site does not offer is lessons for free but incase you have in access of one child then it's a good package. This website can be termed as complete website having numerous lessons from science programs to math solutions to unit studies and more. For instance the full series of Magic School Bus book is there plus lesson plans, study guides, parent notes, vocabulary, and more.

You have the option of either full subscription to site material or else you can pick required material individually. When writing this piece of article the website was offering access to the site's full material and courses for $97 USD. The package is inviting when you have over 200 science, math, & history curricula. It covers the kid's entire schooling calendar for any play school all the way upto middle school curriculum. Does it sound a tad expensive well I spent $200 just for a math lesson for my child? I felt ignorant as earlier was not aware of this site. is the site where you can access all material

The internet can also be put to use by you to create your own Home schooling curriculum that's affordable to you. But having high school homeschooling at affordable rates is a mission to accomplish. Students at high schools need the knowledge of certain courses that is out of our grasp. Your learn the subjects of Biology and chemistry students need to attend lab classes and every home cannot have a fully equipped functional lab. At this stage home school groups join hands.

Yahoogroups.com is a great group of online resources. You can search for local groups and then join the groups that meet your needs the most. Many homeschool families earn small sums of money via teaching classes. Most probably it will be hard to locate chemistry or biology classes that meet your requirements. There exists home schools based online and offer courses where you can finish study material online, submit the lessons and a grade is received.

Home shcooling through online syllabus can be good if you are able to locate a high school that's affordable and that is accredited. This way even though the child is technically studying in a homeschool that really not exactly a home school but if the state is having stringent requirements this accreditation might prove beneficial.

Discover the debate on on homeschooling VS public schooling at http://www.homeschoolingfordummy.com . You can also get free review on grace academy homeschooling.