Colorado Calvert Academy |
yep
It's no secret that this year has been difficult on the homeschooling front. Or last year. Or the year before that. Or the year before that. Each year has presented its own unique challenges, and the majority of them were mine in the making. Apparently I thought that since I was a HSAHM, (homeschoolingstayathomemom), I had oodles of free time on my hands. So I volunteered up the wazoo for whatever I could get my hands on in an attempt to prove myself to my toughest critic: me. It totally backfired. I learned that being too busy with fluff means that you won't have time to educate your kids. My kids are not lacking in ability, but they are severely lacking in instruction time, and as the years have flown by, the accumulative effects are showing.
The lack of time can't be addressed until I clear my schedule. This year has shown a very sharp decline in doctor appointments, thanks to resolving my shoulder issues last spring, and my BR last fall. These appointments have been sneaky time-wasters. I am resigning from our homeschool association's board, effective in May. I am stepping down from leadership in the Girl Scout troop, also effective in May. After three years, it's time for another mom to take the helm and share the burden.
So with all the 'free time' on the horizon, I intend to fill it with the things that had been desired all along -long lazy trips to the library, museums, afternoons spent reading, playing games and craft projects. And I will have this time because someone else will be doing the legwork of the planning, the curriculum procuring, the grading, the feedback (some), the record-keeping. That someone is Colorado Calvert Academy.
The clouds of discontent have been looming for years. We knew the present situation wasn't working, but the answer was never to stop homeschooling. We (Dean and I) love the freedom it provides, and we want the kids to stay at home. But. With days and days going by with minimal progress, what was going to be the catalyst for change?
For one thing, I have trouble getting things done when there is minimal accountability. I am not the type of person that ever tried to sneak sloppy work by the boss in the hopes of squeaking by. I was a type-A, straight-A student. Sloppy is not acceptable. But when there is no one looking over my shoulder, reminding me that I really need to stop surfing the internet and get schoolwork going, or that I need to stop wasting time in a fruitless effort to communicate with the unwilling masses of our homeschooling association, or that working on the finances of our Girl Scout troop during school time is not necessary...I will fritter away the hours. Day after day. I need accountability to keep me on track. After seven years of not punching a time clock, I got lazy. Very lazy.
Looking down the road, in the long-term, I feel a rise of panic when I realize, deep down, that our children will not be prepared to lead the kind of life we are hoping for, if nothing is done to change our course.
So enter Colorado Calvert Academy. A fellow homeschooling mom has been using Calvert since her daughter was in K. She has talked about their experiences over the years, but for whatever reason it never really appealed to me. She used Calvert via a virtual school, and I think that was my turn-off. I didn't want the pressure of staying on someone else's schedule. Now I see that that very thing is what I need most. In return for joining an online school and jumping through their hoops, I get a top-notch curriculum for free (you can do Calvert curriculum at home - to the tune of $1200/year/student), the teaching support, field trips, potential school friends for the kids, and relief from the financial burden of purchasing my own curriculum from at least 15 different sources on an annual basis. The $$ savings will be huge. HUGE. Also factor in the time saved researching different curriculums - I have spent HOURS trolling the internet for new stuff, different stuff, ways to use stuff... on and on... Not to mention, knowing how much to do in a day, pacing, working in too much of a subject area into the schedule or not enough... well, staying on schedule period... I have always been akin to planning waaaay too much into a day. The kids get burnt out and so do I.
We start when school officially begins, just after Labor Day. I can't wait!!!
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