How is my boat-schooled kid going to do in
school? A school in a foreign country where she needs to wear a uniform and
where we don’t even really know what grade she should be in? Is she going to be
picked on? Find it too easy? Too hard? Too boring? Too strict? Is it going to
damage her adventurous spirit and teach her to think like an automan? Is it
going to turn me into one of those hovering, nervous mums who keeps trying to
fix things for my kid?
Oh, the
uncertainty…
heading up the dinghy dock |
We’re
beginning week two of our new routine. We had mixed feelings about Maia giving
up home schooling for school here--but she has great memories of grades k-2 and
has been looking forward to all the things a brick and mortar school has to
offer.
Evan and I
were a bit more hesitant. We’ve been sailing without much of a curriculum the
past few years—deciding that the excellent BC provincial curriculum, which we
used the first year, was a bit too constricting for our lifestyle. We wanted
the option to focus on where we were travelling and what Maia’s interests
were—and we didn’t want to be sending work in and trying to rendezvous with new
books every few months.
The result
of our geography based curriculum (we focused on projects) seemed great to
us—Maia is intelligent, articulate and most importantly interested in almost
everything—but we weren’t sure if we were missing the odd essential here and
there. And we were a bit concerned that all the confidence and independence she’s
gained through travel would be damped down in a school setting.
The arguments
in favour of school won out though and we settled on the same school the other
cruising kids in the area go to. The principal there explained that as a small
urban school with a mobile, international student body they have a very diverse
group of kids and their turn over rate is high—so they’re practiced with being
flexible about kids coming in with a wide range of knowledge and backgrounds.
After some
hemming and hawing Maia’s now in year six (she’d be midway through 5th
grade at home). She’s studying the expected lessons plus a few exotic seeming
subjects (she takes Mandarin, gets swimming lessons for PE, plays water polo
for ‘sport’ and she’s joined the garden club—so she can raise chickens…) And it
seems like we didn’t miss too much—though math is being taught differently than
Evan taught her and she really has no idea what the capital of Australia might
be…
What we’re
also discovering is that as a home schooled kid she takes her education (and
the fact that she has an important role in it) very seriously. She’s irritated
by busy work but tends to plunge full force into things that seem to have value
to her. Most importantly though—she seems happy. So I’m happy.
off on her own to school |
So we’re
both learning.
3 comments:
Yeah but, who's the dude in the suit walking her to school?
he got his own post about civilization angst;)
http://maiaaboard.blogspot.com.au/2011/11/how-will-she-cope-in-mall.html
I'm with Cindy..didn't recognize Evan! :) Let me know how the school thing works out...I've noticed that Jake seems weird compared to "normal" kids...school scares me!
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