by Kayley Kenzie

Any parent who wants to give the best education to their children will want to think about classical homeschooling. Children who are schooled at home have lots of advantages.

Homeschooled children get more one-on-one time. This gives children a better, more focused education.

Students who are homeschooled also have the advantage of learning in a comfortable and safe environment. It isn’t necessary for a child to learn how to become accustomed to different classrooms. Learning to adapt to a new surrounding can be distracting.

Parents and children who choose to homeschool also have the chance to create deeper relationships. Parents can also have a greater impact on their child’s education.

There are several different homeschooling methods, but we’re going to focus on Classical homeschooling, which relies on a traditional education model.

Classical homeschooling is comprised of three phases: Primary, secondary, and tertiary. Thing of it as elementary, junior high, and high school.

However, there is a huge different between homeschooling and an institutional form of this education. Classical homeschooling at its best focuses on the child’s mental development, not just his or her age.

Children who aren’t yet ready to move on to the next phase don’t have to.

The methods used in classical homeschooling stretch at least as far back as the middle ages. The methods have been tested and proven effective.

Younger children focus on learning the basics of reading, writing, and arithmetic. Once your child has mastered the concepts of this phase, they move on to the next, which consists mainly of grammar. This phase focuses on composition.

The dialect stage is the last phase in Classical homeschooling. Children in this stage are still studying reading, writing, and arithmetic; however, they are also learning rhetoric and how to do public speaking.

Children are able to move at their own pace in Classical homeschooling. It’s reassuring to know that your child has mastered all the basics before he or she is ready to move on. They aren’t just moved from one grade to the next as a matter of course.

One of the great things about homeschooling is how flexible it is. If you want to supplement a Classical approach with another method, there’s nothing stopping you. For example, you could build study units around a theme. You have the freedom to do this when you teach your child at home.

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