No doubt. It's a challenge. My older one is easier. She likes reading and school stuff. My wife also works from home and my mom is retired who is our "babysitter" during the days my wife works and needs help, so that makes a huge difference (for us and the kids).....now my youngest, he'd be much more difficult more than likely, but he is only 4.jfish26 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 10:04 amMine doesn't like to read. So I need her to be in school, where she does so as a matter of course. Belongs in a different thread, but reading is a tough one because making her do it turns it into a punishment (with all that goes with that).BasketballJayhawk wrote: ↑Wed Aug 11, 2021 9:59 amThe fact my daughter did well with homeschooling makes the decision tougher.
For now we are sending them both. If shits starts getting bad and hospitals start filling up with kids then it'll be a wrap...hopefully we don't get to that point, but it seems like thats the path we are heading.
And yes, we do all of the things like encouraging different genres, rewards, etc. It just hasn't stuck yet.
I empathize with households where both parents work full time out of the house. It's nearly impossible to come home from work and have the time (let alone the patience/energy) to do several hours of homeschooling.