I’m not concerned about the “S word” (socialization as it is
known in homeschool circles); it’s one that often crops up. There are so many daily homeschool events and
activities in our local area, the kids will meet plenty of other kids…..and non
peers too. Virtually all the Sportcenters
around us (e.g. ice skating, gymnastics, climbing, trampoline etc.) have
special homeschool hours during the week.
Michael’s Crafts offers art classes for homeschoolers, local nature
centers such as the Howard County Conservancy and many museums such as Smithsonian,
and the Maryland Science Center offer homeschool programs. The Smithsonian and our local Community
College also offer semester long homeschool courses. So, Maryland certainly has a wealth of
resources for us to tap into. We have
many field trips on the horizon!
Maryland is very homeschool friendly. Every state has different guidelines, some
more onerous or bureaucratic than others.
Maryland homeschoolers are governed by Code of Maryland Regulations 13A.10.01
. In a nutshell, it requires that we provide
“regular, thorough instruction during the school year in English, mathematics,
science, social studies, art, music, health, and physical education at the appropriate
grade level and include relevant materials and examples of the child’s work.” That’s it.
We can choose specifically what and how we want to teach within
each of those subject areas and add anything else we want – bliss. We don’t
even have to keep attendance.
The County Board of Education will conduct one portfolio
review during this time. We can choose to work directly with the Board of
Education or through a 3rd Party Agency that coordinates with them
on our behalf. As this is our first
time, we have elected to use an Agency for the first year so we have a good
idea of what is required for the review.
From speaking with veteran homeschoolers, it’s pretty straight forward
to work directly with the County.
The curriculums we selected will more than cover any review
requirements with the documentation to boot.
We selected Moving Beyond
the Page for Language Arts, Science, and Social Studies and Singapore Math (Goodbye Core Curriculum!).
We will also develop our own “Unit Studies” around areas we are traveling to
this year and other topics we want to dive into.
So, our books are in, the basement is set up as ‘homebase’
for our schooling, our trips are ‘planned’ (as much as we ever plan them) and
we are ready to go. The kids are as
excited as we are, even once they found out not all the schooling will be in
the RV! Yesterday, school was closed,
and they asked me in the morning to do homeschooling in the basement – so we
read a book called “One Day in March” which talks about the different weather
around the world, dovetailed that with astronomy and a geography lesson as they
had to find all the countries from the book on our world map on the wall, did
some relevant reading (for each age) and writing then went to the park for a
long bike ride. I know all days won’t be
like that but to have them at all is a wonderful opportunity!