Income for teaching parent (out of lurkdom)
Quote:
Originally posted by Lokrian
To be brutally honest, I have lost interest in the whole economic efficiency of home schooling aspect of this thread. I am looking for a stat that is more detailed than the one given and that makes at least a yeoman's attempt at accounting for the stay at home parent's time. If and when it comes along I will be convinced. If not, I will remain sceptical of it. Is it really that big of a deal?
*sigh* Out of lurkdom I come to answer this since I can give you personal experience.
If you want to give me a salary and figure out how much it would cost me to homeschool my kids, we'll go with it. I have four children and spend about 3 hours each day in hands-on teaching them. That's not the sum-total of their education as they also attend various homeschool classes and field trips weekly but that's the average amount of time -I- spend physically going over material and getting it into their noggins.
If I teach 3 hours a day, five days a week, I teach 15 hours per week. I'm required to teach 180 days/36 weeks, so that's 540 hours per year. At a very nice and fictitious hourly wage of $20 (nearly twice as much as I was making as a typist but entirely appropriate since I'm working 1/2 the time), that's $10,800 annually for 540 hours of work. Add in the $200 I spent on curriculum and supplies for my four kids this year and you're up to an even $11,000 for costs. Now divide that by four to get the cost per child and you get $2,750 per child annually.
Does that help, Lokrian? Of course it's entirely hypothetical since I was already a stay-at-home parent before bringing my kids home from school. I didn't lose a salary.
Re: Income for teaching parent (out of lurkdom)
Quote:
Originally posted by Marah
*sigh* Out of lurkdom I come to answer this since I can give you personal experience.
If you have the patience to prattle with me, feel free. I was mostly just not wanting to hash over the same points we had all gone through already.
It's a good start. I would want to know how this whole sharing of the load seems to work. You say they go on field trips and to home school classes? Also, don't you do prep work for them, or was that included in the "hands on" estimate you gave? I know all the teachers in my family grade at home and do their lesson plans and whatnot. I don't think any of them have a clue what their per hour pay would be! heh...
It seems to me folks can spend as much or as little as they like on home schooling. When I talk about what I would really want, it would be something I imagine that would have to be done professionally. something that splits things into the income levels of the households and which ones did and did not quit a job to do it. I think even with home schooling there are admin costs born by the state to insure the kids are getting a proper education.
How far into the educational process do you plan taking them? High school, or are you already there? This is more or less just nosiness on my part by the way... A lot of the time I am pretty pointless... ;) Er, I don't have a point that is.
It's just a sort of aside comment, but you must be doing something right because one of the articles I've read recently seemed to suggest that few people care to stick with home schooling past 3 children. I have no idea where that stat comes from either! The fact you are pulling it off with 4 puts you well ahead of the efficiency curve I think.