Another area of discontent
I believe homeschooling parents struggle with is accepting the children God has given them for who they are.
Not exact matches
Supporters of the Tim Tebow laws
believe homeschooled students should have the same rights as public school students, after all
parents of
homeschooled children pay the same amount of taxes as all the public school students»
parents.
Many Christian
homeschooling parents start out
believing that keeping their children at home and pursuing a Christian
homeschool curriculum will churn out good Christian kids.
Because when not - yet AP
parents believe that attachment
parenting comes with a whole bunch of other stuff (albeit much good stuff), like homemade baby food (not necessarily AP), cloth diapers (not necessarily AP), most expensive carseats / infant carriers (not necessarily AP),
homeschooling (not necessarily AP), and not working out of the home (not necessarily AP) it becomes something less attainable to the general public.
Aidan and his family live in a Los Angeles where home - schooling the children is met with as much derision as Amish people using electricity (and Braff's «teaching» is no different from
parents who
homeschool their kids to
believe dinosaurs never existed), and sexual harassment laws are a courtesy rather than something to enforce.
The reason they split, we're lead to
believe, is because they couldn't agree on how to
parent their six children: Jolie wants to
homeschool their children so they can become «worldly» as the family travels throughout the world and among their homes in France, New Orleans, Los Angeles and New York City, and Pitt supposedly wanted them to be enrolled in school.
My best advice for any
parent who wants to
homeschool is to
believe in their ability!