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#home school
gunsatthaphan · 9 months
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zero hinge.
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justafriend-ql · 10 months
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I love croissants. Then Nai is the most handsome boy in Home School. HOME SCHOOL Episode 12
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heretherebedork · 10 months
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The absolute canon of it all, I'm so happy to be here right now. I love that Pennhung is canonically an autistic character with an actor who put thought into his character and who acknowledges that he's only playing this as a character but that people who live as his character does deserve to be loved and respected as well.
... I love this little traumatized teenagers being put into a school that's also abusing them show.
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earthfluuke · 10 months
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She ain’t taking y’all’s shit. HOME SCHOOL (2023)
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jimmyysea · 7 months
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he's magic
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benzatthanin · 11 months
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HOME SCHOOL Ep 1 | Term Begins
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raypakorn · 9 months
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GUN ATTHAPHAN as RUN & FILM RACHANUN as MAKI
in ep 15 & 16 of HOME SCHOOL (2023)
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faeriefully · 1 year
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I don’t know if I agree with homeschooling. I always found it doesn’t really expose kids to the real world and kind of teaches them to bubble wrap themselves from the rest of the world. Did you have a good experience being homeschooled and feel differently? (PS. This isn’t supposed to be an argument or a jab, just thinking about stuff!)
Well, in one sense, you are correct.
Homeschooling does not expose children to the evils of the real world before they are ready to comprehend them.
As a child, I was not exposed to porn, sex, drugs, bullying, verbal abuse from my peers, physical or sexual abuse from others, or authoritative abuse from adults.
Now, I'm not saying these things cannot/don't happen within the home. They do, and it's evil. However, there is a far lesser chance of them happening when you, the parent, are actively engaged in your child's life and education.
Instead, my childhood was one of love and support and growth. My interests were fed and developed, and my needs met both emotionally and intellectually by my parents who were both fully invested in my education and development.
My experience with homeschooling (as well as the majority of my friends') is that we were educated at a pace that was our own, many times a faster rate and higher level than our peers within public school. I normally finished all my "in the books" schooling for the day from 10am-1pm. Even so, when compared to my peers, I tested one to two "grades" higher than my age range.
My exposure to "real world" issues was monitored by my parents. I had discussions about what sex, marriage, racism, politics, government, abuse, and various other "real world" topics were at an age appropriate level that gradually advanced until I was about 17 yeas old.
As far as "real world" experiences go:
I volunteered at a hospital during my teenage years. I knew how to work and how to manage my money from the time I was fifteen. (First babysitting, then eventually retail.) I was in soccer as a kid and later did martial arts for ten years. I learned and talked politics with my family and other home schooled kids from the time I was fifteen. I had a class specifically titled "worldviews" in which I learned not only my Christian worldview, but about other religions and politics and current cultural events happening around us. I learned about puberty in a safe environment with all my questions answered and the comfort of understanding what was happening. I never had to deal with crude comments or abuse as a young girl.
I consumed media that was age appropriate and anything I encountered that I questioned or was unfamiliar with, I brought to my parents whom I trusted and would always discuss things with me in a mature manner.
I grew up with a consistent friend group that I trusted and still have to this day, though time has changed our dynamics and relationships. Currently, I'm quite content with my ability to make friends, socialize, and the number of friends I have.
My relationship with my parents was strong and held mutual trust. I was monitored as a small child, but gradually gained more independence as I got older and understood more about the world. If I had questions, I would bring them to my parents with no hesitation, embarrassment, nor fear. That relationship still remains, though now I'm a good number of years into adulthood.
Every challenge I faced growing up, I felt prepared for-- because my parents had taken the time to prepare me for it. In my education, work life, social life. If it was unfamiliar, I would bring it to them, but I rarely had to. I knew how to problem solve and think critically. I knew how to think things through and address adults and those in authority even if I was in an unfamiliar place. I could find my way around situations with little anxiety.
When it came time for college, I tested higher than average and was asked if I'd graduated in the top 5% of my class. I am now in an honors program and recently accepted into the highest ranked honors society across all majors in the country.
What real world experience does a child need that their parents cannot provide them when they actually invest in their children?
Society trains us into believing that a parent cannot provide their child with the education, development, and "experiences" they need. But what are these "experiences"?
Our media is flooded with horror stories and abuse victims of the public school system-- from burnt out teens, to abuse, to drugs and pregnancy, to anxiety attacks, to bullying, to pornography exposure.
What benefit does it give you as a parent or your child to hand them over into the hands of strangers (whom you're told to trust) for 8+ hours a day to sit in a chair and be lectured to with little to no expression or socialization with anyone outside of the classroom environment? They may sit in the same room as other peers (not allowed to move or talk), walk the same halls, eat in the same places, but they are not learning to properly engage with the world around them.
Children primarily interact with others their age during the day, and in what way is their conversations developing life skills that they need? Yes, they have friends and that is good. People need healthy friends. But a majority of the people they engage with are not their friends and they are not learning how to handle tough situations with individuals.
They are learning to judge one another, to morph and fit in, to avoid being bullied, to become the cutout that the government appointed educator approves of.
I always remind parents, schools don't just teach "abcs" and "123s". Schools form your children's entire foundation and worldview. The internet indoctrinates kids more than anything else once you let them have access to it.
Do you trust over 100 other children to have your child's well being and best interests at heart? Do you trust the government appointed official? Do you trust the internet?
Either you raise your kids; or someone else will.
You teach your child; or someone else will.
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alchemistofthenewage · 6 months
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How to HELP Children learn?
Tips for Successfully Teaching Children
Be gentle and respectful at all times. Equality is important even if there is an age and intelligence gap.
Create the right environment which is free from stress, pressure and fosters creativity, trust, curiosity and fun vibes. Keep the pace of learning comfortable for the child.
Cater to the specific learning style of the child and learn to observe their areas of interests and listen to what motivates them. Participating and self-expression is essential to keep the child engaged.
Try out a combination of learning methods to help the child understand, such as tactile, movement-based, visual and auditory. Always provide context for what is being taught and why we need to learn it from a larger perspective.
Stick to the basics but also be spontaneous with the curriculum. The right mood for the right subject is important. Take time to present information in an appealing manner that excites the child.
Be in the right mind space attitude and energy when you are going to teach the child. If you lack enthusiasm, learning will suffer.
Teach as per the individual’s grasping power and introduce new concepts only when the foundation is ready for them.
Keep it light and don’t overload or confuse children with unnecessary information. Make sure they have understood before moving forward.
Each individual has subjects that they are more drawn to versus others. Choice is a gift, hence we need to honor the choices of children and understand that each one is born with a unique purpose.
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thasorns · 10 months
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HOME SCHOOL THE SERIES + TUMBLR TEXT POST
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justafriend-ql · 11 months
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pennueng meeting the ducklings 🥺 HOME SCHOOL Episode 2
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heretherebedork · 10 months
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🥐💖💜💙🥐
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juneviews · 1 year
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progress of gmmtv 2023 series
aired:
midnight museum
a boss and a babe
double savage
umg
our skyy 2
loneliness society
enigma
home school
be my favorite
the jungle
hidden agenda
only friends
dangerous romance
wednesday club
faceless love
last twilight
cooking crush
find yourself
cherry magic
currently airing:
beauty newbie
23.5
finished filming & airing in 2024:
the interest
phro thoe khue rak raek
updated: 15/03/2024
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earthfluuke · 10 months
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“Wanna fight? Bring it on! Let me knock you out once.” HOME SCHOOL (2023)
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aprilblossomgirl · 11 months
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Home School นักเรียนต้องขัง (2023) Episode 1 
Dir. Fon Kanittha Kwunyoo
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benzatthanin · 11 months
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HOME SCHOOL Ep 2 | Duck
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