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Please submit only those sites which are exclusively Charlotte Mason-related. General homeschooling sites that contain CM sections belong in the Homeschooling section.
Charlotte Mason is a homeschooling style that emphasizes narration, nature, outdoor activities, and living books.
Please submit only those middle and high schools that do not require physical attendance of the school by the students.
There is currently no description created for this category.
Please submit support groups, news articles, laws, information, and anything else homeschool and military related.
Homeschooling info relevant to those on military bases, including APO and FPO.
Stories and essays and such _about_ home schooling -- factual stories that just tell it like it is (possibly positive, possibly negative, but _about_ home schooling).

Home schooling issues (including editorials about why it''s good or bad to to home school) have a category in Society/Issues/Education/Home_Schooling.

Stories and essays and such _about_ home schooling -- factual stories that just tell it like it is (possibly positive, possibly negative, but _about_ home schooling). Home schooling issues (including editorials about why it's good or bad to home school) have a category in Society/Issues/Education/Home_Schooling.
Please submit the top URL.
There is currently no description created for this category.
Please submit the top URL of sites that are of interest solely to Christian homeschoolers. Homeschooling sites that are of interest to more than Christians should be placed in the general homeschooling category, even if they are Christian in nature.
Sites for and about homeschooling done for reasons of religious belief.
Please submit sites that relate specifically to Unschooling. These may include sites about the philosophy, practice, or personal experience.
Unschooling is an educational philosophy based on the idea that children are natural learners, not needing to be led or filled with information, but learning best when they study what interests them in their own way and at their own pace. Unschooling involves letting a child choose when, how, and if to learn a specific topic. It is providing an atmosphere rich in resources, then letting the child learn what she chooses and needs to learn for her own life. As a general rule, unschoolers are homeschoolers, but not all homeschoolers are unschoolers. The main qualifier is whether education is parent-directed or child-directed (unschooling).
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Last update: Wednesday, February 20, 2008 10:03:58 AM EST - edit