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Don't Forget the Glue!

Friday, February 1, 2008 12:14 by Kathy R. Lowers

Over the years, I have been so blessed to be able to pan out nuggets of golden wisdom from a variety of godly, veteran homeschool moms.  The many Christian homeschoolers who spoke at our ministry all homeschooled somewhat differently, as God makes each family unique, but I always gleaned something valuable for my family from every one. (Some talks from homeschool veterans, by the way, are available free at Exploring Homeschooling.) Their advice has saved me so much grief, money and time “reinventing the wheel.” 

Often those considering or starting homeschooling want to know what it is that will make their journey successful.  Naturally, thoughts of the best curriculum, home management techniques, field trip opportunities or other aspects of home education come to mind. 

But today I want to share with the most valuable advice I ever heard from wise homeschoolers about what should top the “list for success” in homeschooling.  By far, the most essential part of homeschooling, that crucial thing you need to have in great supply in order to hold it all together is “glue” -- the divine glue of really having a close, continual relationship with the Lord Jesus.  

I have heard several veteran homeschooler emphasize that if you are having trouble keeping your homeschooling together, check your prayer life.   It would always turn out, one seasoned homeschooler noted, that a struggling, “feeling hopeless” mom was spending little or no time before the Lord each day. 

I have had to learn the hard way, so I am passing on this life preserver of good advice, to save those who are jumping into the homeschool journey from drowning.   I can tell there is a dramatic difference in the days when I have been in prayer and in the Word and days when I just roll out of bed and try to start the day cold.  Often mothers of little children will moan, “but I have no time!”  I can tell you this –that if you make time for real heart to heart prayer with Christ, He will make your day blessed with a balm of sweetness so that you will want to always find a way to pray. 

I often looked at versus like 1 Thessalonians 5:17, “pray without ceasing” and I could not understand how a single person, let alone a married lady with children could muster anything close to that.  But, I think I finally have some understanding of that verse.  We had six children in eight years of marriage (whew!) and honestly I pray much more with six children than I ever did with one child.  Right now I have twin babies, two preschoolers and two other youngsters, so hear me out on this. 

What changed?  I see prayer as the cement that holds everything together; to be communicating with and listening to the Creator all day is the most important part of achieving a biblical household.  A homeschool veteran with many kids once advised us to rise while everyone was asleep for daily prayer and devotions – this is perhaps the only quiet time in our household.  Also we busy moms can  pray when we fold the laundry, when we cook, or when we hoover over that child with the not-so-great attitude who needs your advocating to the Father right there and then. 

I believe that real, heartbroken, crying out before God prayer – not the superficial, skipped over, just-for-looks kind -- is the glue that will help hold your homeschool, your family, your marriage, and you together.  What I mean is a “glue” that will attach your heart to Christ and His ways all day, a “glue” that will bond your children to you and your husband, and ultimately to Him. 
 
Being a person of prayer means you know how wretched you are, how you are totally dependent on God for everything.  Anyone can say they pray, but if someone really comes before the Savior, they are dramatically changed.  You cannot be the striving, stressed, selfish, complaining person you were before you stood before Him.  You cannot hold anything against anyone if you know He forgave you.  You realize how blessed you are to be able to serve Him by being a stay home mom and wife, that it is the best job in the world.  Also, you get a vision of great hope for the children you only saw as impossible before you lifted your hands and heart to Heaven.  In other words, meeting Jesus changes your perspective. Having a Holy Spirit led homeschool changes you and that influences everyone you are in contact with.

Make no mistake about it -- homeschooling is the harder road.  It will try every part of you.  But, it is the best road if you are loving, Christian parent who can create a safe place of joyous learning in your home.  But I propose that the “joyous” in that last sentence can only be obtained by getting the glue and pouring it all over your household --- the glue of deep, continual communication with Christ Jesus.

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More than a Snack Plate

Friday, January 4, 2008 23:23 by Kathy R. Lowers

This week when one of our six children was sick in bed, the other kids asked if they could make him up a snack plate.  I watched as they happily cut fruit, piled on goldfish crackers and even drew some pictures for their ill sibling.  After a bit of arguing over who would get to deliver the plate to him, they not only brought him the plate and a drink, but they spoon fed him too.  (He didn't quite need that much assistance, but he did not object, either!)  Then they took turns reading stories to their brother. 

Watching our three year old "read" a picture book to her sick older brother, inventing the words as she went along, just made my husband and I feel so blessed. Of course, children are not born knowing how to minister to one another in such a way, but through parental encouragement they can learn to "...through love serve one another". - Galatians 5:13 

Now what preschool or what nanny would have the eternal motivation or the means to teach such a powerful life lesson?

I couldn't help but think of friends and relatives who send their children off to preschool or outsource their parenting to others when they don't have to.  What they are missing is not only bonding between parent and child, but sibling bonding.  When a person lovingly helps another who is in need, there is a gratefulness that cements a friendship.

I mean, will your child really be able to call up their old preschool friends when they are an adult and in trouble?  No, it is their family you hope they will be able to lean on in dark times.  So, if you are considering homeschooling, don't put your child in day care, preschool or with a nanny while you ponder whether you can handle homeschooling – if you are a loving, safe parent, then care for them yourself, and keep them with the sibling team God gave them. Sure, serving the children in this way and teaching them to serve is the more difficult path, but the more fruitful one.

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Considering Homeschooling DVD and Infomercial

Wednesday, August 1, 2007 21:42 by Charles B. Lowers

Based of the positive feedback we have received on our anti-preschool ad, Considering Homeschooling has decided to produce a new, professional, and high quality DVD that will also run as an infomercial. This DVD is for parents considering homeschooling and features real families from Considering Homeschooling. The script and videotaping are being done as a collaborative effort by the families of the original Considering Homeschooling of Orange County, California.

So many families are eager to participate and show other families God's blessing through Christian homeschooling. That is one of the things homeschool evangelism is about; sharing the blessings God has given you.

This DVD will be made available for all outreaches to use for homeschool evangelism and placed on television as funds permit. If you would like to donate to make this project happen, you can donate online.

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Anti-Preschool Television Ad - Preschool Harms Children

Friday, August 4, 2006 21:43 by Charles B. Lowers

Last month Considering Homeschooling launched a national television ad campaign to urge Christian parents to preschool at home. Focus on the Family featured the ad here. To help air this ad in your community, please support Considering Homeschooling.

 

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National Television Ad Campaign: Preschool Damages Children

Monday, June 5, 2006 22:50 by Charles B. Lowers

Considering Homeschooling today launched a national television ad campaign to urge Christian parents to preschool at home.

As the universal preschool lobby makes political inroads in states across the union and as parents are inundated with the message to separate from their babies and young children, Considering Homeschooling is attempting to counter this attack on the biblical family.

"The growing debate, initiatives, and legislation concerning preschool are all based on the faulty presupposition that preschool is beneficial to children," said Charles B. Lowers, Executive Director of Considering Homeschooling. "Studies have shown negative consequences from placing children in institutional preschool programs. This makes sense because God created the ideal place for children to thrive, learn, and grow -- right in their mom's loving arms."

Considering Homeschooling hopes to set the record straight with a long-term national campaign, launching a series of television ads in select markets during "family" programming.

"The Hollywood elitists and ivory tower think tanks have it wrong. And sadly, most Christian families have it wrong. They want to replace moms, dads, and the family system designed by God with an institutional system of professional caretakers," says Lowers. "Where are parents receiving encouragement to stay home and nurture their own infants? Many churches are in the preschool business and have inadvertently undermined the biblical responsibility of fathers to raise up their children in the Lord. If a family has been persuaded to keep their children home, it is more likely because they were influenced by Dr. Laura, than by the pulpit. Christian men need to take the headship of their homes, and not allow their children to be placed in daycare."

Considering Homeschooling is a nationwide ministry -- started in Orange County, California by Charles and Kathy Lowers -- that focuses on introducing Christian parents of babies, toddlers and preschoolers to biblical homeschooling. The group urges families that can create a safe, loving, Christ-centered environment where a child can learn and thrive, to homeschool.

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Preschool: Like dogs in a cage at the pound...

Saturday, March 25, 2006 21:38 by Kathy R. Lowers

Adelle M., a valiant single mom in our group, recently shared these thoughts with me about walking past a day care center:

"We, too, live next door to a daycare center and on our morning walks we often see the parents rushing to drop their kids off (sometimes, seemingly pushing them out of the car) many don't even notice we are there but I always pray for them, that they will see us walking and enjoying God's creation and each other and feel the tug in their heart to keep their kids with them. The fence is a chain link type and I see the little ones standing there, holding on to the fence and watching their mommies and daddies drive away, it reminds me of dogs in a cage at the pound, a horrible vision but that's what I think of. The kids definitely do see us walking by and sometimes when we are singing or laughing together I will look up and see not longing in their eyes but rather curiosity, which is just as sad, it seems that they just can't process what we are doing, why we are out in the world.... together. So sad, the children and I always pray for them."

Thanks, Adelle, for that powerful image. When I lived in Irvine, I would stroller past three different preschools on my morning walks with my children. I saw the very same thing Adelle witnesses. It would bring back memories of my own experience of having a working mother and being still sleepy and rushed into the car in the cold morning, driven to the place, and then feeling suddenly alone in the midst of much chaos. Although the world touts preschool as better than being home, I hope you will think again if you have a child in there or if you are contemplating putting one in.

Except in cases where a home is dangerous, I strongly believe God wants the children with the parents Yet I realize some reading this long to be home with their child, but are forced by an extreme situation to separate from them. But if you can stay home, making cookies, making play dough, making happy memories with you is what a child considers most precious (and if you are worried about the socialization thing, why not get involved in some Considering Homeschooling activities that put you in contact with other like-minded parents and their children?) There is nothing a preschool provides that a loving, Christian parent can’t provide... and way better.

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About Considering Homeschooling

Saturday, January 15, 2005 22:37 by Charles B. Lowers

Considering Homeschooling is a national Christian ministry that introduces Believers to the blessings of private biblical homeschooling. We believe the Lord Jesus is restoring Christian families and saving the souls of children through biblical homeschooling and that God wants Christians to know the truth about the bad fruit of public school.

Considering Homeschooling was founded by Charles and Kathy Lowers in the spring of 2001. After watching fellow Christian activists try to save others, but lose their own children through preschool and public education, Charles and Kathy asked God to show them a way to help rescue Christian children. God impressed the name and vision of "Considering Homeschooling" on their hearts. We started as a mom's meeting, but we soon realized that the heart of the ministry and a requirement for revival was the restoration of the Christian family -- calling fathers to assume their God-given role as the head of the family.

For generations in the United States, Christians have delegated the raising of their children to the government, with terrible consequences. On the other hand, homeschooling Christians have seen good fruit from their efforts.

Researcher Dr. Brian Ray found that 94% of homeschooled adults responding to his survey strongly agreed with the statement, "My religious beliefs are basically the same as those of my parents" and 93% continue to attend church. But various ministries have found that a shocking 75% to 85% of Christian children sent to public school drop out of church and do not hold a Christian worldview after high school graduation. (Homeschoolers Grown Up: What do the Facts Show?, 2004.)

Considering Homeschooling encourages Christian parents -- who are able to provide a safe, educational, Biblical home environment for their children -- to homeschool.

Considering Homeschooling seeks to strengthen the private Biblical homeschooling movement by encouraging Christian families to homeschool from a Biblical worldview and free from government control. We bridge families who make a decision to homeschool to established Christian homeschooling organizations in their communities.

Considering Homeschooling is a national ministry that seeks to connect the new generation of Christian parents (those with babies, toddlers, preschoolers, those with children in public school, and even those with their oldest child in the womb) with private biblical homeschool groups who are open to them.

Most importantly, this ministry must be a movement of prayer. We cannot expect a revival of the Christian family without giving everything to Jesus Christ, showing our dependence on the Almighty by beseeching Him to spare us and our country from the judgment we deserve.

Mission Statement

The mission of Considering Homeschooling is to impact the world for Jesus Christ by encouraging Christians to homeschool from a biblical worldview, especially starting when their children are babies, toddlers, preschoolers; and equipping individuals, families, churches, homeschool groups and other organizations to engage in homeschool evangelism.

Statement of Faith

We believe in Jesus Christ as our Savior, that the Bible, both Old and New Testaments, is the inspired and infallible Word of God.

We believe that there is one God, eternally existent in three persons: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

We believe in the deity of our Lord Jesus Christ, His virgin birth, in His sinless life, in His miracles, in His vicarious and atoning death through His shed blood, in His bodily resurrection, in His ascension and His personal return in power and glory, and the presence and power of the Holy Spirit.

We believe salvation is a gift of God's grace through faith in the finished work of Jesus Christ's death on the cross, and not based on church affiliation or good works (Ephesians 2: 8-9) Those who are truly born again will manifest good works as a result of being saved. (Galatians 5:22-25, Ephesians 2:10)

We believe that children are a gift from the Lord (Psalm 127:3) and the Bible commands parents to raise their children in the Lord (Proverbs 22:6), and that the most Biblical institution for teaching children is the family, with parents as the main teachers (Deuteronomy 6:6-7). We believe homeschooling is doable by most Christian families; it is not a special calling of an elite few. However, we realize that due to serious reasons, some believers cannot home educate and this is where the church can minister via Christian schools.

We believe that since the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding (Proverbs 9:10) that children should not be put under the authority and mentorship of teachers who have no fear or knowledge of the Lord and thus are unwise (Proverbs 13:20), nor should they be surrounded by unbelievers as peers (1 Corinthians 15:33).

As the public school system undermines the Christian faith, we do not believe public school is an option for Christians. We also oppose government funded homeschool programs for many reasons, including that they usurp the father's God-given headship over the family and focus the homeschool on humanist goals and curriculum.

We believe all believers in Jesus should live a life in accordance with the Bible, and which brings glory to God. We believe that homosexuality is an abomination to the Lord (Leviticus 18:22, Romans 1:26-27) and that a marriage between one man and one woman is the only place God permits a sexual relationship.

The Considering Homeschooling national website is: www.consideringhomeschooling.com

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Why NOT to Put Your Child in Preschool

Thursday, August 5, 2004 23:28 by Kathy R. Lowers

Many parents these days are putting their children in preschool in the mistaken belief that the sooner their young ones are institutionalized, the better. While some parents are forced by circumstance to put their children in the care of others during the day, many are doing so as the result of being influenced by the propaganda of the universal preschool lobby.

In targeted advertising campaigns, news reports and parenting magazines, preschool is being touted as the best place for children to spend their day. Families are being inundated with the message that if they do not separate from even their babies, their children will suffer dire consequences. Nothing could be further from the truth.

The fact is, there is no evidence that healthy children from healthy homes benefit from preschool at all. Furthermore, the research shows that there are no long-lasting benefits to preschool even for those from disadvantaged backgrounds. Studies have shown more advanced developmental skills and greater empathy in children who stay home with mom, while increased aggression and sadness occur in those who spend the day away from their mothers.

What we are seeing is a massive push to divide families, to have most American children raised by strangers in institutions. Digging through the web pages of the universal preschool advocates soon reveals their perverted goal -- to foist mandatory, state-funded preschool on all states, for all children, from infancy. Christians need to believe the Bible and what has worked from the beginning - God's divine design of having MOTHERS nurture their own babies, toddlers, preschoolers and older children in a loving Christian home, full-time. God created the family as the vehicle for taking care of all a child's needs.

Those who intend on homeschooling need to understand that homeschooling begins at birth, so they should not put their children in preschool while they wait for the child to attain compulsory education age.

Corralling kids together in institutional preschools is no different than putting them in public school - in fact, it is even worse, as these formative years are when the child's spiritual, emotional and academic foundations are being set. Parents CAN teach preschool at home - and do a much better job than any institution! If you are a loving Christian mother who can provide a safe and wholesome home for your children - then with YOU is where your precious children need to be. Trust Jesus to give you the wisdom you need to raise your own young!

Please consider these reasons why not to place a child in a day care or preschool:

1. Preschool promotes inconsistent discipline:

Children need consistent, biblical discipline. Preschool divides a child's heart between two sets of rules, two authorities -- preschool and home. Preschool workers do not have a vested, eternal interest in raising up your child. And, they miss a lot of bad behavior because God never intended one unrelated adult to oversee many kids of the same age at the same time.

For those who remain unconvinced, try "the 30 second test" -- watch children playing outside in a preschool yard. Within seconds you will see many instances of gross bullying and other dysfunctions -- and the child care workers are too overwhelmed to notice or to care. After all, it takes a lot of energy and staff time to monitor so many children per adult and to keep the wild ones in "time outs" -- energy and time they do not have.

In contrast, a husband and wife will work out one set of rules for the household and have their children adhere to those rules no matter what time of day. Discipline at home is given by the same person, with the same values, and by someone who is intent on shaping the children's behavior, not just to keep the peace for the moment.

2. Preschool undermines the child-parent bond:

A child has tremendous spiritual, emotional, physical and learning needs from babyhood on -- that are best met by someone who has an eternal, loving interest in them.

Children need to try out their verbal skills one-on-one with an interested adult who knows and cherishes them, to safely ask all kinds of questions, to get sincere praise for the little accomplishments they have throughout the day, to get loving Biblical discipline, to get their basic needs met by someone who cares tremendously, and to get kisses and hugs every hour from their mommy, not a stranger.

Parents are told that children will "get over" their despair and pain at being left by mom in a preschool each day, but they won't get over it -- they will just "get over" trusting mom.

3. Preschool undermines sibling bonding:

When you child is grown, they will not remember their "preschool friends" -- it is their brothers and sisters whom they will call when they need help -- if they forged a strong bond in childhood. Preschool artificially separates siblings from each other, depriving them of the quality family time they need to learn to love each other and be best friends in the deep, lasting way that God intended. God chose them to be together -- He hand picked the sibling team you have been blessed with -- do not force them apart.

4. Preschool undermines a mother's intention to homeschool:

A mother gets used to "the break" and often goes back to work when her children are in preschool. Even if she intended on homeschooling when the children became five and older, coming back home is often too much of a lifestyle change for her. She never learned to handle multiple children at home all week and becomes intimidated at the thought of suddenly being home alone with her own children. Deep in her heart, she knows the bond between her and her offspring has been disrupted, and that she has not "gone through the fire" of learning to deal with her children all day, all week.

In contrast, there is a peace about homeschooling mothers who stayed the course, who did not delegate thier children to others, who cultivated a close walk with Jesus - they have gone through His refining fire as they cared for their little ones, and found He never let them fall. They look back on the preschool years with great fondness.

Another reason preschool undermines a potential homeschool is because mom has not experienced teaching her child many of the basics - the preschool has done her job. She may then lack the confidence to become her children's teacher. For example, the preschool may have potty trained her children, taught them their colors, numbers, letters, and even to read.

Children who have always been home and taught the basics by their own mother usually have no problem accepting mom as their main teacher. But preschool children are often confused at this point, some folding their arms and declaring, "But you're not my teacher -- you're my mother!" This has caused moms to feel intimidated by their own children.

5. Preschool exposes children to destructive peer influences:

Proverbs 13:20 says, "He who walks with the wise grows wise, but a companion of fools suffers harm." Parents of children sent to preschool have no idea what type of peers their children are being exposed to. Even in Christian preschools, there are children who come from homes that have pornography present, that allow foul TV and movie programs to be seen, where abuse occurs, etc. You just do not know. Even cruel words or unjust behavior from a peer or preschool worker can cause lifelong damage to your children's view of learning and life.

Your children are gifts from God. Children are just learning the ways of the Lord and when thrown into an unstable environment of constantly changing peers and child care workers, their Godly character formation is sabotaged. God gave children parents to be their close supervisors and the guardians of their heart - do not delegate this divine responsibility to anyone else.

6. Preschool teaches a child a perverted form of justice:

Sometimes parents say, "Children need to go to preschool to learn to handle bullies". But a bullied child often becomes a bully. After all, no one stopped the bully. In preschool, children learn a worldly, Darwinian view of life -- the survival of the fittest. Children in preschool quickly find their place in the pecking order, with weak and less attractive children getting harassed. In contrast, children who stay home can learn a solidly biblical worldview -- a mother can make sure the bigger siblings learn to treat the little ones with the kindness of Jesus, doing good "to the least of these".

7. Preschools may inaccurately diagnose a child:

We are witnessing an epidemic of young children being tested, labeled and drugged for ADHD and other modern conditions. Preschool these days serve as a place where teachers and educational "experts" prescreen children for various mental, social, physical problems. The parents of this generation are more vulnerable than previous generations to think normal childhood and discipline issues are clinical problems that need therapy and drugs. Testing and labeling a child whose brain and motor skills are still undeveloped is like diagnosing a newborn bird with a flying problem. It's best to keep your child home and far from the labeling fanaticism that is going on.

Why not give your children a loving, stable Christian environment, surrounded by those who love them? If you have a baby, toddler, preschooler - you ARE a homeschooler. Homeschooling starts when that newborn baby is put in your arms and is a natural continuum. Get off to a solid start in homeschooling by keeping your little ones at your side.

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Are you considering homeschooling?

Tuesday, June 15, 2004 22:56 by Charles B. Lowers

Will your children believe in Jesus when they graduate from high school?

Homeschooled: 94%
Public Schooled: 15%

94% of homeschoolers keep the faith and 93% continue to attend church after the high school years. But a shocking 75% to 85% of Christian children sent to public school drop out of church, and do not hold a Christian worldview after high school graduation.

 

There has never been a better time to homeschool...

Never before have parents had access to such a wealth of educational resources and technology for home education. And, Christian homeschool support groups abound, offering parents a helping hand in homeschooling.

There is an abundance of extra-curricula activities for homeschoolers to participate in, with opportunities for wholesome friendships and real-life learning experiences.

Homeschoolers avoid harmful school environments where God is mocked, where destructive peer influence is the norm, where drugs, alcohol, promiscuity and homosexuality are promoted, and where school violence is on the rise.

By grade eight, the average homeschooled student performs four grade levels above their public and private school counterparts.

A background in teaching is not necessary; in fact, "home educated students' test scores remained between the 80th and 90th percentiles, whether their mothers had a college degree or did not complete high school."

 

How to get started homeschooling...

It is natural to feel uncertain when you begin. Pray and trust God for the confidence you need. Get the support of other believers by contacting the homeschool organization listed on the back of this brochure.

Research homeschooling by attending Christian homeschool conventions and reading books like Home Schooling: The Right Choice by Christopher Klicka.

Keep your young ones home and out of preschool which disrupts family bonding, teaches inconsistent discipline, and exposes children to harmful peer behavior.

Avoid government homeschooling programs such as "charter schools" and public school independent study programs. These government programs usurp the father’s God-given headship over the family and focus the homeschool on humanist goals and curriculum.

Discover the blessings of private Christian homeschooling – your children will appreciate your caring efforts. In fact, a recent study found that 95% of the homeschool graduates surveyed were glad that they were homeschooled.

 

What does God say about education?

Homeschooling is the most Biblical form of education. God addresses parents, not government employees, as the educators of their own children:

"And these words which I command you today shall be in your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, when you walk by the way, when you lie down, and when you rise up."
- Deuteronomy 6:6-7

"All your children shall be taught by the Lord, and great shall be the peace of your children."
- Isaiah 54:13

"Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it."
- Proverbs 22:6

Jesus said: "Can a blind man lead a blind man? Will they not both fall into a pit? A student is not above his teacher, but everyone who is fully trained will be like his teacher."
- Luke 6:39, 40

"Learn not the way of the heathen."
- Jeremiah 10:2

"He who walks with the wise grows wise, but a companion of fools suffers harm."
- Proverbs 13:20

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