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Janice Campbell
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Articles:
Home Schooling Costs Money Homeschooling costs money. Private schools seem to cost more and in some ways provide less value for the money. However, when a family chooses to homeschool, the mother (or sometimes the father) forgoes working. Theoretically, the mother could work and earn more than enough to pay for private school. So homeschool costs both the outgoing expenses and the forgone income of the wife. Because of this dilemma, homeschool moms are constantly looking for ways to add to the family income part time and on the side. But what if the education of teenagers were designed as it once was - to pay in large part for itself? What if the act of learning by a teenager produced value that other people wanted to purchase for their own use or enjoyment? What if your teen's school work brought in the money needed to pay for the larger things that are so helpful in the education of a youth? It's difficult in today's economic environment for a one-income family to survive. No matter how thrifty a family is, education of any kind costs money. And beyond that, there are so many great experiences that we want our children to have that expand their understanding of the world and increase their ability to learn more mundane things. If I had unlimited funds for my own children? I would buy my daughter a cello, and get her the best training, both single and with a group, that I could. Oh, guess what. I don't have to have unlimited funds because my teenage daughter is earning the money to rent a cello and obtain the private lessons herself through her own piano teaching business, that is, business-based learning. It doesn't stop there, though. There are things like taking the sailing master coarse with my teenage son and daughter so that our family can go sailing on Galveston Bay and my teenage children can man the boat as certified sailing masters. Or attending the city theater to watch all the great theater productions coming through Houston this next year. These are just a couple of the larger parts of a great education that cost money, but which provide learning and memories that last a life time. Business-based learning for your teenager is a key to answering this great need and dilemma in providing a quality education for your children. A teenager, by following a well-laid out business course that gets him or her started in their own business right away, while teaching them many of the academic objectives of high school, can easily provide not only for his or her own educational needs, but have money left over for many personal needs as well. This is real education, learning that produces value. Help your child build his or her own business with Micro-Business for HighSchoolers, a nine month course that guides step-by-step in the creation of a real-world business, while learning a whole lot. This course could easily become a central part of your child's high school education. Check it out at http://www.YguideAcademy.com/MicroBusiness.html. If you have any questions about applying business-based learning to your teenager's education, please contact us through http://www.YGuideAcademy.com. We would be happy to help you to devise what will work for your own family. Copyright 2009 by YGuide Publishing. Freely use without changes, including links. Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Daniel_Yordy
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