In 2016, my family was featured in a national UK newspaper about our homeschooling journey (see this link here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/family/hating-the-new-sats-meet-the-mums-who-chose-home-education-over/ ) Today, I appear on a national podcast in the US, focusing on the differences and changes when homeschooling in the UK and now US. Please share the link to it - Vicki Tillman and the gang at 7sistershomeschool.com offer a wonderful support group for homeschoolers at all stages, being veterans with many years of experience under their belts. You can even subscribe to their podcasts, and their recent series about reading and writing for high schoolers was very interesting. http://ultimateradioshow.com/hshsp-ep-65-homeschooling-in-uk-and-us/
As promised a few weeks ago, I am publishing the results of a long-distance interview with Vicki Tillman, one of the "7 Sisters" at http://7sistershomeschool.com/ and a professional life coach. "Our Vicki" at Seven Sisters and Homeschool High School Helps She was kind enough to agree to help me in my term-long exploration of my children's own career paths, something originally sparked by our reading Chris Hadfield's An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth . So here is the first part of that interview, basically copied and pasted from our notes. They make excellent reading and Vicki is full of great advice. Kat, this was fun! Thanks for the opportunity!- Vicki 1. Judging from the timeline on your website profile, I’m assuming you explored your own mid-life career change before helping your homeschooled children work through theirs - what advantages do you think homeschooling parents would gain from re-visiting their own career goals before nurturing their...
Continuing my series on career exploration, here is the second part of the interview with Vicki Tillman. Be sure to pop over to 7 Sisters Homeschooling's "Homeschool High School podcast" for my interview with Vicki about teaching Shakespeare. It's scheduled to air on 3rd April 2018 as episode 104. It's never too early - nor too late - to think about teen careers. Your website asks the question on your Career Bundles page about what to do with a child who loves everything: this describes me perfectly and I still feel adrift sometimes, so what advice would you have given “younger me”? I know, right?! Some teens DO love everything, and what’s “worse”…they are good at just about everything. It is so much harder for those teens to feel settled in one career. That’s why providing lots of role models, experiences, service and prayer is important. AND a good Career Exploration course. AND maybe a mentor or coach. AND they may end up having several college majors/degrees ...
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