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  • Okay, so the government have closed the schools.

  • You're effectively your children's teacher.

  • This might seem a bit daunting, but I'm here

  • to tell you that it's possible.

  • I've been home educating my children for the last eight

  • years and working from home.

  • Here are my top tips.

  • Okay, so tip Number 1 is don't try and replicate the school

  • system.

  • You can't, and you don't need to.

  • The way that your teachers will be teaching your children

  • is very different from how you will teach your children.

  • So cast that aside.

  • Stop worrying about it.

  • Teach in the way that you would teach

  • and in a way that suits you and your child,

  • and don't worry about what's been happening

  • at school particularly.

  • So tip Number 2 is to do with timetabling.

  • For many of us a timetable is absolutely essential.

  • For many of us it isn't essential.

  • If you do want to set a timetable so that you can work

  • alongside your children, then make

  • sure it's one that suits you.

  • Work it around your working hours, their waking hours,

  • when they're at their most productive.

  • This is a great time to really get to know your children.

  • So if they are morning people front

  • load the academic work in the morning,

  • have the afternoon set aside for free play,

  • try and work your working hours around them,

  • and just make it a time that suits you.

  • Don't look on social media at the timetable that

  • your neighbour has posted that's all colour coded and terrifying

  • and onerous.

  • Just think of one that suits you and stick to that.

  • So tip Number 3 is about getting outside as much as you can,

  • if you can.

  • Obviously, not all of us are able to sit in the garden.

  • But remember that playing in the garden, playing in the mud

  • is education.

  • Don't try and think that your children

  • need to be sat at their desks all day,

  • poring over maths books.

  • Fresh air is good for you.

  • Fresh air will make them learn better.

  • It will make you happier.

  • Sunshine will be better for them.

  • There's plenty of educational opportunities

  • outside if you're able to go.

  • So get outside as much as is possible and safe for you.

  • Tip Number 4 is to really value the one-to-one time

  • that this experience will give you.

  • As a home ed-er, I don't tend to spend eight hours a day

  • working one-to-one with my children,

  • but what I do give them is really

  • valuable short bursts of one-to-one attention.

  • So if there's a maths problem that they're struggling with,

  • I can really sit down with them, explain the concept,

  • make sure they've understood it, then send them away

  • to do it themselves.

  • And this is something that not all children

  • get in the school system.

  • And so this is something that you can really

  • make the most of, and it doesn't need

  • to take up a lot of your day.

  • A good friend of mine referred to home ed-ing

  • as being as though your child has a full-time PhD tutor.

  • And that's the way to treat it, is

  • to imagine that you can really help

  • them guide their own learning, and this is really valuable.

  • So tip Number 5 is to take advantage of the massive wealth

  • of online resources.

  • There's absolutely loads of things out there.

  • There are sites dedicated to home education.

  • There's Twinkl, which is a really good teacher resource

  • site.

  • The TES has handouts and printouts available.

  • There's Conquer Maths, which is a brilliant daily maths

  • programme.

  • Some of these you pay for.

  • Some of these are free.

  • Some have a mixture of free and paid content.

  • There's absolutely loads out there,

  • so you don't need to worry about worksheets

  • and curriculum-based activities.

  • But there's also a lot of brilliant online resources

  • that you might not have thought of.

  • So English Heritage, I think, do lots of school-based downloads

  • and videos and things.

  • Most of the galleries are doing virtual tours, which

  • is really worth looking at.

  • So if you go on any of the major galleries,

  • they're doing a walk-throughs, which

  • is great for you and your children to explore together.

  • The music.

  • Lots of the main orchestras are doing live concert

  • performances.

  • The internet is your friend in this situation.

  • Your children - don't think of it as something

  • that your children are going to be glued to all day.

  • Think of it as something that you can use together

  • so you can watch concerts online,

  • you can work through tutorials together.

  • It's something that can really help you all bond

  • and know that everybody else is doing the same.

  • Just to summarise, lots of people home

  • educate all day, every day.

  • I've been doing this effectively for eight years,

  • and I'm still smiling, and I still really love it.

  • This is a really good opportunity

  • for you to get to know your children,

  • to know what motivates them, to know what excites them,

  • to know how they learn, and to know what they need to learn.

  • And you might learn something about yourself in the process.

Okay, so the government have closed the schools.

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