'and I don't think that it would suit my children on a social level'
I know it varies from area to area and depends on what a child wants, but the following is from the list of activities and workshops that youngest daughter has done during the last year-it is part of the report I sent to the LA.
Some of thee things happen on a weekly basis and some are one offs during the year, all are with home educated or schooled peers.
We usually get educational rates of entry into places when it is term time, which is how we manage to make the small budget stretch but we also do drive an old banger and do without holidays apart from home ed camps and bargain travel lodge stays)
The other advanatsge of using places like the skainting rink in term time, is that the local home ed group mostly has it to ourselves.
Think you'll see that for us, as for many home educators, socialisation is not a problem.
Card games
Bowling
Gold award from RYA, in sailing.
Swimming
Ice-skating
Rugby
Canadian canoeing
Kayaking
Body Boarding
Bell boating
Surfing
Rock Climbing
Abseiling
Zip Wires
Assault Courses
Orienteering
Grass sledging
Bike riding.
High ropes courses
Camping- during several home educating and public camps and festivals. Mixing with hundreds of home educated peers nationally.
Travels nationally to stay with other home educated peers.
Festival of history day-covering British history, from 4AD to 1945.
Visits to various local stately homes and museums
?Shakespeare for Kidz?
Royal Ballet
Musical theatre, concerts and recitals throughout the year.
Local Museum and Art Gallery-various exhibitions throughout the year.
Sings in a choir.
Bulgarian, Georgian music.
West Gallery and Shape Note music
African church and folk songs
Sings with a band. Has played live ?gigs? locally nationally at festivals and public venues.
Drama lessons and public performances at local Theatre
Guitar playing.
Drumming.
Music Studios-performing, mixing and editing.
Keyboard and piano lessons