HomeSchooling Expenses
It doesn’t mean that the moment you decide to home school your child, the educational expenses you would normally have to pay to a school
would disappear. In fact, this idea has misled many parents into home schooling, without them understanding the fact that home schooling on its
own is also a monetary investment. You may spend less than someone who sends his or her child to a private school would, but you will definitely
spend a considerably large amount of money as well.
You most obviously will have to purchase the same classroom basic materials, which include textbooks, paper, pens, and the like. Aside from
these, you would have to purchase other equipment to make your home more conducive to learning at home. This, perhaps, would require a greater
amount of expenditure. The equipment may include a chalkboard, chalk, desks, desk lamps, and chairs. You may also have to improve the light and
ventilation systems of your home to make sure that these do not detract the attention of your child from learning. The equipment needed to
transform a portion of your home into a place conducive for learning is non-deductible from your tax payments, so you’re completely on your own
as you buy these things.
Moreover, as a home schooling parent, you are aware of the fact that an ordinary school constantly improves its technology in order to better
meet the demands of the current world. As a parent, you would want to purchase up-to-date computers and other technological devices available in
schools in order to at least put your child to par with traditionally educated children. At the end of the day, the amount of money you spend in
getting that computer would be far less than a school would spend. Why is this so? There is a huge volume of students who will use the school’s
computers, which means the school has that inherent opportunity to take full advantage of the equipment and get the value of its money. This
cannot be said for a home computer bought for home schooling per se.
However, one of the greater costs that home schooling would entail is the opportunity cost should a working parent decide to stay home
full-time to supervise your child’s education. This means that your family will have to do without the benefit of an extra income from one parent
who instead stays at home to educate your children.
But as has been said, there are ways to make the expenses worthwhile. Make sure you understand what home schooling entails financially and
decide if the losses are worth the benefits you gain when home schooling your child.
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