Question
 | |  | | | 
Mar 1, 2009, 01:41 PM
| | New Member | | Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 6
| | | overprotective mother Hi, I'm a stepmother. My husbands 2 children have been homeschooled throughout their entire school career. My step daughter "graduated" from home school June 2008. My step son is 16yrs old and a junior in homeschool. My husbands exwife has full custody and he can only see his kids when she lets him. We all get along well. Except, if my husband asks his exwife how the kids are doing in homeschool, any kind of feedback, she would get angry and the kids would not come over. So he is conditioned to not say anything to her. His exwife never graduated from high school herself . He is only taught what he learns from his course material at home.
I've asked so many time about the education, what they're learning and the kids respond with general answers history, math, etc.
I beleive my husband and his exwife originally wanted to homeschool the kids because they had very bad high school experiences in poor schools. Now, I know she's homeschooling because of a control issue, overprotection. I can understand wanting the best education for your children, but I'm beginning to see what I don't want to see. My step daughter has no drive to continue any kind of schooling. Does not want to work (mom hasn't worked since the kids were born). She's just hanging out. She absolutely doesn't have any desire to really do anything. This may be a usual teenage thing, but I don't think so. We have offered to help her with anything she wants. She just shrugs her shoulders, and ambles off. I'm not sure if my stepson can read or write. He is smart, there is no drive to excel more than basic skills. My husband doensn't want to rock the boat, he wants to see the kids.
I know there isn't any real advice. I just had to get this off my chest. I'm so scared for them in the future. I think their mother doesn't want them to leave, she wants them to be homebodies, not have a future beyond the front yard Thanks for listening. I know homeschool is what you make of it, it can be an excellent learning experience, if your doing it for your child. | | | | | | |
Answers
 | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 01:43 PM
|
#2
| | New Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 6
| sorry for the spelling errors, I went to public school |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 01:49 PM
|
#3
| | Jobs & Parenting Expert
Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Chicago - western suburbs
Posts: 8,007
| Aren't there rules set by the state if a family wants to homeschool -- curricula to follow, tests to take? Or can she homeschool any way she wants to without supervision?
(I went to public school mostly and for four years to a parochial school.) |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 01:57 PM
|
#4
| | New Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 6
| We live in Michigan and it's the most lax state, no real rules. They have to be enrolled in some kind of church program (which she's pulled him out of). No testing, just record keeping, which she says she's doing. No one checks up on the children. I've been asking my husband about asking her, he wants to see his son, so he won't ask. His ex will get mad, he won't get an answer and she will revoke any visitation. It's just awful. I talk to my stepson, ask him what he wants to do after school, he wants to be a navy seal. I expect him to do it. But his mom has no expectations at all. This is so hard. |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 02:50 PM
|
#5
| | Jobs & Parenting Expert
Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Chicago - western suburbs
Posts: 8,007
| Quote:
Originally Posted by Fr_Chuck Actully no, MN has very good and somewhat restrictive laws on home schooling | They're in Michigan (MI), not Minnesota (MN). |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 03:01 PM
|
#6
| | | Christianity Expert
Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Georgia
Posts: 36,905
| sorry, deleted my previous answer, clicked on the wrong page.
A child being lazy or not wanting to go to work is about normal for even public school and has little to do with the schooling but the home life and values given.
The father has all the rights he gets from the child custody order, what is his legal visititation, why is he not inforceing them, making him stand up for his legal rights is the first thing.
if the 16 year old is not getting proper education, go back to court, see if they can make her prove the childs level of education by standard state testing. |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 04:13 PM
|
#7
| | New Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 6
| He does have those rights. What he explained to me......everytime I ask (often) that the custody rights in Michigan are so weighted toward the custodial parent, in conjunction with the family services in Michigan so overwhelmed with issues for the past 10 years, it's impossible for a complaints to go anywhere. This is low priority according to them. My husband is in law enforcement, deals with child protection issues and the family agencies.
His exwife is so...I don't know how to say it.....whatever my husband says, she does the opposite, just out of spite. She is VERY over protective. When the 16yo said he was out of the Church Home program, we were alarmed and immediately called her. She was very defensive about us asking. She said he would be in the program in the fall again. We didn't see my stepson for a month after that. I really try to understand where she is coming from, weighing her explanations with what I see, it's just not right. |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 04:20 PM
|
#8
| | | Christianity Expert
Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Georgia
Posts: 36,905
| That is the issue " did not see step son for a month" does he not have scheduled visits, if you don't have them take her back to court and get scheduled visits.
If you have scheduled visits and she is not allowing it, take her back to court for contempt,
Use family court |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 04:42 PM
|
#9
| | New Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 6
| When they went through their divorce, my husbands mother was dying of cancer. He was so distraught, his exwife used that (she even told me this), to get full custody and full physical custody. She has found religion again and has apologized to him, he said she's nicer but still has the same mental issues...some compulsive thing. They have a verbal agreement, he is able to see the kids every weekend, unless she has other plans. We've been at her mercy for the past 10 years. We met 4 years after his divorce. I've been learning about parental rights over the past 10 years. It's very hard in Michigan to change anything unless, she agrees to it, and she won't, mostly because of the home-school time. I know homeschool is flexible.............. |
| | | | | | |  | |  | | |
Mar 1, 2009, 04:49 PM
|
#10
| | | Christianity Expert
Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Georgia
Posts: 36,905
| Ok even so with her having full legal and phsycical custody he is still suppose to have set days,
So he takes her back to court and gets it modified so she can't say no. He has to stand up to her and stay NO, NO NO, hire an attorney get court orders |
| | | | | | | |
Search this Thread |
Bookmarks
| | |