Homeschool enrolment spikes by 100 per cent
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 13/10/2020 (1833 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
More Manitoba families than ever before have registered to teach their children at home, amidst the life and learning disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
At the end of September 2019, 3,689 students were enrolled in a homeschool. One month into the 2020-21 school year, the province has registered 7,377 students.
The new recruits — albeit, on a temporary basis — include Sara Verwymeren’s two eldest children: Grade 4 student Lucy and her brother, Sam, who recently started the second grade.

“Homeschooling has never been something that I wanted to do, because I love the school system and I love teachers and I think they’re so valuable,” Verwymeren said Tuesday.
“It just felt like we were yanking them out of this wonderful community that they have at our school.”
The mother of three said she had hoped there would be universal remote learning for families who wanted it. Without the option, Verwymeren and her husband decided homeschool was the best way forward — in part, because she only recently entered cancer remission.
Verwymeren now juggles child care for her three-, six- and nine-year olds, homeschool and work as a professional organizer on the weeknights. She has scaled back her hours to ensure she can focus on teaching her children during the daytime.
There are ups and downs, she said — the former being the days her children learn new things that spark their curiosity and creativity; the latter being the ones when she feels guilty they are isolated from friends. The fact their home in St. Norbert is in earshot of the school playground doesn’t make things any easier.
“We’re trying to communicate to them that this is a super-special time with our family, where we have all this time to spend together. They are also appreciating it. They’re getting along better than they did before,” Verwymeren said, adding her family plans to reassess its situation in the new year.
In Manitoba, students can rejoin the public school system at any time. While homeschooling, families are not eligible for provincial funding or any other resources from Manitoba Education. They are required to submit biannual progress reports.
The 100 per cent spike in registrations has both prompted Manitoba Education to reallocate staff to support the increased demands on the homeschooling office and kept the organizers behind the Manitoba Association for Schooling at Home busy.
A long-time homeschooler, Jennifer Gehman of the Manitoba Association for Schooling at Home reported Tuesday membership has reached nearly 1,000 — approximately double the pre-pandemic figure, similar to the official enrolment spike.
Gehman said she’s curious about whether the wave of new homeschoolers will realize the benefits.
“We’re just such a busy world all the time and I think, sometimes, we lose sight of how important it is to spend time with our children,” she said, “and homeschooling really gives that opportunity.”
Gehman’s advice to new homeschoolers? “It takes time to find your groove.”
One month into homeschooling, it’s one lesson Verwymeren has already learned.
The St. Norbert mother said her trio of learners is getting into a routine, with academics in the morning and outdoor activities and crafts in the afternoons. They are currently studying rocks, minerals and volcanoes.
maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca
Twitter: @macintoshmaggie

Maggie Macintosh
Education reporter
Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie.
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History
Updated on Tuesday, October 13, 2020 8:17 PM CDT: Corrects number to 100 per cent in body of story