Gunsaulus family believes education is parents’ responsibility

They homeschool all six of their children who range from 4 to 16

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Homeschooling keeps the Gunsaulus family close and has helped their children prepare for the real world (Submitted photo)

“We promote home education and believe that every family has the God-given mandate and responsibility to oversee the education of their own children. NICHE is not a church, nor are we an organization meant to replace the ministry of the local church to the home educating family.”

NICHE also hosts a homeschool graduation, has an honor society, and has an annual Capitol Day where students go to the Statehouse to hang out with lawmakers and attend a conference where NICHE members and vendors gather in Des Moines.

The Gunsaulus family attends both events: they use the capitol trip as a field trip and the conference to see what is the latest in teaching supplies.

“I buy a lot of stuff used for curriculum,” Cami said. “The NICHE conference has a curriculum exhibit when they have the homeschool conference. They have a lot of curriculum there too.”

“Part of that conference is a huge curriculum hall,” Aaron added. “There are all kinds of vendors there.”

They also believe that they are preparing their kids for the real world in a better way with homeschooling.

“The end game isn’t to get some sort of diploma for us,” Aaron said. “The end game is to prepare them for life and whatever career they are going to choose. We’re constantly evaluating them to see how they’re wired and what their interests are and letting them know what they excel in. We listen to them as they get older about what they think they might want to do, and see if we kind of match those up and give them some direction.”

There also some misconceptions about homeschooling they want to help clear up. Their kids get physical activity: the older boys run a mile a day and play golf in warm weather. They all swim and sometimes will play pickup games of football. The biggest one they get is that people don’t think the kids get enough socialization.

“I think you would be able to ask multitudes of people (about the misconceptions about homeschooled kids’ social behavior), we get compliments all the time about, ‘How well this,’ or ‘How well that’.

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