#070 - Yes, you're qualified to teach your kids

You don't need a master's degree to teach addition and subtraction

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đź’ˇ THOUGHT

Yes, you are qualified to teach your kids

Homeschooling dad M.A. Franklin has a good reminder not to let anyone make you feel inadequate about your ability to teach your children.

His insight touches on something we see often at OpenEd: Parents doubting their ability to guide their children's education, despite having unique insights into how their kids learn best.

Here's what we know from thousands of families:

  • The most important qualification is caring deeply about your child's development

  • Enthusiasm for learning is contagious

  • You don't need to know everything - you just need to know how to find resources

The question isn't whether you're qualified. It's about finding the right mix of tools and approaches that work for your family.

📊 TREND

Career-Connected Learning (the numbers don't lie)

A program in Guilford County, NC is showing what's possible when we break down walls between education and real-world experience. Their "Signature Career Academies" let students earn industry credentials while still in high school. The results:

  • 2020-21: 2,966 credentials earned

  • 2021-22: 7,118 credentials earned

  • 2022-23: 10,766 credentials earned

At the same time, the district's graduation rate hit 92.2% – an all-time high.

Why? Because when learning feels relevant, students show up. When students see the direct connection between their education and their future, they engage.

🛠️ TOOL

Code.org: Where Computer Science Meets Real Learning

Looking to add some tech skills to your educational mix? Code.org is a complete computer science education platform used by over 80 million students worldwide.

  • Zero cost, forever

  • Available in 67+ languages (that’s spoken languages, not programming languages)

  • Self-paced courses for every skill level

That last point means you can start exactly where you are. Whether your child is a tech wizard or has never written a line of code, Code.org meets them at their level.

Ready to explore? Start with the Hour of Code (perfect for ages 4 through 104!).

👉 Visit Code.org to get started

(MEME) OF THE DAY

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