It may come as a surprise to many, but home schooled kids do better in college and in the real world. Most spelling bee, history bee, and math bee champions in the last 20 years or so have been home schooled. I was also told they need to learn how to interact with other kids. Well, if you take them to church with kids their age, family reunions, and meet weekly with other home schooled kids, they will learn to interact. They learn most of their interaction skills from the parents anyways. I found that teaching them the basics and show them practical applications, like how to tell how wide a river or creek is without going across using math, or how to do fractions by cutting lumber or building wood projects. Learning the life sciences by collecting insects, leaves, etc. and identifying them. Learning about electricity by repairing things, or building radios or electric motors from scrap materials. Learning how to find out about things by reading, researching, and looking up things in a library, encyclopedia, or internet. Learning can be fun, but when you have kids in public school that really don't want to learn, they disrupt learning.