Home Education Magazine Sept-Oct, 2011 : Page 8
HEM Notebook to 24 years of John Holt’s magazine, Grow-ing Without Schooling at their website, www.holtgws.com. HEM Archives • Home Education Magazine's online archives include 15 years of back issues of this magazine, with selected articles, inter-views, editorials and columns from each issue. From 1997 through 2011, every issue is represented with the full content of each issue listed, and with links to the content which can be read online. To access this one-of-a-kind online resource go to: www.homeedmag.com/HEM/issueindex.ht ml or just click the HEM Archives button from anywhere on the HEM web site. Homeschooling Books • The Home School Reader: 1984-1994 , edited by Mark and Helen Hegener This book presents an outstanding selection of important articles from the first ten years of Home Edu-cation Magazine : 1984 through 1994. The writers featured here encompass a broad spectrum of homeschooling approaches and ideologies, and the format covers everything from the basics of home-schooling through the philosophical reasons why many families choose this educational option. The Homeschool Reader: Collected Articles from Home Education Magazine 1984-1994 ; 2006 HEM Books, ISBN 0-945097-30-1, paperback, 6”x9”, indexed, resources, 224 pages. HEM Online price $15.00 (Plus S&H -Regularly $17.50). To order visit the HEM bookstore: www.homeedmag.com/store/books.html • The Home School Reader: 1995-1999 , edited by Laura Grace Weldon This second book in The es ool Reader Seri chool Homesch Homeschool Reader series is The Homes Home Education Magazine edited by HEM columnist Laura Weldon, and includes over 60 original articles by more than 40 individuals writing on homeschooling-related topics such as family life, fathers' viewpoints, Collected Articles from socialization, unschooling, young adults and more. The Homeschool Reader: 1995-1999 ; Edited by Laura Weldon, HEM Books, ISBN 978-0-945-097-32-7, paperback, 6”x9”, indexed, resources, 260 pages. HEM Online price $15.00 (Plus S&H -Regularly $17.50). To order visit the HEM bookstore: www.homeedmag.com/store/books.html HEM Online • Home Education Magazine offers much more than just this print publication. The HEM web site includes many excellent homeschooling resources, such as the HEM Archives, with many years of articles and columns from past issues of HEM to read free online; blogs on news, resources, edito-rial opinion and more; a large support area which presents homeschooling laws and support group listings in every state and many countries around the world. You can easily access all of the great HEM content and share it via Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, StumbleUpon, Reddit, Del.icio.us, Digg, and other social network-ing tools. Check out all these great online resources at http://homeedmag.com • Are you a Facebook fan of HEM? The Facebook page for Home Education Maga-zine is an interactive forum with frequent comments and discussions of posts from the magazine and web site which are shared through our Facebook page. Join the conversation on HEM’s Face-book page by clicking on the Facebook fan box on the front page of our web site, or go to the page: http://www.facebook/HomeE-ducationMagazine Magazine Details • If you're interested in contributing to this magazine you'll be pleased to know we welcome new writers. For our Writer's Guidelines, deadlines, rates of payment, and some tips from our editors, check online at the HEM site or email Info@homeedmag.com with the words "Writers Guidelines" as your subject. • If your local homeschool support group or your town or county’s public library does not already have a subscription to this mag-azine, please encourage them to subscribe -or you can easily send them a gift subscrip-tion, which other homeschooling families will greatly appreciate, by going to the link at http://homeedmag.com/ord/order.html Keeping great homeschool publications like Home Education Magazine in your local public library -or dentist’s or doctor’s office waiting rooms -is a wonderful way to share information about homeschooling with the general public, who are often interested in homeschooling, but who might not know where to get good infor-mation about this great option in education. Send a gift subscription today and help spread the good news about homeschooling to other families in your community! • Longtime HEM columnists Larry and Susan Kaseman, who write the Taking Charge series for every issue, always address issues of significance and importance to homeschoolers. In every issue of Home Education Maga-zine their column addresses a topic which homeschoolers will find helpful, and past columns are archived online for easy access and referral, in what is perhaps the most comprehensive resource available for addressing the sometimes sticky questions homeschoolers face. Their experience with all aspects of homeschooling has given them an invaluable perspective on what works, what doesn’t, and why. Column titles very helpfully describe the dozens of topics they’ve written about in past issues: Communicating the Strengths of Homeschooling, Tell Legislators ‘No Thanks’ to Tax Credits, Gaining Confidence in Our Homeschooling, How Rulings in Home-schooling Custody Cases Affect Us All, and many more. Any of these columns can be found by going to the Home Education Magazine web site and typing relevant words or the complete title of the column into the site search box. • Do you have a service or a product homeschooling families would be inter-ested in? Home Education Magazine is an excellent way to reach homeschooling fami-lies! For Home Education Magazine's advertising rates and specifications, includ-ing advertising at the HEM web site, contact HEM's advertising manager Barb Lundgren, Imagine Advertising, 3013 Hickory Hill, Colleyville, TX 76034; (817) 540-6423; email barb.lundgren@tx.rr.com 1995-1999 1984-1999 Edited by Laura Weldon 8 September-October 2011 • Home Education Magazine homeedmag.com
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