The Benefits of Homeschooling
Looking at me you might never know I am abnormal. A casual, and possibly even an in-depth conversation might not clue you in either, but the truth is I am a member of a highly controversial club. You see, I was homeschooled. And not just a my-parents-tried-it-for-a-year-because-I-didn’t-have-friends sort of a homeschooler. I mean, I never set foot in a public school.
As the years have gone by I have gotten used to the pointed questions and skepticism that seem to surround home schooling. People have tried to convert me to their views time and time again, and while I respectfully listen, my support of homeschooling has never waned. That being said, I’ve decided it’s my turn to talk. This article is half my opinion on the benefits of homeschooling and half outright indisputable facts, between which I will do my best to clearly distinguish the difference.
While it is definitely open for discussion, I doubt that most people would argue the educational benefits of homeschooling. A state school consists of a room full of children each at a different level of understanding or ability, a teacher who barely knows them or their interests following an iron clad curriculum designed to comply with the mean intellect in said classroom. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that there are better alternatives. For the sake of argument, however, we’ll suppose that the defects of the program are not so visible and allow the following statistics to speak for themselves.
Academic Statistics
In 1990, the National Home Education Research Institute issued a report entitled "A Nationwide Study of Home Education: Family Characteristics, Legal Matters, and Student Achievement." This was a study of over 2,163 homeschooling families which found that the average scores of the homeschool students were at or above the 80th percentile in all categories. The homeschoolers’ national percentile mean was 84th for reading, 80th for language, 81st for math, 84th for science and 83rd for social studies.1
In 1991, a survey of standardized test scores was performed by the Home School Legal Defense Association in cooperation with the Psychological Corporation, which publishes the Stanford Achievement Test. Students represented all 50 states and their grades ranged from K-12. These 5,124 homeschoolers’ composite scores on the basic battery of tests in reading, math, and language arts ranked 18 to 28 percentile points above public school averages. For instance, 692 homeschooled 4th graders averaged in the 77th percentile in reading, the 63rd percentile in math, and the 70th percentile in language arts. Sixth-grade homeschoolers, of 505 tested, scored in the 76th percentile in reading, the 65th percentile in math, and the 72nd percentile in language arts.
The homeschooled high schoolers did even better, which goes against the trend in public schools where studies show the longer a child is in the public schools, the lower he scores on standardized tests. The 118 tenth-grade homeschool students, as a group, made an average score of the 82nd percentile in reading, the 70th percentile in math, and the 81st percentile in language arts.2
In 1997, a study of 5,402 homeschool students from 1,657 families was released entitled, "Strengths of Their Own: Home Schoolers Across America." The study demonstrated that homeschoolers, on the average, out-performed their counterparts in the public schools by 30 to 37 percentile points in all subjects.3
In study after study children educated at home have, on average, scored higher than students in conventional state-run schools.
Truth be told, academics are not the most frequent argument I hear from my dubious friends. In fact, the most common topic they have issues with is the social aspect of home education. It’s not unusual to think that homeschoolers are socially inept. It is definitely the stereotype and I’ll admit I’ve known my fair share of odd kids, however, my response is always the same. Homeschooling, when done correctly, cannot be surpassed in the benefits it has to offer. Homeschooling does not just mean, keeping your children home for their schooling. In public or private schools, socialization takes little to no involvement from the parents whatsoever. Does socializing your children take more effort when you’re homeschooling them? Absolutely, but it’s a small sacrifice for those parents who understand what they’re getting in return. These days, socialization is becoming significantly easier what with club sports, homeschool groups, special programs, etc. My nephews are part of the newest generation of homeschoolers and as I see the options they have it solidifies in my mind more and more the opportunity they have been given. They take part in gymnastics, group art classes, music classes, acting groups and so much more. They are far from "unsocialized" and are not lacking in the extra-curricular activities my public/private schooled comrades remember so fondly.
According to the National Home Education Research Institute:4
- Homeschool students are regularly engaged in field trips, scouting, 4-H, and community volunteer work, and their parents (i.e., their main role models) are significantly more civically involved than are public school parents.
- The home schooled are well adjusted socially and emotionally like their private school comparison group. The home educated, however, are less peer dependent than the private school students (Delahooke, 1986).
- Dr. Montgomery (1989) found that home schooled students are just as involved in out-of-school and extracurricular activities that predict leadership in adulthood as are those in the comparison private school (that was comprised of students more involved than those in public schools).
- A study of adults who were home educated found that none were unemployed and none were on welfare, 94% said home education prepared them to be independent persons, 79% said it helped them interact with individuals from different levels of society, and they strongly supported the home education method.
So Why Homeschool?
There are many reasons to homeschool and on a person to person basis probably the occasional good reason not to, but below are some of the major benefits that came to mind for choosing to teach your children at home.
- Nearly one-on-one attention. School classrooms are stuffed to overflowing often having 20+ students to every teacher (the national average is 17:1).5 Homeschooling allows a child to get nearly one-on-one instruction (depending on the number of siblings) from a teacher who knows them and their abilities.
- There is no mean to accommodate. Today’s lesson plans, which teachers are required to follow to the letter, are not made to accommodate the different intelligence levels of each child. Children with either higher or lower levels of ability and understanding suffer. It not only causes educational delays but often comes hand-in-hand with behavioral problems. The children with a greater understanding get bored with material they already know and the children with a lower understanding get frustrated with the material that they just can’t seem to grasp. With homeschooling the pace and the material are set according to the ability of the child. Things can be taken more slowly or more quickly as needed.
- You are in control of what they learn. One of the great things about homeschooling is that you dictate what your children will learn and how they will learn it. You decide if you want them to learn about foreign countries by reading about them or going to one. You decide which textbooks they will use. The resources available for home education are amazing. You don’t have to worry about teaching the subjects that are unfamiliar to you. The textbooks for homeschoolers are exponentially more enlightening than those typically used in schools. Regular textbooks are made to be used as a supplement and are often ambiguous with few examples. Homeschool textbooks are made to be the only reference a student will have. My mom never got through algebra and yet her children have gone through at least one level of calculus as homeschoolers.
- Freedom to roam. This may not be the incentive for some families that it was for mine but in my mind it is a definite factor. Neither of my parents grew up in the U.S. although Mom is American. Both travel extensively and believe much can be learned in so doing. In addition, growing up Dad was gone frequently due to the demands of his job. If we had been enrolled in regular classes we would have seen very little of him but as the case was . . . Dad going to Mexico for three weeks? No problem. We packed up our books and went too! Many of my favorite memories were made on the road with my family. Homeschooling enabled me to experience the kind of things you just can’t learn in a classroom.
- Earlier entrance into college. This is a big bonus for many of my homeschooled comrades. So many public/private school students get to college with very little to show for the last four years, except possibly some advanced placement classes. They’re basically starting from scratch. There are at least ten homeschoolers that I grew up with who started college while their friends were still in high school. I became a full-time college student just after my 14th birthday. I received my Associates Degree in Telecommunications when most of my friends were getting their high school diplomas. That might sound frighteningly early or as though I was a high level prodigy but I have no doubt whatsoever that most homeschoolers are in a position to do exactly the same thing. I had an opportunity, but it was not unique to me; it’s unique to homeschooling.
- Better preparation for college. "Homeschooling is teaching your children to teach themselves." It’s something I once heard my mom tell her friends and I think it is the perfect description. High school is made up of teachers and counselors who very often end up being task masters. There are some students who thrive on learning in whatever setting, but a majority of the people in my acquaintance were in schools where you went to class solely to avoid getting in trouble. You did your homework because otherwise you were punished. Everything was enforced. For the most part, colleges aren’t run that way. Professors don’t care if you come to class. In an audience of 200, no one knows if you turn in your math homework! The study skills necessary for college are essentially the same as those needed in homeschool. Self motivation. Focus. Personal drive. It’s hard-wired into homeschoolers and when college comes, very little adjustment is required.
Encouraging statistics on homeschooling can be found all over the web. I’ve read the documented studies and heard countless testimonials on the positive effects of homeschooling but nothing assures me of the benefits more than my own experience. The trips I went on with my parents and siblings, the variety of our lesson plans, the push to do nothing but our best, because admit it, there’s no fooling Mom. All the small details combine with and supplement the educational aspect making my years of learning at home the most wonderful experience of my life.
The point of all this? Homeschooling is not the scary or fanatical approach to education that it has been construed to be. It’s not just a resource for extremist parents and does not relegate its participants to lives of being anti-social outcasts. It is a powerful tool that can be used to help children learn and grow… all in the best atmosphere that can be provided for them.
1 Dr. Brian Ray, A Nationwide Study of Home Education: Family Characteristics, Legal Matters, and Student Achievement, National Home Education Research Institute, Seattle, WA, 1990, p. 53-54.
2 Christopher J. Klicka, Esq., Home Schooling in the United States: A Legal Analysis, Home School Legal Defense Association, NYC, New York, 2002, Appendix I. Excerpts available online at http://www.hslda.org/docs/nche/000010/200410250.asp
3 Dr. Brian Ray, Strengths of Their Own: Home Schoolers Across America, National Home Education Research Institute, Salem, OR, 1997.
4 "NHERI Research" available online at ___http://www.nheri.org/modules.php?name=NHERI_Research___. The National Home Education Research Institute at NHERI.org. URL accessed on September 20, 2005.
5 "Education Issues" available online at ___http://www.nasbe.org/Educational_Issues/State_Stats/usa.html___. The National Association of State Boards of Education at NASBE.org. URL accessed on September 20, 2005.
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- Cheating on Essays, by VnutZ over 2 years ago
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Are parents an assumption? by markmcb
It seems to me that homeschooling could work out well, given that one critical thing is true: smart, motivated parents.
Catherine, I’m curious as to what sort of parents are require to properly school a child through high school. I would guess that most people’s parents have no use for things like Calculus, Biology, and other advanced high school courses and have probably forgotten most of what they learned. Given that, I’d guess that most parents aren’t well-suited to teach such things.
So, I guess this is more of a question since I have no experience at all with homeschooling or homeschoolers. How critical are parents in the process? Is this something that a semi-motivated, semi-educated parent can make happen with success, or is there a hidden assumption that the parent(s) have a good, if not excellent, understanding of all the material that will be presented to the student through the high school level?
Other homeschooling considerations by Anonymous
In this debate, there are other considerations besides the common arguments used by both sides. Perhaps the developmental advantage of growing up in a two-parent home with an intellegent stay-at-home mother has more to do with high scores on standardized tests than the actual homeschooling. Also, homeschooling is a largely Christian movement and homeschooling advocates rarely consider how our society is negatively impacted by removing high achieving Christian students from public schools to be homeschooled.
I’m interested in reading your responses.
genetics by rollbish
I am curious as to how much genetics plays a part in the homeschoolers’ above average performance. The homeschoolers get more than an eduction from their parents, they get their genes. A parent willing to teach their children at home shows above average motivation and intellectual confidence. Also, the family would have to survive off one income so the bread winner probably succeeded in higher education. I think the average homeschooler started life with an above average intellect.
Home schooling on the web by tomtolman
I don’t think anyone has mentioned it yet…I’m curious about the Internet’s impact on homeschooling. I know a boy who is being homeschooled and, in addition to his parents, he has an online instructor he interacts with. I assume there are also other students he interacts with online in this "homeschool" environment. I’d be curious to know how prevalent that is and what people’s experiences are.
Giving a Better Education or Sheltering? by jmarkdavison
A colleague made the point that a lot of home schooling parents’ primary objective may not be a better education, but sheltering their children from the outside world. I am inclined to agree with him, but I don’t think it’s necessarily a bad thing.
I learned the "F" word in kindergarten in 1981; the twelve years after that I learned very little. I probably fit into the category of smart kids bored with being taught to the mean, although laziness also played a big part in my graduating high school with a 2.4.
With a six month-old son, my wife and I are considering our options for educating him. The plan right now is public school through whatever age kids start using drugs and having sex (I think it’s currently about 11 or 12?), then Catholic school until he graduates. But we are also considering homeschooling.
I’d be interested to hear what Mikeforbes’ and Catherine’s (and any other homeschooling veterans) experiences were as they left the homeschooling environment and discovered some not-so-nice things about the world.
Late to the conversation...just a few points by Mikulecky
As a damn good looking, unmotivated, female with superior genetics currently sheltering six children in a homeschooling environment… I felt compelled to put in a few cents.
Yes, it helps to be smart. (And it helps to be attractive or have money, or a hopped up metabolism.) But it is not necessary to fostering education. (Remember your Economics teacher/football coach… and yet you figured out supply and demand.) You can not prevent children from learning. So, all this talk about which adult will do the best job is so much age-centric self-agrandizement. Public school, or any education model that consists of information being transfered from an "educated" person to an uninformed person will not intentionally create intelligence. I will allow that it might accidentally happen, because that is the nature of childhood. But, children will only internalize what they themselves are curious about and interested in. Everything else will have to be relearned when it becomes relevant to them. A really good government school might succeed in creating a group of people that have learned to regurgitate the same Trivial Pursuit type facts on given subjects, but if your definition of education is something more, homeschooling is the only method that can consistently foster it.
What about high school? by Brandon
What do homeschooling parents do in place of things like disections in high school biology classes?
Leadership Experiences? by markmcb
I’m currently in the middle of transitioning to a new job. As I fill out forms, interview, and complete my resume, I find that everyone asks the question (in some form), "So tell me about your leadership experiences from high school until now." What do you say if you’ve not been in high school? It seems that what they’re looking for are things like captain of a varsity sport, class president, organization president, etc. All are clear examples of instances where you took a large group of people and led them.
I suppose you still could say things like eagle scout, summer league sports captain, etc., but I wonder if they carry the same weight. Are there developmental leadership experiences available for homeschooled children that I’m not accounting for, or is this one of the few advantages you might get by attending a school with a large body of students?
Just a thought by Brandon
I was thinking about what would happen if 20% of those now in public school decided to switch to homeschooling – the top 20%, even – and I realized this may actually help improve public schooling. The student to teacher ratio would improve and existing school resources would go further. Also, the range of intelligence levels existing in schools would decrease, allowing public schools to concentrate more on those who need them.
This doesn’t remove or address all possible issues, but it is an angle I hadn’t considered previously.
Finances? by mwhite
From a financial standpoint, I wonder how much more it would cost to homeschool your child through high school than it would to send him/her to public school. Has anyone looked into this?
I would guess that there is some significant additional costs associated with homeschooling your child, especially if you factor in the local sports club dues, books, science equipment, etc. that are normally provided at a public school. Another consideration is the local property taxes you are paying which are going into a school system that you’re not actually using.
So I’m also curious if any local communities offer any kind of tax credit for families who homeschool. I would guess that most, if not all, do not — wanting to encourage families to use the public school system — but it only seems fair. It would seem fair to me that a system similar to the voucher system could be used with home schooling, with the value of your voucher credited to your taxes.
Has anyone looked at these issues in depth?
CAN I PUT MY 2 CENTS IN HERE? by Anonymous
I’ve home educated my 5 children for almost 12 years. I started out doing this as a full time stay home mom with a 7th grade education and a GED. I then became a single mother who had to go to school myself and work full time. I became an EMT/Firefighter. I had also been a published writer, musician, and a ran our homestead. While paying my way through school I worked 3 jobs, helped at the food pantry at church, and taught Sunday school. I am also a long time sober member of a well known 12 step group. During all this I home schooled my children, or I should say, they educated ME. I learned after the first year of trying to do public school at home, that what my children really needed was my support. I learned to write checks, barter, and volunteer for the materials we needed, and they basically led their own way with me rallying behind them. I had a strong support group I ran, with their help, for over 4 years. During that time I worked a discrimination case with the Rutherford Institute, stood against the local school board and town Mayor. The kids and I had to move from our farm to the ghetto for awhile, which was an education in itself. We stayed in church and volunteer activities because this is a cornerstone. I am a christian, and we are a christian family. But we’ve had our share of problems, as any other family. I had to file a lawsuit against a big city fire dept for sexual assault on the job. I went through 2 divorces. The kids were awesome and i truly believe they managed so well because they’d gotten very close being homeschooled. I have little formal education myself, but I’ve been a writer for a few well known magazines and large city newspapers. I’m a self taught computer nerd. I was on a record label and made a music video and CD in LA a few years ago. My children have taken after this in the area of art and writing. They are serious students. A year ago I married a wonderful man who is my best friend and the best Dad to my children I could pray for. He is a college graduate and Paramedic/firefighter with all the Certs. We work EMS full time, co-write a weekly column for a well known magazine. We have a small farm. We bought an old Grange Hall this past April and opened an Amish general store. We are both also on a level One DMAT team. I worked on this for 3 years before I met my husband. We didn’t live together before we married, we did everything by the book to the best of our ability and have been greatly blessed.
My oldest son(homeschool graduate) will graduate next spring with a BA in psychology. My oldest daughter(homeschool graduate) is also a firefighter and works a union job. The middle daughter(homeschool grad and looking at college) helps to run the store and the family. The youngest daughter is a junior in high school. All A’s, it was her choice to go back this year, and she is a studious pupil. No goofing off. The youngest son of 11 is still homeschooled and does beautifully. Does it take a stay home mom/dad with a college education to teach kindergarten? NO. I have learned a mountain more that I did in public school by teaching my own. One area I"ve enjoyed most is conspiracy theories. Again, let me reiterate, the most important element is the enjoyment and freedom of homeschooling. My 11 yr old son is an avid World Historian. But he would regard me with horror were I to require him to read a book on what a flower thinks of the rain. I get a list of the basics he needs, and show it to him. Then we work around it. We use the library, the internet, the book sales, lots of paper and pens for free doodling. We use the discovery,learning,teaching,court, a/e channels on the basic cable.
We talk alot. We eat meals at the table when we aren’t at work. Everyone has chores. We have maps on the wall, a huge dictionary on the table. Everyone pitches in wherever and whenever needed.
Homeschooling is a normal way of life for us. Its just the way we live. And we learn alot by just doing!
My husband has 5 children also, all grown. But they grew up opposite the way we live. They are well versed in all the secular ways of the world but the moral attitudes are absent. And the family bond is not there. This has been a happy experience for my husband who was a farmer for many years and kept his children involved in that every chance he could. But..the circle around them did not, nor does not today, support the way we live, versus the way they live. I am making an observation here. The differences are all too obvious.And I find it sad. I do hope to further my education at some point. But I have written 2 books, and am writing a third. If things progress as they are now, we will be moving to a more self reliant farmstead out in Amish country. I can then go back to being a full time mom, run the store, and finish the book. I want to add that we did not do any of the things we’ve enjoyed because we have money. We are a low to middle class income family. We’ve had to be on food stamps before, and had some rough times before my husband and I met and joined the troops. So we understand roughing it.
I might also add that my daughter and I were on a fire dept together, as a team, and also were recruited to run for public office. It was a illuminating experience to go to the voting booth and see both our names on the list. I was elected to a public office that night. Strange Days indeed.
Just a few thoughts from the country..
Motivation by chaoticset
I think a large part of the reason public schools are full to begin with is that a lot of parents don’t want to have to deal with their children if they don’t have to. Looking after another human being is a really challenging thing, and looking after one that’s small, fast, and seems to consistently try to injure itself is harder.
Homeschooling parents — despite any theological absurdities or social phobias that may or may not be involved — are assuredly more willing to spend time with their children. That the children seem to consistently come out better than the ones in a huge, wretched system filled with bored children who are at least partially unwanted isn’t surprising.
It doesn’t mean the public school system could necessarily be better, or that everybody should homeschool — just that, as anyone could tell you, there’s really no replacement for motivation on the part of a parent.
OK, OK... by wayne.r.keeler
It seems as though there are merits to a well planned, and executed home-based education. Undoubtedly involved parents are critical to the success of any course of education, whether conducted in a home, public or private school setting. What is at times disturbing is the technique of attacking the public schools as a rationale for promoting home-schooling. Some of the statements made by home schoolers in the course of their arguments are nearly inflamatory towards some truly dedicated and hard working teachers. Catherine does a good job of promoting home-based education without attacking public schools too hard. But there are implications made in this article that imply that the products of education that she praises are actually the endststes that are nessecarily beneficial to our children. To a degree, what one considers the "benefits" of education is values driven. Some of what she declares to be the virtues of the home-based model of education are not universally virtuous. It seems that:
1. Nearly one-on-one attention. School classrooms are stuffed to overflowing often having 20+ students…Homeschooling allows a child to get nearly one-on-one instruction…from a teacher who knows them and their abilities. When I was in Grammar school these ratios were even higher. It taught me patience and taught me to wait my turn. It taught me not to get an over inflated sense of self-importance and that everyone gets a turn. The focus of the world 24 hours a day was NOT my mom and dad. I loved them but this experiance taught me independence in a world of equals. Overall, it taught me temperance and compassion towards my community.
2. There is no mean to accommodate. Today’s lesson plans, which teachers are required to follow to the letter (this is a generalization and inaccuracy), are not made to accommodate the different intelligence levels of each child (the teachers have the flexibility to make adjustments).
Children with either higher or lower levels of ability and understanding suffer. It not only causes educational delays but often comes hand-in-hand with behavioral problems. The children with a greater understanding get bored with material they already know and the children with a lower understanding get frustrated with the material that they just can’t seem to grasp(this is where parental involvement in after school homework comes in; open communication with student’s teachers ensures focus is applied in needed areas). With homeschooling the pace and the material are set according to the ability of the child. Things can be taken more slowly or more quickly as needed. Public education, by contrast sets a standard to achieve and those students who are struggling now know where they need help to catch up. Involved and knowledgable parents will push a student to catch up and the pace is not slowed or altered to accomodate the student who falters…he/she must catch up. The student is challenged by someone(teacher) other than their parent who may be too sympathetic to apply the appropriate amount of discipline required to ensure the student appreciates that they must catch up. Furthermore, there are no limits to the number of AP programs offered in public schools for those students who demonstrate the apptitude for placement. They flexibility to accomodate students at all learning levels is there.
3. You are in control of what they learn. One of the great things about homeschooling is that you dictate what your children will learn and how they will learn it. You decide if you want them to learn about foreign countries by reading about them or going to one. You decide which textbooks they will use. The resources available for home education are amazing. You don’t have to worry about teaching the subjects that are unfamiliar to you. The textbooks for homeschoolers are exponentially more enlightening than those typically used in schools (this comment is an opinion as Ms. Christensen admittedly never attended public schools). Regular textbooks are made to be used as a supplement and are often ambiguous with few examples (this is unsupported by the text books I have seen). It is exciting that in the "information age" we have access to so much reference material and data. However, what is of great concern here is that controling everything your child is exposed to sounds a bit like paranoia and exclusionist. I am not so sure I want members of the White Aryan Resistance or a terrorist organization to be homeschooling their kids. Maybe going to public school would expose a child in a less than favorable home environment to another life. Likewise, there are things that I don’t nessecarily believe in and if I home schooled, would not expose my child to (socialism, vegetarianism, etc.). She should have the right to be exposed to these things however, and a public school environment, outside of my direct influence may give her a perspective on these things(either in spite of my views or in favor of them), that she should have a right and opportunity to develop on her own. Who really wants to raise kids that are little clones of themselves?
4. Freedom to roam. No comment here.
5. Earlier entrance into college. So many public/private school students get to college with very little to show for the last four years, except possibly some advanced placement classes(a generalization/opinion). I became a full-time college student just after my 14th birthday. And this scares me. Why are we, as Americans, in such a hurry to "grow up." I remember when my sister tried wearing make-up for the first time when she was about 13…my parents would have nothing of it. Now we are talking about children(<18 yrs old) having bachelors degrees? I would not want my 16 year old daughter running around a college campus anymore than nessecary. It has not been so long since I was a college student and there is enough rowdy and rambunctious behavior to disrupt the development of a child. Students will arrive in this environment soon enough and needn’t sacrifice youthful naivete for excelleration through a process that will not yield the rewards that they may expect. Is a 19 year old with limited life experiance and a bachelors degree prepared to take on a supervisory position in industry or the professional arena in leadership over jaded and cynical 30 something careerists. Their limited experiances handicap them from conceptualizing and relating to their subordinates and may lead to turmoil in the workplace (this is, consequently, a life skill honed well in groups not unlike the classromm of over 20 students or the populated school playground).
5. Better preparation for college. "Homeschooling is teaching your children to teach themselves." It’s something I once heard my mom tell her friends and I think it is the perfect description(it is a perfect description if you agree with Ms. Christensens opinion). Being a "self starter" can be "hard wired" into people in a number of ways. My parents choose to challenge us to seek emplyment and other achievement measured activities. Goal setting is a skill that should never be left exclusively to traditional educators. It is a technique associated with enhancing a sense of self worth. While school influences this, it is a parental responsibility to foster this.
Ultimately, what many proponents of home school do when singing the praises of home-based education is praise the technique without making a distinction between educating and parenting. Home schooling is an amalgamation of these two roles and in this it can only be good. However, a healthy relationship between proficient and professional educators and nurturing ethical parents can CAN still achieve success as partners. I seek not to condemn homeschooling, but public school only fails due to a low level of parental involvement. We need to ensure that when we attack public education we are honest with ourselves about who is really failing our schools, teachers and students.
Public education works.
Unschooling? by tomtolman
Has anyone heard of unschooling? I just ran across a CNN article about it. Unschooling lets children, not parents, determine what they want to study.
Definition:
"Unschooling (also sometimes referred to as ‘natural learning’, ‘child-led learning’, ‘discovery learning’, ‘autodidactic learning’, or ‘child-directed learning’) is the term that means being responsible for your own education. Under unschooling education, parents may act as ‘facilitators’ and may provide a wide-range of resources to their children." (Wikipedia)
What is the difference between unschooling and homeschooling?
"The reason that unschooling is hard to explain and hard for some people to understand, is that it is not a technique that can be broken down to a step by step process. Rather, unschooling is an attitude, it way of life. Where most homeschooling puts the emphasis on what needs to be learned, unschooling puts the emphasis on who is doing the learning. This makes it a very personalized experience and one that does not lend itself well to the one size-fits-all approach of a commercial curriculum package." (Unschooling or Homeschooling?)
According to the CNN article, 10% of all homeschooled students (about 150,000) are ‘unschooled.’ Has anyone else heard of this or experience it?
Great article! by Anonymous
Thanks for sharing your experience! VEry well written article. I homeschool 5 of my 7 kids and it is amazingly easy and effective,
Karen http://o-scientist.blogspot.com
benefits of homeschooling by Anonymous
Good to hear this about homeschooling. Homeschooling as lots of advantage, being a sixth grade student i enjoy being in home and study. Private tutor from tutorz site helping me a lot in math, science.
Denise by DDearman
This is an excellent article. It’s well written and I want to reference it for others to read – planning on including it in our homeschool support group handbook. We homeschooled for 17 years and Catherine’s list of benefits identify our experience as well. Homeschooling (I prefer the term Individualized Instruction) truly is the way to go. I vote Thumbs Up!
Denise by DDearman
This is an excellent article. It’s well written and I want to reference it for others to read – planning on including it in our homeschool support group handbook. We homeschooled for 17 years and Catherine’s list of benefits identify our experience as well. Homeschooling (I prefer the term Individualized Instruction) truly is the way to go. I vote Thumbs Up!