Posted on 11/30/2012 7:11:40 AM PST by Morgana
TORONTO, November 29, 2012, (LifeSiteNews.com) Homeschoolers are incensed after Anna Maria Tremonti, host of CBCs The Current, decided to air what she called the last word on her show discussing homeschooling.
Following her November 14 show, a two minute skit cast homeschooling mothers as incompetent, uneducated, and sexually irresponsible.
The home-schooled teenage malewho was cast as unchallenged, resentful, rebellious, and delinquentsuggested at one point that he would rather not have been created than homeschooled.
OK, so Im supposed to learn geometry from a lady who never graduated college and wasnt smart enough to use condoms? rants the teenager in the skit.
The St. Augustine Classical Lutheran Co-op from the Kitchener-Waterloo area in Ontario slammed the show as play[ing] to the tune the establishment likes to hear.
The only problem, the group pointed out, is [that Tremonti] described a fictional scenario quite divorced from reality. Masked in humour, her message in this segment was all the more insidious.
In her segment prior to the skit, Tremonti interviewed Paul Faris, president of the Home School Legal Defence Association of Canada. She wanted to know why Faris association had supported the removal of a section of the first version of the Alberta Education Act that brought in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Alberta Human Rights Act.
Tremonti attempted to corner Faris into saying that parents compelled the Alberta government to remove the controversial section so that they could teach their children religious teachings on homosexuality. Faris would not take the bait.
Finally, Tremonti suggested: If you believe religiously that homosexuality is a sin, do you believe that if [homeschoolers] were teaching their child that, that [theyd] be vulnerable?
Faris pointed out that a broad public act such as the Alberta Human Rights Act was not made to apply to private life in a home, where homeschooling parents have private conversation[s] in their own home with their own children.
Prior to the proposed Education Act failing it third reading due to an election call, parents across the province had expressed grave concern over section 16 of the act, which they saw as an infringement on their parental rights to raise and educate their own children as they saw fit.
Tremonti then brought Kent Hehr onto the show, Liberal MLA for Calgary Buffalo and education critic for his party. Hehr accused the Home School Legal Defence Association of Canada of being anti-gay and spreading misinformation to move a political agenda.
But Garnett Genuis, executive director of Parents For Choice in Education (PCE), told LifeSiteNews.com that it was not homeschoolers alone who were concerned about language in the original Alberta Education Act.
A wide spectrum of stakeholders had concerns about some of the language in the original version of the education act. These included the Alberta Catholic School Trustees Association and various alternative schools and programs.
From our perspective, people should have a right to hold differing opinions about moral and religious questions, and to pass those opinions on to their children before those children reach adulthood, he said.
Genuis pointed out that the revised Education Act has support of virtually all education stakeholders since the government fixed and clarified the language that threatened many people - not just home schoolers.
The St. Augustine Classical Lutheran Co-op criticized the CBC for not taking the opportunity to engage in a real debate about the state of education in this country.
Homeschooling families, as a rule, think about education much more than the average parent, and they tend to take their responsibility of raising the next generation of thoughtful, contributing citizens very seriously, the co-op stated. Far from being dysfunctional as portrayed in the skit, homeschooling families are a model of normalcy. Because the parents spend a great deal more time with their children than the average, the relationship between parent and child is most often one of mutual understanding, honour, and respect.
The kind of conversation this segment portrayed would be unlikely to occur in a homeschooling family, it concluded.
The group accused Tremonti of demonstrating exactly the kind of close-minded and prejudiced thinking of which she believes others to be guilty.
Is committing this kind of logical fallacy not an embarrassment for a nationally-broadcast radio host?
You may listen to entire podcast here.
Contact: Audience Relations, CBC Online Email form Toll-free: 1-866-306-4636
P.O. Box 500 Station A Toronto, ON Canada, M5W 1E6
I personally avoid the utilitarian-type arguments. At the end of the day parents have the God-given right and responsibility to educate their own children. Government no more has the God-given right to license or direct parent-teachers than I have the God-given right as a parent to invade a foreign country.
It is great that home schooled children, on average, get a better education that government schooled children. More importantly, in addition to a great education, homeschooled children often get a Christian education (synonymous?). Recall that the primary function of government schools (something they are actually very successful at doing) is socialization of children into a secular humanist worldview, rather than providing children with a good education.
There are plenty of “conservative” “Christians” who defend government schooling. Most of them are ignorant. Their participation in the PS system helps to guarantee that we will have socialist government in this country for a long time to come. Ironically, homeschooling “liberals” are probably doing more for the preservation of the Republic with their education choice, than allegedly conservative public school supporters ever did with their vote for Governor etch-a-sketch.
The society we live in today, with all of its moral decay and illiterate government schooling graduates, is a product of the government school system and its “accredited teachers”.
After I began to have health problems, my kids went back to public school.
My son was in constant trouble for ‘disrespect’. The teacher would make an error and he’d politely correct her.
He ended up in the principal’s office more times than I could count. Each time, he’d passionately defend his actions. “This woman is teaching these kids INCORRECT information. This will warp the foundation of their education and set them up for failure later.”
The principal agreed with him.
I was never bothered by the school on this issue.
I was complimented by my kids’ teachers and a few members of the administration on the job I did more times than I can count.
And no, math was not my strong suit. I had to learn with my children. I didn’t ‘play teacher’ with my kids. If there was something that I had trouble with, the three of us would do research and figure it out together.
My kids learned how to solve their own problems and find answers rather than be spoon-fed.
Posts 60-62 ..... Excellent posts all.
As a product of a homeschooling mother, I find this article appaling. In public school, they wouldn’t let me jump a grade because I was too young, despite having every other credential. My mother pulled me out of that school and eleven years later, I made it to the semifinals of an international competition in Biology, when no one else in my public high school did. I’m proud to have been school espaically when I look at what happens in public school nowadays.
I’m proud to have been school espaically when I look
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Maybe your were trying to say “I’m proud to have BEEN home schoolED, especially when I look.....etc...
I am (at least I hope) sure that your fingers were moving too fast BUT whatever happened to ‘proof reading’.
Not saying much for your ‘home schooled education’ when a glaring error like that is ‘let loose’ and also lets those against you have a plethora of ammunition to use against you.
That hurt my eyes to read and comprehend.
Maybe your were
OOPS your = you ..
I know, when one criticizes another it is best to have a PERFECT copy of your criticism message....
Oh well, 20 strokes with a wet noodle and off to bed with no supper.....
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