Posted on 03/17/2004 6:38:11 AM PST by gobucks
A revolution is happening in American education. As it grows in size, it should frighten teachers everywhere.
Just how bad are American schools? And how deeply do conservative Americans distrust their government? One answer to both these questions is provided by the growth of home-schooling. As many as 2m American studentsone in 25may now be being taught at home.
The growth of home-schooling is all the more remarkable when you consider two facts. The first is the commitment of the parents. They give up not just a free public education, but also often the chance of a second income as well, because one parent (usually the mother) has to stay at home to educate the children.
The Department of Education highlights the results of its survey: Homeschooling in the United States: 1999. See also the Home School Legal Defense Association.
The next is that the practice challenges most of the assumptions behind public education. For most of the past 150 years, compulsory mass education has been the hallmark of a civilised society. Sociologists such as Max Weber have hailed the state's domination of education as a natural corollary of modernisation. Yet in the most advanced country on the planet (on many measures), more than 2m parents insist that education ought to be the work of the family. How has this come about?
Faith's imperatives
The 2m figure comes from the Home School Legal Defence Association. The most recent (1999) survey by the Department of Education put the number at only 850,000. The chances are that the HSLDA is closer to the truth. Rod Paige, the education secretary, uses its figure in his speeches, and, although home-schoolers tend to refuse to answer government surveys, a wealth of anecdotal evidence suggests that home-schooling is on the rise.
The market for teaching materials and supplies for home-schoolers is worth at least $850m a year. More than three-quarters of universities now have policies for dealing with home-schooled children. Support networks have sprung up in hundreds of towns and cities across the country to allow parents to do everything from establishing science labs to forming sports teams and defending their rights and reputation. When J.C. Penney started selling a T-shirt in 2001 that featured Home Skooled with a picture of a trailer home, the store faced so many complaints that it withdrew the item from sale.
Home-schooling is a fairly recent phenomenon. When Ronald Reagan came to power, in 1981, it was illegal for parents to teach their own children in most states. Today it is a legal right in all 50 states. Twenty-eight states require home-schooled children to undergo some kind of official evaluation, either by taking standardised tests or submitting a portfolio of work. Thirteen states simply require parents to inform officials that they are going to teach their children at home. In Texas, a parent doesn't have to tell anyone anything.
The main reason why legal restrictions on home-schooling have been swept away across so much of America is the power of the Christian right. Not all home-schoolers, of course, are religious conservatives. One of the first advocates of home-schooling, John Holt, was a left-winger who regarded schools as instruments of the bureaucratic-industrial complex. A lively subdivision of the home-school movement, called unschooling, argues that children should more or less be left to educate themselves. And the number of black home-schoolers is growing rapidly.
Yet the Praetorian Guard of the home-schooling movement are social conservatives. They turned to home-schooling in the 1970s in response to what they saw as the school system's lurch to the secular leftand they still provide most of the movement's political muscle on Capitol Hill. Senator Rick Santorum home-schools his childrenor, rather, his wife does. Another Republican home-schooler, Congresswoman Marilyn Musgrave, sponsored a bill to clear up various legal confusions about grants and scholarships for home-schooled children.
George Bush has tried hard to keep home-schoolers on his side. During the 2000 campaign, he said: In Texas we view home-schooling as something to be respected and something to be protected. Respected for the energy and commitment of loving mothers and loving fathers. Protected from the interference of government. As president, he has held several receptions for home-schooled children in the White House.
Just as the teachers' unions provide so many of the Democrats' volunteers, home-schoolers are important Republican foot-soldiers. According to the HSLDA, 76% of home-schooled young people aged 18-24 vote in elections, compared with 29% in that age group in the general population. Home-schoolers are also significantly more likely to contribute to political campaigns and to work for candidatesnormally Republican ones.
An education that works
So there is certainly an ideological edge to many home-schoolers. But do not be misled. First, this is a bottom-up movement with parents of whatever political stripe making individual decisions to withdraw their children (rather than following orders from higher up). Second, the movement has a utilitarian edge. Home-schoolers simply believe that they can offer their children better education at home.
One-to-one tuition, goes the argument, enables children to go at their own pace, rather than at a pace set for the convenience of teaching unions. And children can be taught proper subjects based on the Judeo-Christian tradition of learning, rather than politically correct flimflam. Some home-schoolers favour the classical notion of the trivium, with its three stages of grammar, dialectic and rhetoric (which requires children to learn Greek and Latin).
This sounds backward-looking, but home-schoolers claim that technology is on their side. The internet is making it ever easier to teach people at home, ever more teaching materials are available, and virtual communities now exist that allow home-schoolers to swap information.
The other factor working in home-schooling's favour is its own success. Many parents have been nervous about home-schooled children being isolated. With almost every town in America now boasting its own home-schooling network, that worry declines. Home-schooled children can play baseball with other home-schooled children; they can go on school trips; and so on.
What about academic standards? The home-schooling network buzzes with good news: a family with three home-schooled children at Harvard; a home-schooler with a bestselling novel; first, second and third place in the 2000 National Spelling Bee; a first university for home-schooled children (see article). Systematic evidence is more difficult to find.
There are certainly signs that home-schoolers are thriving. One recent survey by the HSLDA showed that three-quarters of home-educated adults aged 18-24 have taken college-level courses compared with 46% of the general population. But this is hardly conclusive. Home-schoolers do not have to report bad results. Moreover, home-schoolers may simply come from the more educated part of the population.
Yet these arguments point to change in the way the debate is unfolding. It is no longer about whether home-schooled children are losing out, but whether they are doing unfairly well. Maybe we should subcontract all of public education to home-schoolers, Bill Bennett, Mr Reagan's education secretary, once wondered mischievously. That looks unlikely. But America's home-schoolers represent an assault on public education that teachers everywhere should pay attention to.
We have the world at our fingertips now.
If we are using the case of inner city kids, I don't think many of them have computers in their homes. That is another example of how they are being left behind.
How will they compete in the market place? Of course we would all love to believe that having a "love of learning" will fuel our children and help them succeed.
While a very important trait,loving to learn does not pay the bills.
BTW- I agree with you about the cost of an education to a certain degree. I homeschool two on $500.00 year and two computers. It has been very effective for me.
Alas no, but we began homeschooling in 1989. It is often overlooked that the process of homeschooling serves as a marvelous and wide-ranging liberal arts education for the publicly-schooled parents.
I'm not official or I could charge the state for unnecessary clutter of cyber school material in my house.
Of course, being Lefties, that isn't even true. A few of the homeschooling finalists were also finalists in the national Science, Geography, and/or Math competitions as well.
The price of ignorance is extremely expensive.
I think it's a matter of priorities. I'd rather see the school teaching how to mix mortar, lay bricks, fit plumbing joints, square a foundation, and the science associated with that stuff than to hope that the interest is there to run a computer. It's not.
A stone mason in my area earns $30 per hour. His laborers earn $18 per hour. He has work scheduled two years out. And by the way his laborers are mexicans because nobody here can mix mortar or fit stone. Last I knew, computer work was getting hard to come by.
We don't know what the future holds for certain jobs. We do know that computers are not going away.
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