Truth is, State Superintendents need a lot more oversight.
Here is a question for some of you. Before I ask it, let me give you some background. First of all, I have four children whom I have homeschooled all of their lives. My oldest son is 25, a graduate of Grove City College and an engineer. My second son is 22, a graduate of Worcester Polytech in MA and is heading to Carnegie Melon next fall for graduate studies. He was given a nice scholarship from WPI for his undergraduate work. My third son will be a sophomore at a local private Christian college and is a National Merit Scholar. He recieved a very nice scholarship to attend that school. My youngest is a girl who is starting her first year of high school in the fall (at home, of course).
So, I am a huge advocate of homeschooling and my kids have all done very well. They have always scored very high on standardized tests—not just the SATs, but also the tests that are done during grade school. To qualify for the National Merit Scholarship, you have to score in the 99th percentile on the PSAT.
About me—I have a degree in engineering, so I push math big time. My kids typically take calculus in 9th or 10th grade.
The reason I’m giving you this background before asking my question is that I don’t want to be accused of being “anti-homeschooling.”
Here is my question: How can the info taken from the test scores of homeschooled kids be compared to the test scores of their public school counterparts when the homeschooled kids take the tests voluntarily (that is, their parents decide if they’ll take it) and the public school kids take the tests because they all have to? I can see comparing the SAT scores because that is completely voluntary. But, the Stanford Achievement Test and the IOWAs? I’ve never understood that.
Any help for me here?
More oversight? They’ll do whatever it takes to ensure that the decent kids remain as stupid as the commie kids.
Full disclosure: I work at a small college (not an instructor). My opinion specifically and the general opinion of most instructors at this school has always been that the home schooled kids were better educated. That opinion has been shaken slightly in recent days. Our student body president, a home schooled student, just failed English Comp 1 for the third time. This time his failure was compounded by proof of academic dishonesty. He was found to be receiving outside help to write simple five paragraph essays. His composition skills are below those that I was required to have to get out of 7th grade — oh, so many years ago. Granted, his is an extreme case but it is indicative of a growing problem being seen at this location. I’m sick of government mandates so; physician, heal thyself. Homeschoolers — please make sure your kids are entering this world with the skills necessary to succeed at the next levels in life.