Posted on 04/18/2020 10:38:37 PM PDT by DeweyCA
A rapidly increasing number of American families are opting out of sending their children to school, choosing instead to educate them at home. Homeschooled kids now account for roughly 3 percent to 4 percent of school-age children in the United States, a number equivalent to those attending charter schools, and larger than the number currently in parochial schools.
Yet Elizabeth Bartholet, Wasserstein public interest professor of law and faculty director of the Law Schools Child Advocacy Program, sees risks for childrenand societyin homeschooling, and recommends a presumptive ban on the practice. Homeschooling, she says, not only violates childrens right to a meaningful education and their right to be protected from potential child abuse, but may keep them from contributing positively to a democratic society.
We have an essentially unregulated regime in the area of homeschooling, Bartholet asserts. All 50 states have laws that make education compulsory, and state constitutions ensure a right to education, but if you look at the legal regime governing homeschooling, there are very few requirements that parents do anything. Even apparent requirements such as submitting curricula, or providing evidence that teaching and learning are taking place, she says, arent necessarily enforced. Only about a dozen states have rules about the level of education needed by parents who homeschool, she adds. That means, effectively, that people can homeschool whove never gone to school themselves, who dont read or write themselves. In another handful of states, parents are not required to register their children as homeschooled; they can simply keep their kids at home.
This practice, Bartholet says, can isolate children. She argues that one benefit of sending children to school at age four or five is that teachers are mandated reporters, required to alert authorities to evidence of child abuse or neglect. Teachers and other school personnel constitute the largest percentage of people who report to Child Protective Services, she explains, whereas not one of the 50 states requires that homeschooling parents be checked for prior reports of child abuse. Even those convicted of child abuse, she adds, could still just decide, Im going to take my kids out of school and keep them at home.
As an example, she points to the memoir Educated, by Tara Westover, the daughter of Idaho survivalists who never sent their children to school. Although Westover learned to read, she writes that she received no other formal education at home, but instead spent her teenage years working in her fathers scrap business, where severe injuries were common, and endured abuse by an older brother. Bartholet doesnt see the book as an isolated case of a family that slipped through the cracks: Thats what can happen under the system in effect in most of the nation.
In a paper published recently in the Arizona Law Review, she notes that parents choose homeschooling for an array of reasons. Some find local schools lacking or want to protect their child from bullying. Others do it to give their children the flexibility to pursue sports or other activities at a high level. But surveys of homeschoolers show that a majority of such families (by some estimates, up to 90 percent) are driven by conservative Christian beliefs, and seek to remove their children from mainstream culture. Bartholet notes that some of these parents are extreme religious ideologues who question science and promote female subservience and white supremacy.
She views the absence of regulations ensuring that homeschooled children receive a meaningful education equivalent to that required in public schools as a threat to U.S. democracy. From the beginning of compulsory education in this country, we have thought of the government as having some right to educate children so that they become active, productive participants in the larger society, she says. This involves in part giving children the knowledge to eventually get jobs and support themselves. But its also important that children grow up exposed to community values, social values, democratic values, ideas about nondiscrimination and tolerance of other peoples viewpoints, she says, noting that European countries such as Germany ban homeschooling entirely and that countries such as France require home visits and annual tests.
In the United States, Bartholet says, state legislators have been hesitant to restrict the practice because of the Home Schooling Legal Defense Association, a conservative Christian homeschool advocacy group, which she describes as small, well-organized, and overwhelmingly powerful politically. During the last 30 years, activists have worked to dismantle many states homeschooling restrictions and have opposed new regulatory efforts. Theres really no organized political opposition, so they basically get their way, Bartholet says. A central tenet of this lobby is that parents have absolute rights that prevent the state from intervening to try to safeguard the childs right to education and protection.
Bartholet maintains that parents should have very significant rights to raise their children with the beliefs and religious convictions that the parents hold. But requiring children to attend schools outside the home for six or seven hours a day, she argues, does not unduly limit parents influence on a childs views and ideas. The issue is, do we think that parents should have 24/7, essentially authoritarian control over their children from ages zero to 18? I think thats dangerous, Bartholet says. I think its always dangerous to put powerful people in charge of the powerless, and to give the powerful ones total authority.
She concedes that in some situations, homeschooling may be justified and effective. No doubt there are some parents who are motivated and capable of giving an education thats of a higher quality and as broad in scope as whats happening in the public school, she says. But Bartholet believes that if parents want permission to opt out of schools, the burden of proving that their case is justified should fall on parents.
I think an overwhelming majority of legislators and American people, if they looked at the situation, Bartholet says, would conclude that something ought to be done.
After you. I’ll pass.
“.... Homeschooling, she says, not only violates childrens right to a meaningful education
HA!
and their right to be protected from potential child abuse,
Double HA!
but may keep them from contributing positively to a democratic society.”
Like Lizzy Bartholet do. Yup. She shore do be contributing positively./s
Trying to take her seriesly, but can’t manage it. She’s a moron.
If it will keep them out of Harvard, then Home Schooling is already doing better than Public education.
As always, leftists project. It is not the parents who are powerful, but the STATE. She wants the parents to be as powerless as the children so progressives can enjoy "total authority".
I watched the entire interview with Tara Westover in this
This woman never got a high school diploma but did get a PhD from Cambridge.
Her older brother taught himself Trigonometry, Algebra and Calculus although he had only one year of high school and then went on to college. He nearly aced the ACT.
This woman is an argument that government schooling is not necessary.
To support her argument she gives 1 extreme example of a kid damaged by homeschooling.
The number of kids severely damaged, abused or even killed by public schools runs into the many millions.
Heres a great example why William F Buckley, while still a relatively young man, wisely said “I would rather be governed by the first 2000 people in the Boston telephone directory than by the 2000 people on the faculty of Harvard University.”
This woman who thinks society owns the kids needs to STHU until the many proven failures of government schools are remedied.
The ongoing attacks against homeschooling are hilarious.
Apparently, the establishment education institutions are largely worried that they won’t be able to INDOCTRINATE with their business as usual models. GG. /s
Homeschoolers must be vigilant in protecting our rights, Professor Bartholet is not alone in her views.
bump
My experience teaching college home schooled student are best. They have confidence, knowledge well beyond their peers, and can write well.
Asians are next behind homeschooled.
Indeed! Well stated.
This lockdown has opened some eyes. Many parents are discovering just how much their primary kids DON’T know.
I know of two families who are NOT sending their kids back, as they have taught them more at home these past two months than the system has done in a few years.
Admittedly, they have not been bullied, read to by a drag queen, or ridiculed for clothing, but you can’t have it all.
My two boys who did a couple of years in the K12 online
home school program are on their college Deans List.
The point is the teachers unions fear change that would
make them compete for students.
They object to charter schools too, and home schooling
is a job security and pay issue.
I note, they can’t indoctrinate home schoolers. This is
why so many Christians home school.
What could this woman possibly be going on about for twenty paragraphs?
In my religion, education of kids is the parents responsibility. Thats just common sense. Carting them off to get brainwashed by the communists in the public school system is just neglect and abuse
I agree - the bold lettering did emphasize important parts of the article.
I believe that the word ‘indoctrination’ should permeate the article where it refers to the government teaching/influencing the students.
For as another said, “It takes a village.” (sarc)
Who cares what Elizabeth Bartholet thinks? Only other people like her.
Let’s talk about the risks of public schools.
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