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Home is no place for school - Homeschool Alert
USA Today Op Ed ^
| September 3, 2003
| Dennis Evans
Posted on 09/03/2003 8:29:31 AM PDT by Damocles
Home is no place for school
Wed Sep 3, 6:49 AM ET
By Dennis L. Evans
The popularity of home schooling, while not significant in terms of the number of children involved, is attracting growing attention from the media, which create the impression that a "movement" is underway. Movement or not, there are compelling reasons to oppose home teaching both for the sake of the children involved and for society.
Home schooling is an extension of the misguided notion that "anyone can teach." That notion is simply wrong. Recently, some of our best and brightest college graduates, responding to the altruistic call to "Teach for America," failed as teachers because they lacked training. Good teaching is a complex act that involves more than simply loving children. Research on student achievement overwhelmingly supports the "common-sense" logic that the most important factor affecting student learning is teacher competency. While some parents may be competent to teach very young children, that competence will wane in more advanced grades as the content and complexity increases.
But schools serve important functions far beyond academic learning. Attending school is an important element in the development of the "whole child." Schools, particularly public schools, are the one place where "all of the children of all of the people come together." Can there be anything more important to each child and thus to our democratic society than to develop virtues and values such as respect for others, the ability to communicate and collaborate and an openness to diversity and new ideas? Such virtues and values cannot be accessed on the Internet.
The isolation implicit in home teaching is anathema to socialization and citizenship. It is a rejection of community and makes the home-schooler the captive of the orthodoxies of the parents.
One of the strengths of our educational system is the wide range of legitimate forms of public, private or parochial schooling available for parental choice.
With that in mind, those contemplating home teaching might heed the words of the Roman educator, Quintilian (A.D. 95). In opposing home schooling, he wrote, "It is one thing to shun schools entirely, another to choose from them."
Dennis L. Evans directs doctoral programs in education leadership at the University of California, Irvine.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antiamerican; antihomeschool; antinuclearfamily; antiparent; antiparentalrights; antiparentsrights; backintheussr; bewaretheredmenace; bigstinkincrock; brainwash; breathedeeply; disinformation; drinkthekoolaid; education; groupthink; homeschool; homeschoollist; homosexualagenda; indoctrination; karlmarx; liberalagenda; littleredschoolhouse; losingyourreligion; mccarthywasright; nuclearfamily; pc; politicallycorrect; propaganda; publicschools; reddupes; redmenace; reeducationcenters; socialengineering; socialism; socialists; socializta; socialtraining; taxdollarsatwork; theredmenace; unamerican
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It is a rejection of community and makes the home-schooler the captive of the orthodoxies of the parents.It's all about indoctrination...
1
posted on
09/03/2003 8:29:32 AM PDT
by
Damocles
To: 2Jedismom
Homeschool ping.
2
posted on
09/03/2003 8:32:37 AM PDT
by
Pan_Yans Wife
("Life isn't fair. It's fairer than death, is all.")
To: Damocles
It's all about indoctrination...BINGO!
Ya beat me to it. The headline should read...."Home is no place for indoctrination, because we can't GET to them".
3
posted on
09/03/2003 8:33:52 AM PDT
by
Puppage
(You may disagree with what I have to say, but I will defend to your death my right to say it)
To: aspasia; Tax-chick; Blood of Tyrants; Dubh_Ghlase; StarCMC; LiteKeeper; beaversmom
Homeschool Alert! Please ping anyone else you think would be interested in dissecting this article...
4
posted on
09/03/2003 8:34:28 AM PDT
by
Damocles
(sword of...)
To: Damocles
Home schooling is an extension of the misguided notion that "anyone can teach."I haven't seen any stats on this, but I am of the impression that home-schooled children consistently score higher on SATs and other placement tests than children educated by public schools.
5
posted on
09/03/2003 8:34:29 AM PDT
by
alnick
To: Damocles
Dennis L. Evans directs doctoral programs in education leadership at the University of California, Irvine.I'm quite sure his is a completely unbiased opinion. {sarcasm off}
Poor Mr. Evans. Perhaps he hasn't noticed, but the "professional educators" he's training are failing miserably.
6
posted on
09/03/2003 8:36:05 AM PDT
by
AngryJawa
To: Damocles
Translation: liberals are terrified of losing their monopoly over captive young minds.
7
posted on
09/03/2003 8:36:29 AM PDT
by
goldstategop
(In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
To: Damocles
Can there be anything more important to each child and thus to our democratic society than to develop virtues and values such as respect for others, the ability to communicate and collaborate and an openness to diversity and new ideas? The purpose of public school is political indoctrination. Teaching reading, writing, and arithmetic is left for the parents via homework
8
posted on
09/03/2003 8:36:55 AM PDT
by
SauronOfMordor
(Java/C++/Unix/Web Developer === needs a job at the moment)
To: Damocles
Home schooling is an extension of the misguided notion that "anyone can teach." Somehow, the students of these 'anyones' seem to consistently kick the academic a$$es of the public school students. Hmmm.
9
posted on
09/03/2003 8:37:05 AM PDT
by
tbpiper
To: Damocles; scripter; *Homeschool_list
I SUPPORT HOMESCHOOLERS BUMP!
10
posted on
09/03/2003 8:37:17 AM PDT
by
EdReform
(Support Free Republic - Become a Monthly Donor)
To: lainie
Egghead,statist ping
11
posted on
09/03/2003 8:37:45 AM PDT
by
Cheapskate
(Careful what you carry, the man is wise!)
To: Damocles
It is a rejection of community and makes the home-schooler the captive of the orthodoxies of the parents. In the remaining sixteen hours of the day, when the child is not being subjected to the orthodoxies of the public schools, they must then become exposed to the orthodoxies of the parents. What horrors!
And the children whose parents' work, are then enrolled in "after school" programs, and sports and church activities. Perhaps if we are diligent, we can clutter their schedules enough, so that we only see our children during the eight hours while they are sleeping!?
Wait a minute... there is always boarding school! We could see them on holidays and during the summer.
12
posted on
09/03/2003 8:37:56 AM PDT
by
Pan_Yans Wife
("Life isn't fair. It's fairer than death, is all.")
To: Damocles
LOL! Then why is PUBLIC SCHOOL failing? WHY can't PUBLIC SCHOOL teachers speak ENGLISH as in the Boston situtaion. WHY are public school kids SOOO STUPID? Is it because of the STUPID teachers that are CERTIFIED (insane)?WHY is it that HOMESCHOOLED children ALWAYS test HIGHER than PUBLIC schooled children and they ALSO win the MAJORITY of spelling bees?
13
posted on
09/03/2003 8:38:00 AM PDT
by
nmh
To: Damocles
"It is one thing to shun schools entirely, another to choose from them." An offer to approve of the dreaded vouchers rather than submit to home schooling?
To: Damocles; 2Jedismom
In a way, you kind of have to marvel at the chutzpah of a guy who is willing to stand up in public, fly in the face of all evidence and reason, and make a barking, drooling fool out of himself for statism.
Wow.
Pinhead.
Dan
15
posted on
09/03/2003 8:39:44 AM PDT
by
BibChr
("...behold, they have rejected the word of the LORD, so what wisdom is in them?" [Jer. 8:9])
To: goldstategop
Public schools are working just fine.
Almost everyone now grows up believing FDR, Teddy Roosevelt, Lincoln, to a lesser extent Wilson, were 'great Presidents', MLK was a great man, and anyone who disagrees is a racist or anti-Semite.
Its not the liberals, its the statists who fear challenges to their orthodoxy.
16
posted on
09/03/2003 8:39:58 AM PDT
by
JohnGalt
(Don't leave the children on their own, no, no. Bring the Boys Back Home)
To: Damocles
Glenn Beck tore this op-ed apart quite forcefully on his show this morning. Although when he kept saying "Dennis" I thought this thing was written by Dennis Kucinich!
}:-)4
17
posted on
09/03/2003 8:40:19 AM PDT
by
Moose4
(It's rusting, it's paid for and it's bigger than your car. Don't get in my truck's way.)
To: nmh
Do public schools still have spelling bees?
18
posted on
09/03/2003 8:40:27 AM PDT
by
Pan_Yans Wife
("Life isn't fair. It's fairer than death, is all.")
To: alnick
"I haven't seen any stats on this, but I am of the impression that home-schooled children consistently score higher on SATs and other placement tests than children educated by public schools." I think you are right but see homeschoolers tend not to vote Democrat or be PC in their thinking. Which is something the left cannot allow! Therefore it is imperative that the liberals quash the homeschool movement!
19
posted on
09/03/2003 8:40:43 AM PDT
by
Mad Dawgg
(French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
To: alnick
I haven't seen any stats on this, but I am of the impression that home-schooled children consistently score higher on SATs and other placement tests than children educated by public schools. Consistently MUCH higher than public school student average. My oldest got a 1300 -- as an 8th-grader
What happens is homeschoolers can focus on reading, writing and math much more than public schools because we don't spend time on "diversity indoctrination"
20
posted on
09/03/2003 8:41:07 AM PDT
by
SauronOfMordor
(Java/C++/Unix/Web Developer === needs a job at the moment)
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