Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

How to Suppress Homeschooling
Heir.org ^ | 6-10-1997 | Leon F. McGinnis

Posted on 11/25/2001 7:25:26 PM PST by petuniasevan

How to Suppress Homeschooling

[Opinion page]
This opinion, last updated on July 10, 1997, was contributed by Leon F. McGinnis

Let’s get one thing clear from the beginning; in this country, parents have the right to teach their children at home, provided they meet minimal expectations regarding the preparation of their children for citizenship. This is not just a homeschooling parent’s view; it’s the consensus view that emerges from every judicial opinion rendered in a legal challenge to homeschooling

There has been a lot written and spoken about homeschooling, most of it positive. Unfortunately, there always has been a focused, often loud voice, spewing disinformation about homeschooling. One has only to read the published position of the National Education Association to understand whose voice it is, and also what drives the position. Let’s be clear—it is the success of homeschooling relative to the public education establishment, not a concern for the welfare of homeschooled children that motivates the education establishment to suppress homeschooling.

How successful is homeschooling? To date, every reputable published study has concluded that homeschooled children perform at least as well as their institutionally educated peers on the basics of literacy, mathematics, history, and social studies. In fact, if one can believe the results of the Iowa Test of Basic Skills and the Iowa Test of Academic Proficiency, homeschoolers as a group score approximately 25 percentage points above the general population. This is the test regime most often employed in the public schools in Georgia, so it must have some credibility. And these results are not unique to one year, or to one cleverly-selected sample of homeschoolers—they are repeated time and time again, all over this country. The message is crystal clear; homeschooling works, and works extremely well, as method of primary and secondary education.

Even the education establishment has recognized that it cannot attack homeschooling simply on the basis of academic results. Thus, for many years, the education establishment raised the issue of "socialization"—how could homeschooled children possibly be learning to cope in the "real world" if they were being isolated at home? Socialization is much harder to study than academic achievement, and there have been few reliable studies comparing the socialization of institutionally educated versus homeschooled children. But the studies that have been published suggest that homeschooled children are at least as well socialized as their institutionally educated peers. Much more convincing than scientific studies is simply the observation of groups of homeschoolers compared to groups of institutionally-educated students, for example, on field trips, at the theater, or in other similar settings. Furthermore, homeschooled children quite often are out in their communities, taking arts and crafts classes, volunteering, participating in theater, singing in choirs, and myriad other activities. They most definitely are not isolated, and their experience of the "real world" is out in the world, not in the artificial environment of the narrow age-group settings found in educational institutions.

The education establishment has realized that the socialization issue will be seen for the red herring that it is, and has searched for other means to suppress homeschooling. Two new strategies have emerged, and these pose real threats to homeschooling. The first strategy is to argue that homeschooling needs some form of accreditation. A number of reasons have been offered: it eases the transition back to the public school for those homeschoolers who go back, it is the basis for awarding a recognized diploma, and it makes it easier to provide homeschoolers access to public school programs and facilities such as science classes, libraries, sports, etc. But accreditation is simply another word for conforming, and the desire to not conform is the fundamental reason for choosing to homeschool. Homeschoolers as a group will not be seduced nor will they be tricked by the false promises of accreditation.

The second strategy for suppressing homeschooling is one that is much more likely to be successful, and it is to drastically limit homeschoolers’ access to public higher education. In this, the education establishment has discovered its only effective weapon against homeschooling. The strategy has been used in Georgia, and it unfolds in this way. First, the state Board of Regents establishes a goal of "raising academic standards in the state," and promulgates a policy requiring entering students to have completed a "college preparatory curriculum." Next, the Board of Regents dictates that if a student graduates from a "recognized" public or private school, having taken the designated courses, he or she will be presumed to be "college prep curriculum"-qualified. Finally, the Board of Regents will "recognize" the need to provide access to homeschoolers, and will promulgate an admissions policy for homeschoolers that requires a large number of specific subject tests, such as the SAT II tests, to demonstrate CPC proficiency. The policy specifically prevents institutions from using a portfolio to establish CPC proficiency.

This strategy is extremely effective for three reasons. First, the staff people at the state Board of Regents are members of the education establishment, and therefore anxious to "do their part" in the war against homeschooling. Second, homeschoolers are inclined to take a position that "if you are so stupid that you don’t want me, I’ll go somewhere that appreciates me." Since there are many private colleges and universities that welcome or actively recruit them, homeschoolers have alternatives, albeit generally much more expensive ones, to public higher education. It is this aspect that works so effectively to suppress homeschooling; many parents, faced with the prospect of private college tuition, simply give up and send their children back to the education establishment. Third, the Board of Regents often is not an elected body, so it does not answer directly to the voters, and often works completely out of view of the public. Thus, there is simply no mechanism for the citizenry to effect changes in Board policies.

There will be those who ask, "Why don’t you just take the additional tests, if homeschooling is so effective?" The answer is one that may be difficult for non-homeschoolers to understand. We choose to homeschool, in part because we believe deeply in the need to be an effective learner, as opposed to the need to learn specific factual material. Homeschoolers, left alone, typically become extremely well educated in the specific subjects that interest them, in addition to becoming proficient in the basics. Subject tests, like the eight SAT II tests currently required in Georgia, force children to learn specific factual information, chosen by somebody else, just as if they were in an educational institution. In other words, it is a way to force them to conform. What makes this a travesty is that there is no documented evidence that the proficiency demonstrated by the tests is necessary for success in the student’s chosen academic field of study. And even if it is, for one or two of the tests, to require eight is discriminatory and punitive.

Homeschooling is a movement that has grown rapidly in the past decade. In 1984, when Georgia adopted a homeschooling law, it was estimated that there were approximately 600 active homeschooling families. Today, the estimate is 12,000. If the 20% growth rate of the past five years continues, homeschoolers will number more than 100,000 by 2007. It is the size of the movement that makes the education establishment so desperate to suppress homeschooling, or at least to force homeschoolers into greater conformity. And they have found two new strategies that they can deploy largely out of the view of homeschoolers until it is too late for an effective response.

It is our independence and our desire for privacy that has made us vulnerable to the education establishment. Homeschoolers don’t publicize their successes. Homeschoolers don’t cultivate their elected officials. Homeschoolers don’t "sell" homeschooling to their neighbors. Homeschoolers have ignored the misinformation and disinformation, and allowed the education establishment to work behind the scenes for too long. It is time for homeschoolers to "come out of the closet," and demand respect and fair treatment by the education establishment. If we educate the public, if we cultivate our elected officials, we can make those demands successfully. Otherwise, we must contend with the reduced opportunities and the continuous threat of additional regulation and restriction.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS:
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-33 last
To: petuniasevan
My husband took the Cbest in California...laughable. He came home absolutely shocked of how easy the exam was...said that there were a few people afterward fretting over how well they did. lol.
21 posted on 11/25/2001 9:48:06 PM PST by homeschool mama
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: homeschool mama
I looked at the Cbest page to refresh my memory (I've been "from" California for seven years now),
and I'm newly amazed at how basic it really is. The subject material is at a level I'd expect of high school students.
Junior high, even, for some.
22 posted on 11/25/2001 10:15:28 PM PST by petuniasevan
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]

To: petuniasevan
It's laughable, isn't it? Hubby says the general population is stupid...guess they're the ones taking the CBEST, huh?

I have a cousin that took the test 3x...failed each time. Amazing.

My husband ended up staying in his original field of work...he would have/would be a wonderful teacher. He's a great man.

23 posted on 11/25/2001 10:24:49 PM PST by homeschool mama
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 22 | View Replies]

To: petuniasevan
My mother actually had a funny story involving talking about home schooling. Even though I wasn't home schooled, my parents briefly thought about it. My friends mom is a teacher and told her somthing about how parents are not really qualified and stuff. My mother pointed out that she herself has a PhD, and MBA, a law degree, several masters, and is in a book called 2 thousand notable women in america. At that point the response was simple. "I didn't mean you specifically, I meant common people". Academic elitists always want the oppurtunity to brainwash people, and home schooling takes that away. By the way, my mother is a conservative, somthing that rubs alot of people in academia the wrong way due to her credentials.
24 posted on 11/25/2001 10:26:03 PM PST by Sonny M
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: YoursIn Liberty
Am I correct that this will be not only a politically satisfying endeavor but also a huge market in the years ahead?

There is no one more fiercely independent and politically aware than a homeschooling mother. Why's that? Because she's had to take a lot of hooey from the establishment. And has decided to do her own thing come hell or high water. Yeah, you will be politically satisfied.

Huge market? It is growing, that's for sure.

25 posted on 11/25/2001 10:33:46 PM PST by Slyfox
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

Comment #26 Removed by Moderator

To: petuniasevan
Here's a good excerpt from the "Robinson Story" on their website:

www.robinsoncurriculum.com


Our children must be able to think

Some Christians react to these difficulties with various forms of resignation. They hope that more families will find a way to rearrange their lives for home schooling. In their home schools, they emphasize subjects such as spelling and grammar and generally neglect more difficult subjects such as mathematics and science. They hope that by the age of 18 the children will be strong enough to resist the evils that they encounter at the universities, or else they deny the children a higher education and direct them into occupations where that education is not required.

They are comforted by the fact that they have achieved slightly higher educational performance than the public schools while, at the same time, sparing their children the depravities of the secular world for at least part of their formative years. These Christians are dedicated people and are doing their best for their children. I believe, however, that they should be thinking beyond the current home school situation.

In order to take our country back from the secular humanists - back from those who have abandoned the Christian values and disciplines that made America great - back from the evil that is destroying our society, we must do more in our home school movement than we are doing now.

Our children must be not a little better educated when compared with those in the public schools - they must be so much better educated that they are entirely beyond such comparisons.

Our children must be able to think - and to think so much more effectively than their opponents that they are able, in one generation, to become such a superior force in science and engineering and in industry and government that they dominate American society.

Our children must be such shining examples for the home school movement, that the majority of American families demand the same quality for their children - a quality that can only be obtained by becoming Christian families who take responsibility for themselves.

Our children must be such superior performers in America's colleges and universities, that they not only resist the corruption in those institutions - that they destroy, by their example, the corruption itself.

27 posted on 11/25/2001 11:12:42 PM PST by meadsjn
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: petuniasevan
Try offering decent public education that isn't controlled by stupid unions. Get rid of pathetic uneducated teachers. Quit your quotas and quit bussing. Hold accountable the techers and administrators. But none of this will happen so public education for the most part sucks.
28 posted on 11/26/2001 12:40:46 AM PST by Joe Boucher
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Calico
What state do you live in?
29 posted on 11/26/2001 1:10:21 AM PST by Marie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: petuniasevan
"The teachers' unions are desperate, aren't they, if they're such braying jack@sses as to spout such vile lies."

Yep. Considering that many blacks also homeschool, they must also be racists? Seems that little nugget of stupidity may backfire.

30 posted on 11/26/2001 5:24:07 AM PST by PatrioticAmerican
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: Marie
The requirement I was referring to is in the state of Tennessee:

Any parents/legal guardians who lack the education required to teach a grade level (High School Diploma, or GED- grades K-8; BA Degree - grades 9-12) should be contacted by the school system and informed that they do not qualify [emphasis mine] to conduct an independent home school.

Independent Home School Procedures - Tennessee

Note: This only applies to parents who wish to homeschool their children independently--which was our desire in the first place w/no wish to tie-in church and school. These regulations do not apply if the parent is associated with a Church-related school.

BTW, I am in NC. This came from a discussion with friends in TN.
31 posted on 11/26/2001 11:34:00 AM PST by Calico
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 29 | View Replies]

To: Calico
http://www.hslda.org/laws/default.asp?State=TN

According to HSLDA, you can HS your own kids K-8 without a GED or degree if you are associated with a church group. I have a friend in AL who's found a LOT of local churches who are willing to sign you up as a member just for that reason. (without manditory attendance, etc.) There usually is a loophole to crawl through, though.I agree that this is just another example of the state trying to tie the hands of HSers.

(Texas and WY RULE!! lol!)

32 posted on 11/26/2001 1:59:06 PM PST by Marie
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies]

Comment #33 Removed by Moderator


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-33 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson