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The Why of Homeschool - new sitcom to treat homeschooling as negative
http://www.mises.org/fullarticle.asp?control=1167&month=53&title=The+Why+of+Homeschool&id=53 ^

Posted on 02/25/2003 4:48:47 PM PST by chance33_98

The Why of Homeschool

By Isabel Lyman

[Posted February 25, 2003]

It was only a matter of time before Hollywood "discovered" homeschoolers. 

Ponder the promo from The O'Keefes, a sitcom, which will premiere this summer on the Warner Brothers network.

"Harry and Ellie O'Keefe are loving but eccentric parents who've homeschooled their three children to protect them from the loud and libidinal world." (Translation: The parents are losers.)

"Despite a ban on all things pop culture, teenagers Danny and Lauren and younger brother Mark are growing increasingly curious about what lies beyond the walls of their school/dining room." (Translation: The children are kept under house arrest.)

"They can speak six languages, but are unable to converse with kids their own age. The answer lies in their father's worst nightmare—public school." (Translation: Kids who don't attend government schools become misfits.)

It's infuriating, but not surprising, that homeschoolers—the largest group in the so-called school choice movement—still elicit scorn. The National Education Association, for instance, regularly passes an anti-homeschooling resolution at its annual convention. The resolution states that homeschooling "cannot provide the student with a comprehensive education experience." Now it's apparently Tinseltown's turn to bash the estimated 1.5 million homeschooled children in the United States.

Even in a nation that applauds innovation and liberty, the act of homeschooling continues to raise many uncomfortable, but important, questions about government regulation of private choices. What follows are the seven most frequently asked questions about home education. Hopefully, the answers will explain the benefits of this educational endeavor and dispel common misperceptions.

Why Homeschool? 

Homeschooling is simply the education of school-aged children at home rather than at a school. Why do people choose this option? In 1996, the Florida Department of Education surveyed 2,245 homeschoolers, and 31 percent of that number returned the survey. Of that group, 42 percent said that dissatisfaction with the public school environment (safety, drugs, adverse peer pressure) was their reason for launching a home-education program.

Focusing on homeschooling and the media, my own doctoral dissertation analysis of over 300 newspaper and magazine articles revealed that the top four reasons to bypass conventional schooling were dissatisfaction with the public schools, the desire to freely impart religious values, academic excellence, and the building of stronger family bonds.

What Types of Families Choose Homeschooling? 

The Associated Press reported the findings of a U.S. Department of Education report about the "average" homeschooler in 2001. The AP story noted, "They are more likely than other students to live with two or more siblings in a two-parent family, with one parent working outside the home. Parents of homeschoolers are, on average, better educated than other parents—a greater percentage have college degrees—though their incomes are about the same. Like most parents, the vast majority of those who homeschool their children earn less than $50,000, and many earn less than $25,000."

Given many Americans' penchant for associations, there are national homeschooling groups for the disabled, the religious, and the athletically-minded. Johnson Obamehinti, for instance, founded the Minority Homeschoolers of Texas. His organization promotes home education among ethnic minorities, such as African-Americans, Asians, Hispanics, Jews, Native Americans, and Anglos with adopted minority children.

Homeschooling has also attracted the "high-profiled" to its ranks, such as Jason Taylor, who plays in the National Football League, and LeAnn Rimes, the country music sensation.

Are There Different Methods of Homeschooling? 

Families may choose to purchase a prepackaged curriculum from companies that specifically target homeschoolers, such as A Beka Home School or Saxon Publishers. Others may choose to enroll their children in correspondence programs, like the Calvert School of Maryland, the Christian Liberty Academy Satellite Schools of Illinois, or the Clonlara School of Michigan. Cyber schools, like K-12 Inc., offer an online curriculum for homeschoolers.

As families gain confidence in their homeschooling abilities, they may opt for a less structured approach. Tutors may be sought to teach particular skills, such as a foreign language, a musical instrument, or a high-school science class. Homeschooled children also participate in field trips and learning co-ops with other homeschooled students or even take courses at a day school or local college.

How Do Homeschooled Children Interact With Others?

This question stems from a caricature of kids isolated and holed up in a house. Defining socialization is an arbitrary exercise. The burden, however, still seems to fall upon the parents of the homeschooled to make their case. To that end, one study debunked the myth that homeschoolers are undersocialized.

In 1992, Larry Shyers of the University of Florida defended a doctoral dissertation in which he challenged the notion that youngsters at home "lag" in social development. In his study, 8- to 10-year-old children were videotaped at play. Their behavior was observed by trained counselors who did not know which children attended conventional schools and which were homeschooled. The study found no significant difference between the two groups of children in self-concept or assertiveness, which was measured by social development tests. But the videotapes showed that youngsters taught at home by their parents had fewer behavior problems.

Typically, home schoolers engage in a variety of activities outside the home—athletics (homeschool sports teams are plentiful), scouting programs, church, community service, or part-time employment. Richard G. Medlin of Stetson University notes that homeschoolers rely heavily on support groups as a a means of maintaining contact with like-minded families.

Is Homeschooling Legal? 

The National Homeschool Association has noted that "homeschooling is legally permitted in all fifty states, but laws and regulations are much more favorable in some states than others." For example, Oklahoma is considered friendly toward homeschooling in that parents are not required to initiate contact with state authorities to begin teaching their children at home. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, however, is heavily regulated (approval of curriculum, submission of students' work, etc.). Seasoned veterans encourage homeschooling parents to become familiar with their state's laws before creating a homeschool.

The favorable legal climate does not mean that skirmishes don't occur. Dean Tong, author of Elusive Innocence: Survival Guide for the Falsely Accused (2002), says that a smattering of homeschoolers have had to fight false charges of child abuse.

"Based on the phone consultations I've had with (these) homeschoolers, most have been charged in Juvenile-Dependency court with neglect, failure to protect, emotional and psychological abuse, and failure to thrive," reports Tong. Relative to homeschoolers, he says that these unfounded charges are usually made by nosy neighbors who believe children should receive a more formal classroom education.

How Does the Education a Homeschooled Child Receives Compare with That of Conventionally Schooled Children? 

One measure is how well they perform on standardized tests, like the Stanford Achievement Test or the Iowa Test of Basic Skills. The National Home Education Research Institute notes, "Repeatedly, across the nation, the home educated score as well as or better than those in conventional schools."

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation selected more than 70 homeschooled high school students as semifinalists in its 1998 competition. There were 137 homeschooled semifinalists chosen in 1999, and 150 in 2000.

Rebecca Sealfon, a 13-year-old homeschooler from Brooklyn, New York, won the 1997 Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee. David Beihl, also 13, of Saluda, South Carolina, won the 1999 National Geographic Bee. George Thampy, a 12-year-old homeschooler from Maryland Heights, Missouri, won the National Spelling Bee in 2000. Calvin McCarter, a 10-year-old homeschooler from near Grand Rapids, Michigan, won the 2002 National Geographic Bee and became the youngest competitor to do so.

Homeschoolers have graduated from such prestigious institutions as Yale University Law School, the United States Naval Academy, and Mount Holyoke College. Barnaby Marsh, who was homeschooled in the Alaskan wilderness, went on to graduate from Cornell University and was one of 32 Rhodes Scholars selected in 1996.

What Type of Young Adults Does Homeschooling Produce? 

J. Gary Knowles of the University of Michigan studied 53 adults to see the long-term effects of being educated at home. In 1991, he presented a paper of his findings at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association in Chicago. Notes Knowles: "I have found no evidence that these adults were even moderately disadvantaged. . . . Two thirds of them were married, the norm for adults their age, and none were unemployed or any on any form of welfare assistance. More than three quarters felt that being taught at home had actually helped them to interact with people from different levels of society

Small business owner Tim Martin, 29, and his wife, Amy, 28, live in Whitehall, Montana with their four children. Both the Martins have a homeschooling background and are now teaching their brood at home. "Education just works better one-on-one," says Tim. "Why do we think the 'right' way to do education is to put 20 or 30 children in a classroom with one teacher. That model is more fit for manufacturing than education."

No kidding. By using their liberties wisely, homeschooling parents have graduated scores upon scores of literate, well-adjusted students with minimal government interference and at a fraction of the cost of any government program. Now a second generation is following in those footsteps.  It's the kind of story worthy of thoughtful documentary, not a silly sitcom.


Isabel Lyman, Ph.D., is the author of The Homeschooling Revolution.  Send her MAIL.



TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: homeschoollist
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To: anniegetyourgun
I'm still waiting for the sitcom where public-schooled 18-year-olds can't read. But maybe that should be on the Discovery channel...
21 posted on 02/25/2003 5:19:25 PM PST by Indrid Cold
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To: chance33_98
director Andy Ackerman (Seinfeld, Frasier) produced by Turner Television.

That explains everything for me, no need to watch even one second.

22 posted on 02/25/2003 5:20:40 PM PST by AAABEST
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To: Indrid Cold
Dunno....I've heard Peter Jennings stumble a few times over teleprompter reading. Granted, he did at least graduate from high school....but I think it was in Canada.
23 posted on 02/25/2003 5:23:11 PM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Eala
You know us dumb Yanks. Eating everything with a fork gripped in our right hand, you know, while watching telly. ;)
24 posted on 02/25/2003 5:23:14 PM PST by annyokie
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To: anniegetyourgun
Seems the "professionals" are being exposed for their incompetence everyday.

I don't think professionals could ever hope to do better than a parent with some clue as to what they're doing. A classroom with one teacher with 30 some kids trying to follow some pre-prescribed program on a rigorous schedual just isn't as good as a free flowing program conducted by parents with several children. I don't care how good a public or private school is, I have to think homeschooling is better. Our way of doing things just isn't effective for most kids.

25 posted on 02/25/2003 5:25:47 PM PST by MattAMiller
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To: MattAMiller
There you go again...injecting logic and a reasoned thought process into this discussion....
26 posted on 02/25/2003 5:28:25 PM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: Carry_Okie
Didn't read this but it mentioned home school so thought I would call you over.
27 posted on 02/25/2003 5:30:03 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: Eala
My husband got me the Unabridged for Christmas a few years ago, but the OED is too expensive, even on CD! In my dreams ... and then my kids would win the national spelling bee!

This stuff is such unutterable (blankety blankety blank) pardon my vocabulary lapse, usually I do better.

If this show is "based on reality," are they going to show the part where the kids demand to return to homeschooling after a year in the social cesspool of public school?
28 posted on 02/25/2003 5:31:41 PM PST by Tax-chick ("I'm from Oklahoma, the center of the universe!")
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To: anniegetyourgun
You already took my first choice, girlfriend!
29 posted on 02/25/2003 5:32:40 PM PST by annyokie
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To: MattAMiller
What you said! We never considered sending our kids to any school, public or private. Homeschooling isn't an unfortunate reaction to public school failure ... it is it's own reward, every single day.
30 posted on 02/25/2003 5:34:27 PM PST by Tax-chick ("I'm from Oklahoma, the center of the universe!")
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To: annyokie; annie oakley
Then I suppose you have already notice Freeper Annieoakley too?
31 posted on 02/25/2003 5:35:00 PM PST by anniegetyourgun
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To: chance33_98
The parents are losers...did you ever see The Spelling Bee Girl? Talk about socially retarded...
32 posted on 02/25/2003 5:37:15 PM PST by redfish53
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To: chance33_98
I just got back from subbing a Hight School science class. I don't even want to talk about it. Get your kids OUT of public schools NOW. Run, don't walk.
33 posted on 02/25/2003 5:37:15 PM PST by Libertina
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To: anniegetyourgun
No I didn't, but we must all be smart gals, and goodlooking too! ;)
34 posted on 02/25/2003 5:38:22 PM PST by annyokie
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To: All
Question:

Let's say your a traditional Catholic in the Chicago area, shouldn't you be able to find a Catholic school that shares your values and wouldn't that option be preferable to home schooling?
35 posted on 02/25/2003 5:43:48 PM PST by 7 x 77
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To: Eala
Oh, for my very own copy of the OED!!!!

23rd edition.

36 posted on 02/25/2003 5:50:34 PM PST by Carry_Okie
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To: 7 x 77
No. Even a good Catholic school is still an institution that takes children away from their parents and siblings all day, substitutes a non-parent primary authority figure, age-segregates children and promotes peer-dependency, is unable to treat each child as an individual and educate him to the top of his individual potential, forces boys to act like girls to succeed, conditions the children to unthinking obedience and regimentation AND costs more than homeschooling, AND requires you to drag your children out in the snow, babies and all, unless you've got a swell unemployed spouse like mine, AND hosts fundraisers in addition to your tuition ...

And can you tell I've been homeschooling for 8 years and read a bunch of John Taylor Gatto?

But seriously, I might consider sending my freak-genius second son to someplace like St. Gregory's Academy (the FSSP boarding school) some day, but on the other hand, I think he's just as likely to achieve his full potential with judicious homeschooling and some early courses at Tulsa Community College.

We don't homeschool because we don't like "the available schools," we homeschool because we DON'T LIKE SCHOOLS!

Deo Vindice,

Xy
37 posted on 02/25/2003 5:50:45 PM PST by Tax-chick ("I'm from Oklahoma, the center of the universe!")
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To: 7 x 77
My boys went to Catholic school in Pittsburgh (no experience with Chi) and it was a bad deal. We moved to a more affluent neighborhood and they went to public school with no adverse affects.

They are in public school here in OK and are all A's, Science Fair blue ribbons, et cetera. I can't gripe.

We do have lively discussions at the supper table about (no lie) the dynamics of flight and algebra.
38 posted on 02/25/2003 5:53:35 PM PST by annyokie
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To: annyokie
LOL. The fork now goes in whichever hand is more convenient or appropriate at the time, only once a week is dinner before the telly, and in my (long ago) choice of damnyankee wife I was more than happily respectful of the in-laws who came with the package.

But when it comes to the really critical, crucial, issues of life such as choice of dictionaries I always, if possible, refer first to my (inherited) Webster's New Collegiate (1951). At least until the day I come by my own copy of the OED.

39 posted on 02/25/2003 5:55:18 PM PST by Eala
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To: Eala
I had a damnyankee husband who ate like a troll, despite all my southern charm urging that, honey, you can cut your meat with the knife not hold it down and rip it to pieces, so I can relate!

I refer to my (inherited) double-volume Webster's for critical spelling matters.
40 posted on 02/25/2003 6:01:51 PM PST by annyokie
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