1. Do you think home schooling is a good idea or not? Why?First off, I think it's very important to remember that the plural of "anecdote" is not "evidence". Knowing some homeschooled children, or being one, that have done well and are normally socialised does not mean that all homeschooled children have the same experience.
So to answer the question, it depends. I have seen no properly collected statistics that show that home schooling is unequivocally better than either public or private schools in every instance (or even in most instances). All I've seen are anecdotes (here and elsewhere).
And they don't all support home schooling. Here in the UK home schooling is a lot rarer, for any number of reasons: from what I've seen our state schools are somewhat better for the most part than those in the USA; geographically we are much smaller and much more densely populated, so there are no arguments of remoteness to use; politically the state is much more pervasive here and, depsite some resentment at quite
how pervasive the
current government is, the population generally prefer a more active State than is the case in the USA.
The few cases I've heard of or read about have generally been horror stories of academic geniuses who have been raised in such a way as to be incapable of normal social functions; of child prodigies whose potential genuis is completely dissipated once, as adults, they move out from the shadow of domineering parents; or even of borderline child abuse.
I would no more suggest that this represents the norm in home schooling than I would jump over tall buildings in a single bound. But I find it hard to believe that the anecdotes being supplied here (and elsewhere) of how wonderful well-adjusted "everyone I know" is are the norm for the home schooled.
2. Do you agree with the California Appeals Court ruling in this case?No. While I don't think home schooling is the elixir of excellence its proponents seem to think it is, I don't think it should be illegal either.
QUOTE(quick @ Mar 7 2008, 04:09 PM)

1) We home school and use a home school academy, and know many others who do. By and large, home-schooled kids we know behave better than their peers (i.e., more like adults because they spend more time around adults and are not "raised" by their feckless peers);
Why is it a good thing that kids behave like adults, rather than kids? (I can see how it would be a good thing if they don't behave like animals).
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have a greater love of learning (as they are focusing on academics, not who has the latest cell phone, who has the new boyfriend); waste less time (when we traditionally schooled, we calcuated that almost 40% of the school day was consumed by transportation, idle time, and lunch);
Hmm. This is one of the things I'm nervous about with home schooling (and, to a lesser extent, single-sex private schooling like I had). It's all very well being adacemically focused, but sooner or later most people, home schooled or not, will have to deal with people who ARE focused on "trivial things". And - let's be honest - there is nothing
wrong with focusing on trivia as long as it does not completely dominate i.e. as long as people recognise that there are appropriate contexts for such things, and the workplace or classroom aren't usually among them.
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Many of the homeschoolers I know have gone on to really distinguish themselves in college and in their early careers.
Good for them, but again i draw you to the idea that the plural of "anecdote" is not "evidence". Many of the state (and private) schoolers I know have gone on to distinguish themselves in college, university and their earlier (and later) careers. Many other have not. I don't know any home schoolers that have distinguished themselves - but this doesn't mean that none have done so. Just that I don't know everybody.
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2) I'll read the ruling more carefully, but it seems the state's only legit complaint is whether the homeschooling process is actually teaching the 3Rs (The judges line about indoctrinating the kids is exactly why so many homeschoolers avoid the govt schools). So long as your kid is taking a correctly adminstered standardized test regularly and doing well on it, the state should be happy--the state STILL gets all of your tax dollars but has to devote none of those dollars molding your child into the secular, sex at 13, Prozac-chomping globalist they want your child to become (and I wish to avoid at all costs)!
This raises an interesting point.
Article from the Independent Newspaper The pertinent paragraph is this one:
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But in one sector there does appear to be a free-market solution that is already working - and it is in that bastion of evil capitalism, Sweden. Parental choice, as represented by school vouchers, allows parents greater influence over their children's education and significantly reduces the central bureaucracy, allowing teachers to teach and parents to influence how their children are taught. Any two qualified teachers can set up a school, and parents can (and do) vote with their feet. Schools are set up within communities and the horrors of the school run are all but absent.
As far as I know, this is taken advantage of by many parents in Sweden (and the author's reference to bastions of evil capitalism is sarcastic - Sweden would, by the standards of many Americans, count as a statist nightmare bordering on socialism). Also as far as I know, the Swedish government sets the academic standards which must be met, and runs recognisable state schools that would be familiar to both of us. However, more even than the voucher system, this ability of parents and teachers to set up schools in their own communities that meet their own needs seems like some kind of Holy Grail.
And, I'm guessing, the "home schooling academy" that you mentioned (pooled resources of many home-scholler parents in a community?) might be something similar, only without the ability to claim taxpayer funding that a voucher system provides. Heck, for all I know, the Swedish model might even allow "classic" home schooling parents to claim some the tax money allocated to their children's education themselves, negating your concerns about home schoolers paying for state education in their taxes but not getting any benefit from it.
QUOTE(Dontreadonme @ Mar 9 2008, 12:12 AM)

I think it's a course of action that should be available to parents that desire it. Public schools are a government run institution, and as such they invariably attempt to teach the accepted government agenda. My experience with public schools left me with the notions that capitalism was by and large bad, and must be held in check by the state; that almost every good event that occurred in US history was government inspired or government sponsored; and that competition was a bad thing, becuase everybody is a winner! Unless things have drastically changed in the last few years, open a social studies textbook and see how fraudulent much of it is.
I agree that this is a bad thing, generally. But I'd be just as concerned that anybody's education taught them that the state was at best a wasteful irrelevance, never achieved anyhting of lasting value, was something to be kept at bay as much as possible, etc. Clearly that isn't very likely in a state school, but given the strong streak of muscular libertarianism (some of which borders on anarchism) that drives some people's decisions to home school their children, this is disproportionately likely to be the case among home schoolers (please note I am not generalising that this happens in every case).
From the public policy perspective, I think the rights of the child not to be indoctrinated with arrant nonsense are as important as the rights of parents to home school, so this is one of the reasons I'm nervous and suspicious of the idea and much prefer the Swedish vouchers idea. I mentioned.
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I am amused at the charges of anti-socialization, and sheltering from the 'real world' that comes about from these debates; I believe the decline of the public school system from its previous medicore position is but one of many factors that have led to the social problems we have today.
Can't say I disagree with you on the problem, but I don't think that giving up on the public school system altogether is a very sensible cure.
Most parents are simply not in the position to home school - many, if not most, couples both have full time jobs to pay the mortgage. Who teaches their kids? What about single parents (the vast majority of whom are not feckless sluts, but simply divorcees or both genders)? Who teaches their kids?
What about people who have themselves been poorly educated by the state system and know they are not themselves sufficiently educated to be able to teach their children anything worthwhile? Sure, they can and should educate themselves, but if they are in a position where - say - they can't themselves read & write, it's going to take them several years to get to a level where they might be in a position to teach their kids anything. Is the kid supposed to sit around at home twiddling their thumbs waithing for mom or dad to be ready to teach them anything?
The answer in such cases where the luxury of having one full-time equivalent parent (e.g. one at home all the time, or both sharing the responsibility through part time or shift working) at home all day is almost always going to be the State. If State education is already is such a bad way, then the solution on a public policy level is to do what it takes to fix it, not for the well off and influential (who are most likely to have the political will and clout to make change happen to the benefit of everyone) to withdraw from it.
Ok, my point is that the majority of parents, and therefore of children, are never going to be in a position to home school, and therefore - while the California judge may have been wrong to effectively outlaw the idea - it can never be a central plank of education policy. You, or others here, might be a Constitutional literalist who sees no need for the State to provide education at all. Fair enough, but realise that in a game of every man for himself, most people lose. Your kids might be winners within your country, but your country will be a loser in the world.
QUOTE(NebraskaMom @ Mar 9 2008, 01:45 AM)

1. Do you think home schooling is a good idea or not? Why?
I think homeschooling is wonderful. My two oldest have graduated from homeschooling. The oldest has graduated from college and has his dream job. The second is a college sophomore with all As & one B for his first 2 years. My children actually know how to think and how to converse with adults. Virtually all the homeschooled children I know are better socialized.
Anecdotes and evidence, again. I'm not saying you're wrong, because I haven't seen any properly collected and weighted statistics to prove anything about home schooling one way or the other. Does
anyone have anything like this? I couldn't find anything on Google myself...
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2. Do you agree with the California Appeals Court ruling in this case?
I do not agree with the general ruling and I hope it gets depublished. However, it sounds like this family has some pretty serious problems. It is unfortunate that homeschooling in general is on trial because of one dysfunctional family. After my personal experience, I do not want to judge others. However, I have read enough about this family from sources that I trust to believe that there are serious issues here.
Careful, NebraskaMom. Your own experience might indicate that you should believe everything you read - I daresay some of the press coverage and comment of your own situation was unflattering to your own family. That doesn't make it true.