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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!black.clarku.edu!vax.clarku.edu!hhenderson
- From: hhenderson@vax.clarku.edu
- Subject: RE: Homeschooling (was Re: Education and the Environment by Gregory A. Smith)
- Message-ID: <31DEC92.17162343@vax.clarku.edu>
- Sender: news@black.clarku.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Clark University
- References: <C03JMs.Jy8@news.iastate.edu> <C040qL.4qM@watserv2.uwaterloo.ca> <scottj-311292082509@iamac-1.dml.georgetown.edu> <1992Dec31.152903.25127@cbnewsj.cb.att.com>
- Date: 31 DEC 92 17:16:23 GMT
- Lines: 84
-
- Michael McDonald wrote:
-
- Thus far, the arguments proffered here in favor of homeschooling strike me
- as profoundly selfish, as primarily a matter of wanting to ensure that
- children are good little reflections of their parents. Talk about
- indoctrination!
-
- John Scott wrote:
-
- here is
- my goal in homeschooling. I want my kids to have to the skills to learn
- anything they want about the world, to pursue any interests they have, to
- try to do anything they want to do. I want them to be able to think, to
- have confidence in that ability and all their other abilities, and to have
- respect for themselves and their own minds.
-
- Evelyn Leeper writes:
-
- >I would agree with Michael McDonald, but for entirely different reasons
- >than he puts forward. (Well, okay, I might say "shortsighted" rather
- >than "profoundly selfish.")
- >
- >If one believes (as I do) that a society benefits by educating all its
- >members,
-
- I have never heard *anyone* disagree with this idea. The question is how to
- go about doing it.
-
- >than for people to say, "Well, the school system is bad, so
- >rather than work to fix it, I will pull my kids out." I certainly
- >believe that parents should be concerned about their children's
- >education, but it seems to me that this can be done in addition to
- >sending them to public school, rather than in place of.
-
- That can, and should, be the case.
-
- >Why is this important? Well, you may be committed to homeschooling
- >your children. But what about the single parent who has to work
- >full-time (or more) just to *support* his/her children? What about the
- >parents who for whatever reason can't homeschool their children? Maybe
- >they can't speak English very well. Maybe they are illiterate. Maybe
- >they are handicapped. These children need a decent education, and
- >abandoning the public school system and saying homeschooling is the
- >answer seems to me to guarantee that the next generation will be even
- >worse educated than the current one.
-
- I don't see that wanting to homeschool your children means you are in favor
- of junking the entire public school system. The people I've heard talk about
- homeschooling have never said anything about it being "the answer" for the
- rest of society. It's the answer for *them*. If anything, increased
- homeschooling sends a warning signal to society that, in fact, public schools
- are not providing a decent education. Would you also say that parents who
- send their children to private and parochial schools are abdicating their
- responsibility to work within the public school system and improve it?
-
- It appears that many people feel threatened by homeschooling, rather than
- private and parochial schooling, because the power is taken away from large
- institutions and given to the individual. They seem to trust large
- institutions more than they trust individuals. I don't. What is scary to
- *me* is that there are still parents who leave the burden of educating their
- children to the American public school system.
-
- I think it's fair to expect homeschooled kids to pass some standardized tests
- in order to prove that they have learned the basics. From everything I've
- read and heard, this is not a problem. Homeschooled kids seem generally to
- be far ahead of their public-schooled peers.
-
- >And you say your children can become environmental activists or nuclear
- >engineers. Can you homeschool them to do this? Do you have the
- >science labs, the language labs, all the accoutrements that come with
- >having a school that serves hundreds of students?
-
- There were a handful of homeschooled kids in my college, a few of whom hadn't
- attended any organized school at all until that point. They took lab science
- courses and did well. As far as languages are concerned, people have been
- learning languages for millennia without the benefit of language lab tapes.
-
- >Can they really pursue any interests they have, regardless of cost?
-
- Cost is another question entirely. No education takes place without some
- kind of cost.
-
- Heather
- HHENDERSON@vax.clarku.edu
-