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An A for Home Schooling
Brian C. Anderson

{H}ome schooling first showed up on the national radar screen in 1997, when 13-
year-old Rebecca Sealfon, all brains and awkward gestures, won the National
Spelling Bee, showing a startled public that her unorthodox education must be
doing something right. Today, though home schooling accounts for only 3 or 4
percent of America's schoolchildren, the movement's brisk 15 percent annual
growth rate has become a powerful, hard to ignore indictment of the nation's
academically underachieving, morally irresolute, disorderly, and often scary
public schools. Side by side with public education's lackluster results, the
richness of home schooling's achievement—the wealth of challenging subjects its
pupils learn, the civility it inculcates, the strong characters it seems to
form, and the nurturing family life it reinforces—embodies a practical  ideal
of childhood and education that can serve as a useful benchmark of what is
possible in turn-of-the-millennium America.

Though existing data are incomplete, everything we know about home-schooled
kids says that they are flourishing academically in every way. This year, home-
schooled kids swept the top three places on the National Spelling Bee, and
Stanford accepted 27 percent of its home-schooled applicants, nearly twice its
average acceptance rate. Small wonder that the public school establishment
wants to regulate home schooling out of existence. It represents a silent, but
eloquent, reproach to the professionals.

Only 20 years ago, home schooling was a far-out fringe phenomenon. No more than
50,000 children were then educated outside of school, their parents mostly
graying hippies who wanted to protect them from what they considered the
stifling conformity of "the system." In the early eighties, though, the ranks
of home schoolers began to swell with Christian fundamentalists dissatisfied
with value-free public schools. Today, the full array of American families—from
religiously orthodox Catholics and Jews to thoroughgoing secularists—are
joining the fundamentalists and the Age-of-Aquarius types in home schooling
their kids.

Former Department of Education researcher Patricia M. Lines, writing in The
Public Interest, estimates that now anywhere from 1.5 to 2 million children are
being home schooled, considerably more than the 400,000 students enrolled in
charter schools across the country. "The rise of home schooling," Lines judges,
"is one of the most significant social trends of the past half century."

What does a typical home-schooling family look like? It is likely to be white
(only 6 percent of home-schooling families are minorities) and observantly
Christian, with married parents and three or more kids. The parents are likely
to be better educated than the adult population at large, and the family will
be comfortably middle-class—though either Mom (in nine out of ten home-
schooling families) or Dad forgoes a second family income to stay at home. Mom
and Dad will probably vote Republican.

The Imperatos of Bohemia, in New York's Suffolk County, fit the typical home-
schooling family profile pretty much to a T. Blunt-spoken Joe Imperato,
Brooklyn born and bred, works for the New York City Fire Department; his soft-
spoken, articulate wife, Karen, teaches the kids, eight of them (aged 11 months
to 17 years) . . . and counting. The Imperatos have been home schooling for
eight years now, for academic, religious (they're evangelical Christians), and
familial reasons. To get a sense of what home schooling was like up close, I
went to visit them in late May.

Welcomed into their big white house with a firm handshake from Joe, I felt for
a moment—no exaggeration—as if I had entered Laura Ingalls Wilder's little
house on the prairie, relocated to a leafy New York suburb. The well-dressed,
polite, and cheerful children spill out of every corner of the house to greet
me; family portraits and drawings by the kids adorn the walls. The home
radiates warmth and good order, from the kids' elaborate chore chart to the
piano in the living room to the prominently displayed "House Rules" (Rule No.
1: "I Will Not Argue with Mom and Dad").

Recovering from my intrusion, the Imperatos' home school soon bustles. The
family has converted one section of the house into three makeshift classrooms.
There's a narrow room with a long counter for the younger kids, three of whom,
12-year-old Julie, Philip (9), and Peter (7), return to math after saying
hello; a wider room humming with slightly bruised computers where Luke, 14, is
doing a grammar program on CD-ROM; and a third, "quiet" room, where the older
children can read. Books pile on shelves in each of the rooms, and everywhere
you turn there's something to engage the mind—a wall poster time-lining major
events of world history, globes, and educational videos.

The school day, Karen explains, begins promptly at 9:00, after breakfast and
chores, and can last, with breaks, until 4:30. She hovers over the younger
children, making sure they're working and helping them with difficult problems;
Luke and 16-year-old Christine don't need much supervision. Last week, Karen
informs me, the whole family dissected a frog as part of a complete science
lesson purchased from an educational vendor, formaldehyde-soaked amphibian and
dissecting tools included. To teach their children, the Imperatos use a mix of
pre-designed curricula, including the excellent Saxon Math program, and their
own improvisations. The children do well academically, says Joe; Karen beams
that Philip is the equivalent of a grade ahead in math. Speaking with Luke
about his American history lessons, I'm surprised at how well-informed and
thoughtful he is for his age.

Though family is central for the Imperatos—the children clearly revere their
folks, and Mom and Dad are proud parents—the kids do plenty outside the house,
too. Christine is an accomplished pianist and Luke is getting there with the
violin. They both play classical music in a home-school orchestra that meets
several times a month. "Everybody learns to play a musical instrument in this
house," laughs their father. Three of the kids, including Julie, play Little
League baseball. Every month, the family spends an afternoon at the Bowery
Mission helping the down-and-out. Field trips and outings with other home-
schooling families are frequent. The Imperatos also participate actively in the
life of the Gospel Community Church in West Sable.

I left impressed: if home schooling is responsible, even in part, for such a
seemingly happy, thriving family and bright, well-mannered children, it's a big
success.

The No. 1 reason that most families first decide on home schooling these days,
surveys show, is dissatisfaction with the academic quality of the public
schools. "A lot of parents say, I'd be happy to trust the local school system
with the education of my kids—except that they haven't learned to read yet, "
says Susan Wise Bauer, co-author, with her mother, Jessie Wise, of The Well-
Trained Mind, a remarkable compendium of information designed to help home-
schooling parents give their children a traditional liberal education.
"Something has changed in the schools for the worse over the last 20 years,"
believes Catherine Moran, director of a national network for Catholic home
schoolers. "They're dumbing down the kids, and the teachers aren't of the
highest caliber, to say the least."

Sabrina and Gary Matteson's story of their son Myles's public school woes is
typical. Several years back, Myles, bored crazy with third grade at the New
Hampshire public school he attended, begged his parents to let him stay home
and read more challenging books—"a request from a kid that a parent shouldn't
simply ignore," says Sabrina. When the Mattesons informed the school principal
that they were going to home school their son, the honest administrator
couldn't blame them. "He told us that they had to teach to the 40th
percentile," Sabrina remembers—meaning that classroom instruction geared itself
to the worst students, and sharp kids like Myles lose out. Trapped in dull
public school classrooms that do nothing to engage their minds, the Myleses of
the world frequently tune out or become disruptive. Even American Federation of
Teachers president Sandra Feldman admits that public schools have to do more to
challenge smart kids or risk losing them to home schooling.

Home schoolers' misgivings about the public schools aren't just based on
isolated cases. As education reformers William J. Bennett, Chester E. Finn Jr.,
and John T. E. Cribb Jr. underscore in their recent book, The Educated Child,
the public schools have suffered at least since the mid-seventies from watered-
down assignments and exams, politically correct textbooks, incompetent or lazy
teachers who can't be fired because of union protection, and trendy educational
fads like "New Math" that have pushed aside the three Rs. It's a toxic brew,
the authors argue, that has left only one out of three public school fourth-
graders reading "proficiently," 40 percent of public school eighth-graders
unable to do basic math, and public school 12th graders the worst in the
industrialized world in science.

Why not send the kids to a competitive private school? Most home-schooling
families can't afford it, even when a good private school is available nearby.
Weekly Standard literary editor J. Bottum and his wife, Lorena, have decided to
home school their daughter, Faith, in part for economic reasons. "My wife and I
are typical, I think, of that shabby-genteel class of people with more
education than money and greater aspirations than resources," says Bottum. "At
some point we realized that we would never be able to afford to hire anyone
else to give our daughter the level of schooling with which we'd be satisfied."

But this may be to construe too negatively what for many home schoolers is an
inspiring educational mission: to regain the vision of excellence that has
vanished from so much of American education. Indeed, the brisk sales of Bauer
and Wise's The Well-Trained Mind point to the longing of many parents to
educate their kids in the great riches of the West that too many public schools
value so lightly. Most of the home schoolers I encountered were learning Greek,
Latin, and other serious subjects that most public schools have abandoned, and
their history lessons emphasized imagination-stirring biographies of great,
world-transforming men and women instead of the abstract and inhuman historical
forces that so many dry-as-dust public school textbooks stress.

The rise of home schooling has sparked an explosion of marvelous curricula
based on the ideal of a comprehensive liberal education. Upstate New Yorkers
Melissa and David Fischer, both Cornell grads, home school their three
children, 15, 14, and 12, with the help of one such curriculum. It's a "unit"
study program, provided by the evangelical Christian educational firm Konos,
that organizes studies, month by month, around common themes. (Secular and
Catholic firms offer equally impressive curricula.) When I talked with the
Fischers, they were exploring ancient Greece with Konos. After morning prayer,
Melissa, who does most of the teaching, read and discussed Homer with the kids;
later in the day, after math and before piano lessons, the family studied Greek
history and even a bit of ancient Greek, at each child's own level. Konos is
meaty stuff, using great books, the study of languages, and intelligently
designed study guides for parents. Many home-schooling parents told me that
they enjoy learning along with their kids, filling in gaps in their own
educations.

Frequently, home-schooling parents design their own curricula. When done right,
they can be imaginative and substantial. Kenneth Robinson, a lawyer by
training, is one of the rare fathers who stays at home to teach (his wife
writes and illustrates children's books in a wing of their pleasant Ware,
Massachusetts, home). His self-designed curriculum uses "the best books I think
available." Whitney, his 13-year-old daughter, begins her day with pre-algebra
math, and then moves on to reading—Arthur Conan Doyle's collected Sherlock
Holmes stories and C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity are currently on the plate.
Then it's time for logic. "I stress thinking skills and the ability to reason
correctly, so we spend time looking at arguments and critiquing them for
logical fallacies," Robinson says. In the afternoon, Robinson and his daughter
were tackling Frederick Bastiat's writings on socialism's flaws.

Home schooling, families say, allows you to tailor your educational approach to
a child's interests, innate gifts, and learning style. This kind of flexibility
can go too far: some in the small but growing "unschooling" wing of the home-
schooling movement, inspired by 1960s educational radicals like John Holt and
Ivan Illich, think that any adult direction will crush kids' creativity, so
that parents should just facilitate whatever their children want to learn,
whenever they want to learn it—replicating at home the trendy folly of the
"child-centered classroom." But, kept within limits and balanced with
fundamentals, a flexible approach can ignite a child's love of learning.

Lisa Kander is a Michigan home-schooling mother with four kids, ranging in age
from ten to 18-year-old Beth, who now attends Brandeis University in
Massachusetts on full scholarship. All of Kander's children read, write, and do
math far above grade level. She attributes their success to home schooling's
flexibility. "Home schooling allowed our four children to reach a readiness
moment for reading skills on their timetables, not on an arbitrary curriculum
chart," Kander says. With one child, that moment came earlier than average;
with another, later.

Home schooling can take much less time than classroom schooling, since you
don't have to stand in line, spend an hour at recess, or wait for the slowest
student in class. "We can get accomplished in three hours what it takes a
public school days to cover," says Sabrina Matteson. Freeing up time lets many
home-schooled children devote lots of energy to interests like music. Two of
Matteson's home-schooled children are gifted musicians: Myles, now 16, plays
the bagpipes and his elder brother Tyler plays eight instruments, including the
piano and the sitar. Almost every home-schooling family I talked with had
musical children. Sixteen-year-old Piper Runnion-Bareford, home schooled in
Deerfield, New Hampshire, practices the harp four hours a day, something that
wouldn't be possible, she says, if she attended public school. Her effort—"pure
joy," she says—has landed her the harpist's position in the New England
Conservatory Youth Philharmonic.

Even a well-designed curriculum, along with great flexibility and efficiency,
can't always substitute for expertise or for access to expensive facilities,
such as science labs, that public and private school kids take for granted. For
difficult subjects like advanced languages or upper-level science, most home-
schooling families outsource, with the children enrolling in community-college
courses or seeking out tutors in the fat home-schooling bulletins published
these days in almost every part of the country. For example, Mary Eagleson, a
retired college science professor in White Plains, New York, does a booming
business as a science and math instructor for home schoolers, converting her
porch into a makeshift science lab. In some states, including Washington and
Iowa, home-schooled students can even enroll in public schools part-time, in
order to take advantage of school facilities or sports programs. The schools
receive partial state funding for the part-timers.

A ll this sounds good, but how exactly do home-schooled children measure up
academically to their counterparts in public and private school? The National
Education Association—focusing, with its typical disingenuousness, on inputs
rather than outcomes—has passed a testy resolution demanding that home-
schooling parents go through "the appropriate state education licensure agency"
and use only curricula "approved by the state department of education" before
they receive state permission to home school. After all, if any dedicated
parent can home school effectively, the teachers' unions' and ed schools' claim
to the special, credentialized skills of "teaching professionals" collapses.

And indeed, the data show that the legions of parent-teachers are succeeding
solidly. The largest study so far, authored for the Home School Legal Defense
Association by respected University of Maryland statistician Lawrence M.
Rudner, examined some 20,000 home-schooled students from 50 states. These
students scored higher on standardized tests than public and private school
students in every subject and at every grade level. The longer their parents
had home schooled them, the better they did. The results shocked the left-
leaning Rudner, who initially believed that home schoolers were a bunch of
"conservative nuts." He has changed his mind.

On standardized national tests of skills and achievement, Rudner found, home-
schooled kids score better than 70 to 80 percent of all test-takers. Even more
striking, he observes, "By eighth grade, the median performance of home-school
students is almost four [grade] levels above that of students nationwide." By
12th grade, home-schooled students scored way up in the 92nd percentile in
reading. Rudner cautions that his study doesn't compare home-schooled children,
whose parents are generally richer and more educated than average, with
equivalent public and private school kids. Moreover, the families whose kids he
studied all sought testing materials from fundamentalist Bob Jones University,
so they are a skewed sample.

Recent statistics from the SAT and ACT college entrance exams, though less
impressive than Rudner's, are still solid. In 1999, students who identified
themselves as home schooled scored an average of 1083 on the SAT, 67 points
above the national average, and 22.7 on the ACT, compared with the national
average of 21.

Sixty-nine percent of home schoolers go on to college, compared with 71 percent
of grads from public high schools and 90 percent of private school grads. How
do they get in without transcripts? Parents will put together portfolios with
samples of their children's work and lists of their accomplishments. "If home-
schooled students are required to take standardized tests, they take them,"
explains Cafi Cohen, a home-schooling mother and author of And What About
College? "If they need a transcript, Mom or Dad sits down at the computer and
writes up a transcript, with grades if necessary." More than two-thirds of
American colleges now accept such transcripts, though some require home-
schooled applicants to submit a GED or additional subject exams, and home
schoolers now attend 900 colleges of all descriptions. Harvard accepts
approximately ten every year. Oglethorpe in Atlanta actively recruits home
schoolers.

Home-schooled undergrads do well, after the initial adjustment. Those who have
enrolled at Boston University during the past four academic years, for example,
have maintained a 3.3 grade-point average out of a perfect four. "Home
schoolers bring certain skills—motivation, curiosity, the capacity to be
responsible for their education—that high schools don't induce very well," a
Stanford University admissions officer recently told the Wall Street Journal.
The consensus among admissions officers across the country, a 1997 study
reports, is that home-schooled students are academically, emotionally, and
socially prepared to excel in college.

T hough academic excellence is essential for home-schooling families, two-
thirds have chosen this course primarily for religious and cultural reasons.
For Joe and Karen Imperato, raising their kids right was crucial. "We want our
children to grow up with sound characters and firm values," Joe stresses.
Protecting children from a popular culture overflowing with images of rebellion
and sexual promiscuity is a key goal. "Home schoolers know that you don't have
to condemn your kids to the kind of educational-formation-by-default in the
rotten popular culture that so many parents seem to resign themselves to,"
remarks University of Tennessee historian Wilfred M. McClay, who has home
schooled his two children, ages 11 and 14, with his wife, Julie, for four years
now. Home schooling mother Connie Marshner agrees: "You can resist the culture
that so many horrible TV shows and movies promote today," she says. Home-
schooling, she's convinced, helps you take up arms against it: "It allows
parents to play more fully the role of cultural gatekeepers," she maintains.
Accordingly, only 1.6 percent of fourth-grade home schoolers watch more than
three hours of television per day, compared with 40 percent of fourth-graders
nationally.

The public schools, these home schoolers believe, fail to shield children from
the enticements of McClay's "rotten popular culture" because few teachers and
principals offer adult leadership or moral example anymore. "Teachers don't
know how to discipline kids today, since they themselves don't believe in
authority," Marshner argues. "The sixties destroyed the idea. How can you
inculcate character and good behavior—the old idea of deportment—without
legitimate authority?" Some teachers even stoke the spirit of rebellion in
their young students. Laurie Runnion-Bareford began her journey toward home
schooling her kids after a New Hampshire public school teacher told her ten-
year-old son that profanities were okay to use in a vocabulary assignment. "It
wasn't as if he hadn't heard bad words before," Runnion-Bareford recalls, "but
the signal his teacher sent by doing this was that incivility was
acceptable—which was unacceptable to us." Many home schoolers, too, find the
Heather Has Two Mommies and condoms-on-bananas aspect of today's public school
regime deeply offensive.

This abdication of authority, social thinkers say, has produced disorderly and
uncivil schools, where the peer group sets the terms. "There used to be a
social consensus that you don't talk back to adults, you don't spit, you don't
swear at the teacher," Marshner says. "All those things start breaking down now
in the fourth grade, as kids start taking their cues from their peers and
popular culture." Says Catherine Moran of such peer-dominated schools:
"Everyone acts the same, dresses the same, and, when they're 12 or 13, pierces
the same—and in some cases starts having sex or doing drugs." Says social
scientist Rudner: "When a nine-year-old comes home with garbage language and
garbage values, home schooling makes sense."

Sabrina Matteson sees the Columbine massacre as a watershed for home schooling.
"Columbine caused a lot of families and students to assess the safety of their
schools," she says. Colorado's home-schooling population rose 10 percent in the
months after the killings. Friends of the Mattesons just pulled all their kids
out of their local New Hampshire public school after the seventh bomb scare
this year.

Critics of home schooling claim that withdrawing children from the classroom
will retard their "socialization," to use educrat jargon. Charges Annette
Cootes of the NEA-affiliated Texas State Teachers Association: "[H]ome
schooling is a form of child abuse because you are isolating children from
human interaction. I think home schoolers are doing a great discredit [sic] to
their children."

Yet social science research suggests that home-schooled children aren't lacking
in social skills. Grad student Larry Shyers of the University of Florida
videotaped at play 70 home-schooled eight- to ten-year-old children and 70
children of the same age group who attended school. Trained counselors—who
watched the tapes without knowing which group the kids belonged to—found only
one behavioral difference: the home-schooled kids had fewer behavior problems.

Even a cursory familiarity with home schoolers makes clear that the accusation
of isolation is absurd. Most home-schooled kids take advantage of buzzing
networks of associations. Beth Kander's busy social calendar as a home schooler
before she left for Brandeis is typical. "I never had a problem with friends,"
she recounts, "since I belonged to the Girl Scouts, participated in several 4-H
clubs and youth programs and the drama club my mother started, and volunteered
all over the place." Many home-schooled kids join church groups, play in town
sports leagues, do internships, or work part-time. And they form their own
associations, everything from poetry recitation clubs to Scandinavian dance
groups to home-school orchestras—legions of them.

For their part, home-schooling families reject the model of age-based
socialization that the schools offer. "I don't know any adults who would choose
to spend eight hours a day, five days a week with 20 to 30 people of exactly
the same age," says Glorianna Pappas, a New York musician and home-schooling
mother. Instead, home schoolers often meet people of widely different ages and
outlooks when helping out at a homeless shelter or singing in a church choir.
"This gives them a greater level of poise, experience, and maturity than can be
had in the artificial confines of rigid, age-based classrooms," argues
educational theorist Andrew J. Coulson.

Still, for home schoolers, family comes first. Historian Dana Mack sees home
schooling as an important example of what she believes to be a growing
"familist counterculture." This counterculture firmly rejects elite culture's
contempt for traditional family values and its celebration of a me-first ethic
in pleasure and work that has led to sky-high divorce and illegitimacy rates
and a generation of sad and neglected kids. "Home schooling," Mack holds, "is
one aspect of a new vision of family life that equates family time with
children's well-being, and that puts family intimacy and child-parent bonds
before self-realization and economic gain."

For many, home schooling gives family life an unexpected richness. Historian
McClay, who watched his teenage son Mark develop a deep love for classical
music and leap ahead academically when removed from school, describes the
"transformative" impact that home schooling had on his family. "There's this
sense that we're involved in a project in life together: the notion that the
family is an arrow in time is much more meaningful to me and to all of us than
it was before," he says. "We've seen a bonding in our family that we wouldn't
have seen if we didn't home school," stresses Joe Imperato. "When you become
the teacher, you're really aware of the incredible responsibility you have
toward your children."

Home schooling seems to minimize the proverbial friction between teens and
their parents. "Life with our home-schooled teens has been a joy—heaven,"
Laurie Runnion-Bareford enthuses. "It surprised us, because my friends who had
teenage kids in the public schools were miserable." But, after all, argues home
schooler Douglas Dewey, Chief Operating Officer of Theodore Forstmann's
Children's Scholarship Fund, "Not so long ago, it wasn't considered natural or
even tolerable for children to rebel against their parents."

It's important not to over-idealize home schooling's impact on family life. It
is an enormous investment of time for a teaching parent, and it can lead to
burnout. Says Shari Henry, a contributing editor of Homeschooling Today and a
home-schooling mother of three: "One February, when the weather was bad, I just
said to myself, I can't keep doing this—it's too much responsibility." To avoid
burnout, Henry emphasizes, home-schooling parents, particularly those with
young children, must give themselves occasional breaks and make certain that
they're plugged in to a good support network of other home-schooling families.
In addition to this difficulty, home-schooling parents often encounter painful
opposition from their own parents or from neighbors and friends. And—one last
danger—Susan Wise Bauer, who speaks to home-schooling families across the
country, reports that one does occasionally come across a paranoid and
domineering parent, afraid of letting go—ever—of the children.

The rise of home schooling has pressured the legal system to accommodate it.
"From the early eighties through the next decade, there was a pitched war over
whether home schooling was going to be legal at all," recalls Michael Farris,
the lawyer and former politician who heads the Home Schooling Legal Defense
Association. When his advocacy organization was formed in 1983, home schooling
was illegal or strongly discouraged in all but three states, and school
administrators and teachers' unions wanted to keep it that way. Parents who
tried to teach their kids at home frequently faced jail terms and the loss of
their children to foster care as school districts cracked down on them for
breaking state compulsory education laws.

But because of the HSLDA, which has won virtually every legal battle it has
fought, and because of the warm support of Republican legislators, home
schooling is now legal in all 50 states, though the degree of state regulation
varies. Texas's regulations, for example, are all but nonexistent: home-
schooling parents must cover reading, spelling, grammar, math, and good
citizenship, but they don't have to keep records or have their kids
academically tested annually or follow any rigid timetable. New York's
regulations, by contrast, require parents to teach "AIDS awareness," "substance
abuse," physical education, and health (i.e., sex ed), among a host of other
specific subject requirements, and they must do so on a state-determined
schedule; parents must also file detailed quarterly reports with the local
school superintendent. (Many states once required home-schooling parents to
have teacher certification, but all have abolished that requirement.)

Nevertheless, even today, Farris complains, some school districts "just don't
get it." This March, to take one egregious example of many, the Richmond County
School District sent cops to arrest Gerald and Angela Balderson, after they
removed their eight-year-old from his Warsaw, Virginia, public school to teach
him at home. The Baldersons had scrupulously given notice to the school
superintendent, as Virginia law requires. But the district chose to call out
the truant officer on them nonetheless. The Baldersons, understandably, are
suing. According to the HSLDA, home schoolers also have to watch out for social
workers, some of whom perversely view home-schooling as a "risk factor" in
assessing the likelihood of a family to commit child abuse.

Against opposition like this, home schoolers have turned themselves into a
formidable political force. California Democratic Congressman George Miller
learned this the hard way. In 1994, he offered an amendment to a federal
education bill that specified that teachers had to have certification in the
subjects they taught. Miller protested that he didn't intend the amendment to
apply to home schoolers, but worried home-schooling parents, galvanized into
action by the HSLDA, barraged Congress with hundreds of thousands of phone
calls. The amendment, which had already made it through committee, got only one
vote on the floor—Miller's.

W hat level of regulation is appropriate for home schooling? The best arguments
are on the side of a relatively laissez-faire approach. The New York–NEA model
of constant school-district supervision and narrowly specified subject
requirements implicitly presumes that the state does a good job educating kids
and that parents are ignorant until proven otherwise—dubious propositions.
Moreover, some states' subject requirements may offend a home-schooling
family's deeply felt cultural and religious beliefs, subverting the very reason
they've decided to home school their children in the first place. But the
public does have a legitimate interest in making sure that home-schooled kids
get educated and that, say, a dysfunctional foster care family isn't yanking
its children out of school to use them as laborers. The most sensible
regulations would be minimal, requiring home-schooled kids only to
demonstrate—through taking a state test or some agreed-upon alternative
means—that they were learning how to read, write, and do math by a certain age.

"In America in the twenty-first century," William Bennett recently observed,
"no family should feel it has to educate at home to educate well." But until
that day comes, home schooling will continue to grow—educating kids
successfully, invigorating civil society, and reaffirming family values.


End<{{
A<>E<>R

Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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