Yes, education ought to be outsourced if "family is abusive or
dysfunctional". That is consistent with the principle of subsidiarity:
that the larger social unit exists to do things for the smaller unit
that it cannot do for itself. Things like education, in the case of a
dysfunctional family. The case is entirely different for a healthy one
in which parents are capable of directly fulfilling their mission as
the primary educators of their children.


On Feb 4, 3:47 am, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> The family is the primary source of a child's emotional life/future so
> in some ways it is better to outsource education to a larger theater
> if the family is abusive or dysfunctional to attain some balance.
> Additionally, all the learning, quickness of mind, readiness of
> intellect and talent have to be fostered and nurtured lest they spoil
> or die on the vine though sometimes this can be turned to
> profit...depending. A major goal of parenting is to turn out self-
> sufficient young adults- whether a cub or human; humans have been
> granted a long period of time in which to raise their young- our
> Designer was more clever and wise than we acknowledge! Conversely, I
> see families who live in generational proximity who slog through the
> years with a grumble and the young unwilling or unable to give up
> dependency upon their parents.
>
> On Feb 3, 4:09 pm, Alan Wostenberg <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > "Germany does not allow home schooling. I am aware that the radical
> > libertarian tradition in the US...gives home-schooling a certain
> > cachet. ".   Parents are the primary educators of their children, and
> > the State plays a subsidiary role. On the principle of subsidiarity,
> > the larger social units do things the smallers social units cannot. So
> > if the smallest social unit -- the family -- can educate the children,
> > they ought to, and ought /not/ outsource this to the state, who have
> > the deck stacked against them (just look at the student:teacher
> > ratio!) .
>
> > As for "learning social skills", what skills are, say, 20 fifth
> > graders sitting together learning? That's not life; in life we
> > interact with people of all ages. And this is the life experience
> > learned when kids in 1-12 grade sit together and learn, as in the
> > family home, full of life and love.
>
> > On Feb 1, 9:52 am, frantheman <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > A German family has been given political asylum in the US because of
> > > their refusal to send their children to school in Germany and the
> > > subsequent, according to the US judge granting the application, "well
> > > founded fear of persecution."
>
> > >  http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,674492,00.html
>
> > > Germany does not allow home schooling. The article in "der Spiegel"
> > > explains: "Mandatory school attendance is based on "the idea that
> > > group learning in school also helps develop social skills," says
> > > Martina Elschenbroich, an expert on education law with the Culture
> > > Minister Conference, an assembly that brings together education
> > > ministers from Germany's 16 states. Children learn how to interact
> > > with people who hold different views, which serves as the basis of a
> > > democratic society, says Elschenbroich." The German position has been
> > > upheld by the European Court of Human Rights in 2006.
>
> > > I am aware that the radical libertarian tradition in the US (and the
> > > impossibility of mandatory school attendance for many chidren in the
> > > legendary frontier days of the 19th. Century) gives home-schooling a
> > > certain cachet. On the other hand, it seems to me that it harbours
> > > great dangers in giving all kinds of - sorry to be so blunt - nuts the
> > > chance to indocrinate their children with rubbish.
>
> > > Any thoughts?
>
> > > Francis- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
""Minds Eye"" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/minds-eye?hl=en.

Reply via email to