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Homeschooling: The reality behind closed doors
In 2007, NCES (National Center for Education Statistics) reported that there was an approximate 1,508,000 homeschooled students in the United States. 36% of these homeschooling parents have reported that the main reason behind their decision to home school their child was to provide him or her with religious or moral instruction. The second most popular reason to home school a child, at 21% of parents, was their concern for the school environment. 17 % of the parents say they were dissatisfied with the academic instruction available to their children. The remaining parents reported other reasons, such as their child’s physical or mental health, 2 percent; their child has special needs, 4 percent; interest in a nontraditional approach to education, 7 percent; and other reasons such as family time, travel, distance and finances, 14 percent.
Even though parents who home school have their reasons, there are so many more reasons why homeschooling is bad for their children. For example, how is a parent properly educated to teach every level of education? Teacher’s go through years of college to prepare themselves for the difficult task of educating children. A parent doesn’t have the necessary qualifications to educate a child. Plus, isolating children from other children doesn’t allow them to grow up understanding how society works. There needs to be bullying, asking teachers for permission to go to the bathroom, lunch tables, assemblies, packing lunches, taking school pictures, riding buses and presenting projects. Without situations like these, children won’t be able to function properly in society. Public and private school prepares children for the real world, it teaches them how to interact with those around them and how well they can act in given situations.
Through many online blogs, the majority of homeschooled student’s talk about how much they hate having to be stuck in their houses all day and how they never get to see their friends. For example, on My Blogging Site there are two entries from anonymous writers that talk about how much they despise being homeschooled. One even stated how they only see their friends at church on Sunday’s. I feel that this is another example of why children should not be homeschooled. Why should someone be stranded at home all day, everyday, and rarely see their friends? The worst part is they don’t even have the opportunity to make new friends. Homeschooling is a horrible way to raise a child. A parent can’t shelter their child forever, they need to realize that.
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This article has 6 comments.
You say homeschooling is a horrible way to raise a child. And you would know this how, pray tell? Reading your impassioned statements about how bad it is to homeschool, one would have to assume that you have firsthand knowledge. Do you? Were you homeschooled? Do you know what actually does go on behind closed doors? Or are you simply making assumptions based on statistics?
You state that there must be bullying, asking teachers for permission to go to the bathroom, lunch tables, assemblies, packing lunches, taking school pictures, riding buses and presenting projects, and that without situations like these, children won’t be able to function properly in society. Hmm. Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't we trying to stop bullying in schools? And could you please inform me why packing lunches, taking school pictures, and riding buses are essential for the socialization of a child? How does all of this relate to the, quote unquote, real world? Do you spend upwards of six hours with your peers in the real world?
You also touch on how, and I quote, the majority of homeschooled students talk about how much they hate having to be stuck in their houses all day and how they never get to see their friends. Well. That certainly is news to me. If you haven't figured out by now, I'm homeschooled. And I know scores upon scores of homeschoolers who love it. They have a close and honest relationship with their parents. They enjoy the one on one schooling, which is more than you can say for public schools. They do get to see their friends. And we are most assuredly not stuck in our houses all day.
So far, in nine years of homeschooling, I've been involved in a writing group, a drama club, basketball, figure skating, roller blading, swim lessons, gym, and a young authors club. All of which are homeschool related. How can you call that isolated?
Now, before you get on your high horse and accuse me of hating public schools and the people who attend them, let me clarify something. I have nothing against public schooling. In fact, some of my closest friends go to public schools. What I do have a problem with, however, is people who assume that homeschoolers are isolated and unsocialized, and homeschooling is horrible. That I most definitely have a problem with.
I was homecholed, and I WAS bullied, I did have to ask to leave the lunch table because it was the same table I did my schoolwork at, and thankfully I've managed to avoide school pictures, assembles, and prom *bleh*
I don't homeschool to learn, I homeschool to concuer. And I know my spelling isn't a good example but homeshoolers are often recognized for their better ACT/SAT scores and for being fairly more well rounded than other kids. None of this is to say we're better than anyone, it's just something I wanted to say.
Also, I'd like to know, were you homeschooled?
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