Imagine a child who has never experienced the joys of a school dance, never had the chance to participate in a formal graduation, and was never able to experience the small joys of pleasant cafeteria banter: this is the life of most homeschooled children. Today, most students will attend typical public or private schools, but a few students choose to travel down different paths like homeschooling. Homeschooling is a form of education that is primarily taught at home and typically involves one-on-one learning from a private teacher or educated parent. Each homeschooled student follows a somewhat structured curriculum based on state guidelines. Homeschool is very much like public school except, with few distractions. I, personally, would …show more content…
As the year progressed though, she seemed to wilt like a flower. She was no longer happy and preferred to be alone. She transferred out of my elementary school the next year, and I never saw her again. I only found out years later that she was tirelessly bullied for her delayed speech and odd behavior. It saddens me to think that she left school because of that, but it’s probably for the best since the bullying may have gotten worse if she stayed. I’m sure she is very happy in her new homeschooling program. My other friend, Sam is the complete opposite of Cali, yet he still ended up being homeschooled. Sam decided to leave school around the third grade because he simply wasn’t challenged enough and grew uninterested in school altogether. It was rumored that he had a IQ of around 190 and was working on Algebra II at home with the textbooks his parents got him for Christmas. He spoke Spanish and Chinese and he seemed to have no flaws besides the fact that he was socially awkward. After he transferred out of our school, he started experimenting with chemicals during his free time after homeschool. He discovered that McDonalds chicken nuggets have traces of plastic in them and he won a national prize for his discovery. He finished homeschool and graduated in two years. I now hear that he is attending some tiny unnamed college in Canada studying to be a STEM researcher. Sometimes people can accomplish the craziest of things if you just give them the opportunities to
An estimated 4 million children are currently home schooled with a 15-20% yearly growth rate. According to a California study by researcher Dr. Brian [D.] Ray, 92 percent of school superintendents believe that home learners are emotionally unstable, deprived of proper social development and too judgmental of the world around them. The latest claim against home schooling suggests that home schoolers are potential child abusers. Mr. Ron Barnard, a Holly High School teacher says that he would prefer public schooling for his children because of
Homeschooling a child can drastically affect their lives in the future, and put them in a clouded state of mind for seeing what the world is. Schooling your child from home will hold them back from learning a wide variety of basic skills that can be easily provided in public or private school systems. Although some see homeschooling as a good way to shelter their children from the world they view as harsh, it is not giving them any chance to gain common social skills. Social skills cannot be taught to a child, they are something the child must learn from interaction with his or her peers. Furthermore, homeschool teachers are not required the level of training and experience that a teacher at a public school are required (Hudak). Diversity is something widely portrayed in school systems; however, homeschooling doesn't allow students to bear witness to the diverse nature found in school systems.
While public schooling is the traditional way of receiving education, homeschooling is an alternative that must be considered. To clarify, homeschooling is the education of youths at home by their
Before the development of the United States education system it was necessary for children to homeschool, but that time has passed. Today students have the option to attend the school that best fits them due to the process of open enrollment. The United States educational system now offers students options such as religious schools, charter schools, private schools, and public schools. Therefore, no reason exists that they can not find a decent school that meets their academic expectations. Families that homeschooled have a distinct disadvantage to families that attend public or private schools.
Education in our society is a very important factor in shaping our future. One’s future is depended on the education they receive and everyone is somehow affected by this. Children from the ages of kindergarteners to seniors in high school, college graduates, and stay at home mothers, are all shaped by the education the government provides us. There are many different ways to acquire an education some through private schools, public, charter, and being homeschooled. However, homeschooling is growing more in popularity than it has ever been.
While the American public school system educates the majority of students today, a fast growing population is beginning to accept homeschooling as an adequate alternative. Anyone with kids desires only the best education and experiences for them. Those who face this decision have to take in the plentiful list of differences and decide which will suit their family best. For years, most people saw homeschooling as an ineffiecent replacement to the government-provided schools already in existence. However, in the last ten years, studies have proved that homeschooling well equipps a student for college and beyond, changing the minds of many(http://www.usnews.com/education/high-schools/articles/2012/06/01/home-schooled-teens-ripe-for-college?page=2). In order to make this crutial decision between public or home school, one must account for the social and extracurricular opportunites, the educational aspect, and what role the family plays in education.
Rachel Gathercole, the author of The Well-Adjusted Child: The Social Benefits of Homeschooling says “Whatever the teaching methods used in school or homeschool, it is ultimately the social environment itself that distinguishes homeschooling from conventional school.” When it comes to being socialized there is a difference between being homeschooled and being a homeschooler. A homeschooler is the image that society has planted in many people’s minds to be an anti-social, long skirt wearing, and religious children. But, being homeschooled is simply a child that is doing school at home. While doing school at home students are being challenged in social norms, they have more time for extra curricular activities, most are learning skills that are not being taught in a regular classroom setting, it has been found by Rockney Randall, author of The Home Schooling Debate: Why Some Parents Choose It, Others Oppose It gathered, “When speaking to a student that has grown up in a household that participates in the homeschool traditions I found that 9 times out of 10 the homeschooled student makes better eye contact, uses better grammar when speaking, and can carry a better conversation.”
Ballard. Eastern. Male. Manual. All of these are public schools right here in Louisville, with varsity sport teams. If someone lives in Ballard’s district, they can go to Ballard and play football, if a person lives in Easterns’ district they can still transfer to Ballard and play football, but what if this person was homeschooled, then what? This child should still have the same opportunities to play sports at a varsity level with the high school of their choosing even if they don’t attend that school. Being homeschooled should not take away the opportunities given through high school athletics for various reasons but especially since parents of homeschooled kids pay the same taxes as kids who attend public school. Home-schooled kids also need the exposure to the social skills one would learn through team settings. Also there are various reasons why one maybe home-schooled; such as religious reasons and denying participation because of religion is illegal.
Stereotypes have continued to lead people to believe that homeschoolers are isolated from the real world. However, taking a closer look into public and private schools it becomes apparent that traditionally schooled children are the ones not living in the real world. Traditionally schooled children are confined to a classroom for around 180 days each year with minimum opportunities to be exposed to a workplace or to go on field trips. Also, they are usually only surrounded by children their own age. Lastly, in traditional school everything is provided for the students and the students are given little to no responsibility. These students are not prepared to be responsible at home or the workplace, making them unprepared for life after graduation.
Homeschool is for losers, so they say. It’s for those who are weird and socially awkward around others. Or those who get pregnant in sophomore year and can’t handle highschool. People, such as parents, believe that you go to high school to learn, pay attention in class, and get good grades. Not everyone knows what actually goes on behind those doors. From my experience, high school was full of drama and distraction. Most of the time I went there to hang out with my friends and just have fun. Typically people would think of homeschool as low class or for the troubled ones. If a student has homeschool, they must have some sort of problem. Even when you'd tell someone you're in homeschool, they would look at you oddly as if the words ‘I’m dumb’
Can you imagine a world in which parents were free to send their children to only the best schools, no matter which neighborhood they lived in? What if cost wasn’t a factor? Imagine if even a student in the poorest section of town had access to the best education. What could that child achieve? What would they become? How would their life change? Those questions that I asked lead now to the focus of the essay. The world we live in is ever so changing, with that the need for education also needs to be changing. No longer do classic public schools fit the job in all certain situations. That is why with school choice being a controversial issue in education reform, school choice public funds should be used to support school choice programs that offer parents alternatives to traditional public schools.
Education is a crucial aspect of people's lives. In the United States and numerous other countries, we are reminded throughout our twelve years of mandatory schooling that we must do well so that we can get into a good college, achieve a degree, and then lead an accomplished and fulfilling career. Despite the fact that this idea is drilled into our heads from a very young age, our system of education does not provide each child with the same amount of support and encouragement. A vast number of black children are penalized for simply wearing their hair in its natural state. There have been numerous instances in which black children are threatened with detention, suspension, and even expulsion if they refused to change their hairstyle into
Why is it that we rarely acknowledge homeschooled students for who they are in this society? Is it because they are different from the run-of-the-mill students that attend public schools? It could very well be that they are misjudged because so many people are not informed on homeschooling. If so, the majority of homeschooled students around the nation feel like outsiders simply because society has not taken the time to understand and provide for them. But, one should not feel ashamed as around 3.4% of the all K-12 students in America are homeschooled, (Ray). It is reasonable for such a small population to feel like a group of outsiders when everyone else has not been apart of this experience. Fortunately, there are various methods of tackling this problem; diagnosing this issue is the most beneficial of all. Thus, homeschoolers are outsiders because others do not fully understand the setting they are taught in, the education they receive, and the reasons behind why they are being homeschooled in the first place.
Many concerns are expressed for homeschoolers. When it comes to homeschooling, the first point of emphasis that critics point towards homeschoolers is the lack of socialization. “Critics charge that home-schooled children will be socially handicapped and unable to adapt to real-life interaction when older” (Jeub 1994). Ultimately, critiques get their conclusions with many observations and interviews that show how they do not choose to, or are not incorporated in social events or activities. Critiques imagine that the children are stuck with their parents all day and only go out when their parents allow them or when they personally go out. With this environment, critiques envision that homeschoolers get little to no cultural experience from their world surroundings (Anderman and Anderman, p. 468) In essence, the assessment is a never-ending speech from the critics that the number one flaw in homeschool is socialization and the
Homeschooling is the education of children at home, usually taught by a parent or tutor, rather than in public or private school. Homeschooling is an option for families living in isolated rural locations, living temporarily abroad, or families who travel often. This method of education is growing around the world.