This is an article published in Mothering Magazine that covers many aspects of homeschooling, including most common homeschooling myths: HOMESCHOOLING'S TRUE COLORS: EXAMINING THE MYTHS--AND THE FACTS--ABOUT AMERICA'S FASTEST-GROWING EDUCATIONAL MOVEMENT By Rachel Gathercole We're all familiar with the popular images of homeschoolers in These stereotypes are touted freely by the popular media and conventional schooling experts alike. We have probably all imagined them ourselves at one time or another. But they have little to do with the realities of homeschooling for most families today, and are rarely backed by factual data. But even when we ignore these stereotypes and look to the news media for answers, it is hard to sort out what homeschooling is. The things we are told about it and the images portrayed are often contradictory and/or downright sensationalized. The mass media tell us on one hand that homeschoolers excel, and on the other hand that they are underregulated. One minute we hear that it is hard for homeschoolers to get into college, and the next minute that they are going to Harvard. We are told that homeschooling is difficult and requires an incredible degree of sacrifice by parents, yet the number of parents choosing to homeschool is skyrocketing. Just what is the truth about homeschooling? The hard facts might surprise you. Below are some common myths about homeschooling, and the simple facts behind this widely misunderstood movement. Myth: Fact: Patricia M. Lines, the foremost homeschooling expert in the US Department of Education, further notes (in 1999) that since some families homeschool for only part of their children’s school years, the number of children with some homeschooling experience, by age 18, would be around 6 to 12 percent of the population. 2 The percentage would be greater today. Demographically speaking, the homeschooling population comprises families of all socioeconomic groups, religions, sizes, political affiliations, family structures, and ethnicities.3-6 Statistically, homeschooling families tend to be large, conservative, white, two-parent families, and the average homeschooling parent has a moderate to high level of income and education.7-10However, according to the US Census Bureau, differences between homeschooling families and conventional-schooling families are not very large, and the demographic gap appears to be narrowing.11 Myth: Fact: Statistics that correctly state that the majority of homeschoolers in Myth: Fact: Myth: Fact: Homeschoolers also employ a wide range of overall approaches and philosophies, from “school-at-home” approaches that match the popular image, to (perhaps most common) an eclectic approach in which the family selects materials and activities according to the children’s needs at the time, to unschooling—“delight-driven” or “child-led” learning in which the child learns all necessary material through pursuing his or her own interests in a real-world setting, with a parent available to help, answer questions, and direct the child to resources.33-36Those who engage in formal lessons do so to varying degrees: one family might purchase and adhere to a full curriculum, while another might devise a complete or partial curriculum of their own using alternative methods and focus; still another might reserve formal lessons for a particular subject area, such as math.37-40 As new and varied as these methods may sound, all are effective methods for home educating. Dr. Lawrence M. Rudner, in an independent study of more than 20,000 homeschoolers, found that though homeschoolers tend not to use prepackaged curriculum programs, they nevertheless score “exceptionally high” on standardized tests, ranking typically in the 70th to 80th percentile (compared to the national average of the 50th percentile). “It is readily apparent . . . that the median scores for home school students are well above their public/private school counterparts in every subject and in every grade,” regardless of the presence or absence of formal curriculum use,41 says Rudner. Homeschooled students, regardless of teaching method, have gone on to attend Ivy League universities. According to an article in Stanford Magazine, “among homeschoolers who end up at Stanford, ‘self-teaching’ is a common thread.” 42,43 Myth: Fact: Myth: Fact: More recently, psychotherapist Dr. Larry Shyers, in a study involving “blind” observation of the behavior of homeschooled and conventionally schooled children, found that homeschooled children exhibited significantly fewer “problem behaviors” than their conventionally schooled peers and had no significant difference in levels of self-esteem.49 Thomas Smedley, studying communication skills, socialization, and daily living skills through the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales, concluded that homeschooled kids in his study were more mature and better socialized than the conventionally schooled.50 And finally, in a survey of adults who had been homeschooled for at least seven years, Dr. Brian D. Ray found that 59 percent said they were “very happy” with life, while only 27.6 percent of the general population said they were “very happy” with life.51 Due to the excellent teacher-student ratio that homeschoolers enjoy and the lack of time-consuming administrative tasks such as attendance taking, busywork, etc., the academic aspects of homeschooling require only a fraction of the time necessary for the same tasks in a conventional school setting, leaving lots of extra time for social activities. Not limited by strict “school hours” and brief interactions in the hall, homeschooled children are often found instead spending long days at the park with friends, gathering with other kids for group activities, sleeping over at each other’s houses on weeknights or weekends, and enjoying long conversations with their parents and siblings.52, 53 Homeschooled children also tend to have both homeschooled and conventionally schooled friends, and, like conventionally schooled children, they can and do play with neighborhood children and participate in scouts, 4H, church groups, community bands, orchestras, and sports groups, as well as outside classes such as dance and martial arts.54, 56 Many homeschooling parents consider their children’s social learning to be as integral a part of their education as academic subjects, and they are careful to provide their children with both social skills and opportunities to use them. Myth: Fact: Myth: Fact: Myth: Fact: Myth: Fact: Keeping in mind that the average homeschooled student appears to exceed the achievement of her or his average conventionally schooled peer, it is illogical to impose curriculum or other requirements aimed at making homeschooling more school-like or requiring homeschools to adhere to the standards of public or conventional schools. Such regulations would be superfluous and could potentially lower the level of achievement by removing the freedom and flexibility that make homeschooling so effective. Myth: Fact: Myth: Fact: Moreover, it is private schools, not public schools, that appear to bear the true brunt of reduced enrollment. While enrollment in public schools and home schools continues to grow with the population, enrollment in private schools remains stagnant.70 In other words, it appears statistically that the majority of homeschooling parents would otherwise be sending their children to private school, not public school. Finally, it has been noted that educators in conventional schooling situations stand to learn much from homeschoolers, who are conducting field research on education that can never be conducted in a school setting, even as they educate their kids very successfully. As the late educator John Holt commented: “It is a research project done at no cost, of a kind for which neither the public schools nor the government could afford to pay.”71 He also wrote: “From these people and their work, all serious schools and teachers, many of them now severely limited and handicapped by the conditions under which they have to work, stand to learn a great deal.”72 Whatever images pass through the media and popular culture, the facts of homeschooling ultimately speak for themselves. As more and more homeschoolers grow up and become adult citizens, perceptions of homeschoolers will gradually change, but the facts will remain the same. Although it is understandable that perceptions and fears exist, there is a reason that homeschooling is growing at the rate it is. There is a reason that so many educated parents are choosing it despite popular stereotypes and assumptions. The reason is simple: In the face of fact, those muddled images are cleanly washed away by homeschooling’s true colors. Flying colors. See www.mothering.com/sections/extras/true_colors_notes.html for the endnotes to this article. | Some homeschooling articles by Rachel Gathercole that might interest you: "Homeschooling's True Colors: Examining the Myths--and the facts--About America's Fastest-Growing Educational Movement" (left) "The Truth About Homeschool Socialization" "Homeschooling and Socialization"(excerpt from The Well-Adjusted Child) "Happytown" (click on link and then scroll down to article) "Zen and the Art of Unschooling Math" (click on link and then scroll down to article) "Of Swimming and Schooling" (click on link and then scroll down to article) "Doing Their Best--Naturally!" (click on link and then scroll down to article) Other helpful websites that might interest you: www.terriebittner.com Terrie is the author of Homeschooling: Take a Deep Breath--You Can Do This! www.livefreelearnfree.com Live Free Learn Free Magazine--Inspiration, Information and Support for Natural Learners www.homeschoolingstuff.com Helpful, free articles about homeschooling, and some other helpful stuff besides. http://www.homeschoolingstuff.com/socialization.htm Articles about socialization, including some by Rachel Gathercole. http://learninfreedom.org/ A very thorough resource that covers just about anything you could want to know about homeschooling! www.homeedmag.com Home Education Magazine www.lifelearningmagazine.com Life Learning Magazine--"Inspiring families around the world who learn without schooling" http://www.homeschooltoday.com/ Homeschooling Today! Magazine--Homeschooling information and support from a specifically Biblical perspective.
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Copyright (c) 2007 Rachel Gathercole. All rights reserved.