Americans of different
races, socioeconomic backgrounds, and religions homeschool. Holt
Associates describes its clientele as individuals who "live in
the country, city, suburbs, small towns. Some are single
parents, combining working outside the home with homeschooling."(33)
Given many Americans' penchant for associations, there are
national homeschooling support groups for Mormons, Catholics,
Jews, Muslims, the handicapped, and homeschoolers of color.
A recent study of 5,402
homeschooled children from 1,657 families, conducted by Brian
Ray and the HSLDA, noted that the top three occupational groups
of homeschooling fathers were accountant or engineer (17.3
percent); professor, doctor, or lawyer (16.9 percent); and
small-business owner (10.7 percent). According to the same
survey, 87.7 percent of mothers who have chosen to stay at home
and teach their children list "homemaker" as their
occupation.(34)
Educational researchers
Jane Van Galen and Mary Ann Pittman have categorized the two
primary types of families who choose homeschooling as ideologues
and pedagogues. Ideologues are typically the religious
conservatives whom homeschooling attracts. Van Galen notes that
ideologues want "their children to learn fundamentalist
religious doctrine and a conservative political and social
perspective" and establish homeschools to communicate to their
offspring "that the family is the most important institution in
society."(35)
Van Galen defines the
pedagogues as those who teach their children themselves
primarily because they dislike the professionalization and
bureaucratization of modern education. They are parents who
"come to their decision to home school with a broader interest
in learning--they have professional training in education, they
have close friends or relatives who are educators, they have
read about education or child development, or they are involved
with organizations that speak to the issue of childrearing."(36)
Both types of families
share a common characteristic: they have enormous confidence in
their ability to do a competent job of educating their children
with minimal institutional support.
Are There Different
Methods of Homeschooling?
Families may choose to
purchase a preplanned, prepackaged curriculum from publishers
that specifically target homeschoolers, such as
School of Tomorrow
(800-685-3357) A Beka Home School, Konos Curriculum, and
Saxon Publishers. Other families may choose to enroll their
children in correspondence programs, like the Calvert School of
Maryland, the Christian Liberty Academy Satellite Schools of
Illinois, the Home
School Academy of Pennsylvania (800-683-1474), or the
Clonlara School of Michigan.
As families gain
confidence in their homeschooling abilities, they may opt for a
less structured approach and rely on homemade materials or
borrow heavily from local libraries. Tutors may be sought to
teach particular skills, such as a foreign language or a musical
instrument, and older children are sometimes recruited to teach
younger siblings a particular academic discipline or task.
Homeschooled children also participate in field trips and
learning co-ops with other homeschooled students or even take
courses at a day school or community college. In Ray's study of
1,657 families, 71.1 percent of the respondents said they custom
design their curriculum to suit their child's needs, and 83.7
percent said that their children use a computer in their home.
The average cost is $546 per homeschooled student per year.(37)
No matter the method
employed, studies indicate that one-on-one involvement with
homeschooled children, especially during their primary years, is
high. Theodore Wagenaar of Miami University notes that
homeschooled children "are considerably more likely to
experience someone in the family doing the following activities
with them three or more times a week: tell a story, teach
letters, teach songs, do arts and crafts, play with toys and
games indoors, play games and sports outdoors, take child on
errands, and involve child in household chores."(38)
What about Socialization?
How Do Homeschooled Children Meet Others?
Those are the questions
homeschoolers report they are usually asked first when they are
asked to explain their lifestyle. Typically, homeschooled
children engage in a variety of activities outside the
home--sports teams, scouting programs, church, community
service, or part-time employment. Richard G. Medlin of Stetson
University notes that homeschoolers rely heavily on support
groups as a resource for planning field trips and maintaining
personal contact with like-minded families.(39)
In 1992 Larry Shyers of
the University of Florida wrote a doctoral dissertation in which
he challenged the notion that youngsters at home "lag" in social
development. In his study, 8- to 10-year-old children were
videotaped at play. Their behavior was observed by trained
counselors who did not know which children went to regular
schools and which were homeschooled.
The study found no big
difference between the two groups of children in self-concept or
assertiveness, which was measured by social development tests.
But the videotapes showed that youngsters who were taught at
home by their parents had consistently fewer behavior
problems.(40)
Is Homeschooling Legal?
The U.S. Constitution and
the Bill of Rights do not mention education. In spite of the
creation of a federal Department of Education, education is an
issue of states' rights. According to the National Homeschool
Association, "Homeschooling is legally permitted in all fifty
states, but laws and regulations are much more favorable in some
states than in others."(41) For example, states such as Idaho,
Oklahoma, and Texas are considered user friendly to
homeschoolers in that there is no requirement for parents to
initiate contact with the state to begin to homeschool. On the
other hand, states such as Massachusetts, Minnesota, and New
York are heavily regulated (curriculum approval by the state,
home visits, submission of achievement test scores, and so
on).(42)
In the late 1970s and
throughout the 1980s, as the homeschooling movement gained more
converts, the compulsory attendance laws of various states were
challenged in court. One landmark case, for example, occurred in
Massachusetts. In Perchemlides v. Frizzle (1978), a
Massachusetts court upheld the right of the nonreligious
Perchemlides family to homeschool their young son. The court
concluded that "the Massachusetts compulsory attendance statue
might well be constitutionally infirm if it did not exempt
students whose parents prefer alternative forms of
education."(43)
In response to
homeschoolers' court victories at the state level, 33 states had
enacted homeschooling legislation by 1995. The more favorable
legal and political climate did not mean that controversies with
school officials ceased.(44) Christopher Klicka, an attorney for
the HSLDA, notes that, during the 1990-91 school year, nearly
2,000 homeschoolers with problems sought assistance from his
organization. Those problems "involved various degrees of
harassment, ranging from actual or threatened prosecution to the
attempted imposition of restrictions in excess of the law."(45)
How Does a Family Begin
Homeschooling?
Susan Nelson, a
homeschooling consultant and curriculum developer, suggests that
new homeschooling parents will find their task simpler if they
decide whether their primary goal in becoming home educators is
"to provide their child with useful and interesting educational
experiences; or to prepare him for [formal] schooling."(46)
Other advocates of homeschooling are more practical and suggest
reading homeschooling literature, becoming familiar with the
homeschooling laws of one's state, attending a how-to seminar,
joining a regional support group, or spending time with a
seasoned homeschooling family before taking the leap. Popular
homeschooling advice books include How to Tutor by Samuel
L. Blumenfeld, Homeschooling: Your Questions Answered! by
Deborah McIntire and Robert Windham, and The Original Home
Schooling Series by Charlotte Mason.(47)
After a period of trial
and error, most families fall into a satisfactory routine with
their homeschools. Nancy Wallace, a homeschooling mother, said
about her beginning days of teaching her children: "Every
morning we practice our French, play the piano, and do some
writing. Every evening we read aloud to Vita and Ishmael for
about 1½ hours. And in between? Ishmael takes two drama classes,
a French class and a piano lesson for 1-hour periods once a
week, we go to the library, explore the woods, observe nature
and read."(48)
Do Homeschooled Students
Get Admitted to College?
A growing number of
colleges and universities around the United States, including
Harvard and Yale, are admitting homeschooled students to their
freshman classes. One unusual family, the Colfaxes of Boonville,
California, have had three of their four homeschooled sons
accepted by Harvard. The Chronicle of Higher Education
recently reported a boom in homeschooled students' winning
admission to selective colleges.(49) In the absence of a
transcript or high school diploma, applicants can submit samples
or a portfolio of their work, letters of recommendation, and
CLEP and Stanford Achievement Test scores. The HSLDA's study of
1,657 homeschooling families notes that homeschooled students
want to attend college: 69 percent of respondents pursued a more
formal postsecondary education.(50)
How Does the Education a
Homeschooled Child Receives
Compare with That of Conventionally Schooled Children?
Lines notes that
"virtually all the available data show that the group of
homeschooled children who are tested is above average. The
pattern for children for whom data are available resembles that
of children in private schools."(51) Ray notes that, regardless
of income, race, gender, or parents' level of education,
homeschooled children consistently score between the 82nd and
92nd percentiles on achievement tests.(52) The data from the
Washington Homeschool Research Project, which has analyzed the
SAT scores of homeschooled children in Washington State since
1985, demonstrated that the scores of those children were above
average. Jon Wartes, writing on behalf of the project, notes
that "fears that homeschooled children in Washington are at an
academic disadvantage are not confirmed."(53) One significant
piece of evidence of the educational progress homeschooled
children are making: the National Merit Scholarship Corporation
chose more than 70 homeschooled high school seniors as
semifinalists in its 1998 competition.(54)