Homeschoolers
in the trenches
June 18, 2003
Given the poor academic
track record of public education in many areas of this country,
you would think the government and education establishment would
be a little less arrogant about superimposing their will on homeschooling
families who prefer to opt out of their system. But you would
be wrong.
The establishment's
assault against the homeschooling movement continues. In Waltham,
Mass., local authorities are so adamant about imposing their mandatory
standardized testing that they sent social workers and policemen
to the home of George and Kim Bryant at 7:45 a.m. last Thursday
demanding their two teenagers take the tests.
According to Worldnetdaily.com,
the Department of Social Services (DSS) actually threatened to
take the Bryant's children away from them over this issue -- if
other issues were involved, the article didn't say so. But the
Bryants refused to let their children go, believing they have
a right to determine their children's educational choices.
The Waltham Public
School's homeschooling policy mandates that parents develop a
grading system and file educational plans for homeschooled children,
but the Bryants have steadfastly resisted the government controls.
It's not that homeschooling
families are afraid of competing with their public school counterparts.
Homeschoolers have continually done well on academic tests and
contests.
In 2000, the top three
winners in the Scripps-Howard News Service's National Spelling
Bee were all home-schooled. This is all the more remarkable when
you consider that only 11 percent of the contestants were homeschoolers.
That same year, homeschoolers placed first and second in the National
Geography Bee.
There's more. According
to official reports for the American College Testing Program (ACT),
homeschoolers have scored higher on average than students in public
and private schools. In 2000, the average composite ACT score
for high school students was 21, while homeschool students scored
22.8.
Dr. Lawrence M. Rudner,
an expert in quantitative analysis and one who has studied the
performance of homeschoolers, once remarked that this move to
make homeschoolers meet public school standards was "odd"
given the superior academic performance of homeschoolers.
Rudner conducted a
study in 1998 that included 20,760 students in 11,930 familes.
He found that in every subject and at every grade level (K-12),
"home school students scored significantly higher than their
public and private school counterparts." Some 25 percent
of all home school students at that time were enrolled at a grade
level or more beyond that dictated by their age. According to
the study, the average eighth grade homeschooler was performing
four grade levels above the national average.
Nevertheless, some
homeschooling families are still reluctant to submit to standardized
testing because it would be an indirect method for the state to
gain control over the curriculum. If homeschoolers were required
to pass standardized tests geared to public school curricula,
is it not inevitable that their families would have to alter their
curricula to teach to those tests?
Don't just assume
the Bryants are being stubborn and unreasonable. This is a freedom
issue. Why shouldn't the Bryants or any other parents be free
to make their own curricular choices? We've seen the extent to
which the educational establishment influences public school curricula,
often in directions that many parents -- not just homeschooling
ones -- would consider repugnant.
Most homeschool parents
-- at least Christian ones -- understand what the education establishment
has known for a long time but won't often admit: that there is
no such thing as values-free education. With the banning of Christian
values and their replacement with humanistic ones in the public
school system, we have witnessed the adoption of bizarre ideas
having little to do with academics and everything to do with social
engineering, directly resulting, ultimately, in the corruption
of educational quality.
As more parents opt
for homeschooling, public schools will grow increasingly nervous.
Homeschooling's financial impact on public schools can be significant.
If thousands of students are homeschooling in a school district,
it stands to lose millions of dollars in revenue. And with every
additional homeschooled student, the public education monopoly
is eroded a little further, and control over children's academic
and social development shifts away from the state and back to
the family unit.
So despite homeschooling's outstanding academic track record,
we can expect persistent opposition from the establishment, sometimes
reaching the point of policemen and social workers at homeschoolers'
homes threatening to snatch away their children.
But we can also be
sure that homeschooling families will continue to resist this
oppression. They deserve our support, because they are fighting
over the most fundamental rights of a free society: the right
to raise and educate children as they see fit. They are carrying
the banner of liberty for all of us.
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