Part 1
The opposing view to the pro home-schooling
position taken by USA Today in their
September 3 Todays Debate, was written
by Dennis L. Evans, director of doctoral programs in
education leadership at the University of California,
Irvine, who came out swinging.
Writing under the heading Home is no place for
school, Evans stated, Home schooling
is an extension of the misguided notion that anyone
can teach. That notion, he summarily
concludes, is simply wrong.
Evanss conclusion is based on his observation that
some of our best and brightest college graduates,
responding to the altruistic call to Teach for
America, failed as teachers because they lacked
training.
Shouldnt this be an indictment of the
education they received for 16 years?
On the contrary: Good teaching is a complex
act, Evans writes. Not even an
altruistic educationist can resist the
temptation to mystify his role.
Throwing a bone to homeschoolers, Evans says that
some parents may be competent to teach very young
children. Actually, the facts show that virtually
every home-schooling parent is more than
competent.
But the words are hardly out when he offers the caveat
that competence will wane in more advanced grades
as the content and complexity increases. This
statement is simply inexcusable. Any parent who is either
homeschooling or planning to do so is quite aware of his
own limitations, which is precisely why home-schooling
networks provide information on tutorial services offered
by fellow members. Those advertising to teach specific
subject matter are usually homeschoolers themselves who
have learned through personal experience that which Evans
shrouds in mystery as the elusive teacher
competency.
Tossing around university-level vernacular soon enough
gives way, though, revealing Evanss true gripe with
homeschooling: Schools serve important functions
far beyond academic learning.
Ahh. Now were getting to the crux of it.
Attending school is an important element in the
development of the whole child, he
says. Schools, particularly public [sic] schools,
are the one place where all of the children of all
of the people come together. Can there be anything
more important to each child and thus to our democratic
society than to develop virtues and values such as
respect for others, the ability to communicate and
collaborate and an openness to diversity and new
ideas?
Rarely will we have an opportunity to see so many
misguided, inaccurate, and wholly offensive ideas
communicated in one place.
Apparently, any good citizen would understand that
teaching respect for others and
openness to diversity is best left to a bunch
of overworked, underpaid government employees
armed with the latest fashions in child development
rather than to parents.
But trusting parents to do right by their children is the
last thing Evans is prepared to consider. The
isolation implicit in home teaching is anathema to
socialization and citizenship, he says.
People who choose to home-school have done so because
they dont think their children will get a proper
education sitting for six or eight hours in a classroom.
It is to combat the remoteness inherent in
institutionalized schooling that they have taken their
kids out of school it is the classroom, not the
living room, which sucks from children their passion for
the outside world, with its plethora of cultures, races,
religions, opinions, and peoples.
And what could make for a better citizen than for a child
to learn from an early age how to learn and function in
this real world, rather than in the stale, artificial,
and contrived environment of a government school?
Still, it gets worse. [Homeschooling] is a
rejection of community and makes the home-schooler
the captive of the orthodoxies of the parents.
Translation: If children are taught at home, they stand a
greater chance of learning about such heresies as
limited, republican government, property rights,
self-reliance and gun ownership, religion (gasp!), the burden
of taxation, and what it means to be the kind of citizen
who takes responsibility for his own children the
kinds of ideas, values, and virtues rejected by the
leftists dominating the National Education Association
and the American Federation of Teachers.
It isnt just the common mans orthodoxy that
can hold children captive.
A home-schooled child is independent, free-thinking,
questioning, and hostile to artificial constraints
exactly the kind of person who might one day begin to
question the need for what education historian E.G. West
called a growing educationist bureaucracy and a
protection-seeking teaching profession.
But give the devil his due: By focusing so hard on
molding children like pieces of clay to represent the
governments definition of a whole
child, advocates of government schooling have done
a wonderful job of socializing all of
the children of all of the people in 12 years of
stifling mediocrity, violence, drugs, class warfare,
mindless ritual and militaristic routine, ringing bells,
political correctness, sexual encouragement, dumbed-down
curriculum, Ritalin, emasculation and football as
the height of cultural pursuit.
Contrary to the claims of Dennis Evans, the home is the
perfect place for educating children. The fact is, most
parents want whats best for their children, and no
one knows better than they do what it will take to attain
that. This isnt to suggest that no one will fail,
but its interesting to note that before the
introduction of compulsory education laws in the United
Kingdom (according to E.G. West), there was a
near-universal system of private fee-paying schools, and the
majority of parents were using it. Even archleftist
Teddy Kennedy has admitted that literacy rates in
Massachusetts were higher before the state
started forcing parents to send their kids away to
school. History testifies to the competence of individual
parents in choosing whats best for their kids
education.
An education at home can be filled with fun and exciting
experiments in learning, a chance to see the world
through a grownups eyes, with one-on-one attention
and a vision of learning that encourages experimentation,
boldness, and enthusiasm in the quest for knowledge
rather than the humdrum of rote memorization and a
political agenda aimed at shaping the whole
child.
The beauty of homeschooling is that it gives teaching
parents the opportunity to utilize the world as their
classroom and, more important, to cater to their
childrens individual needs and particular way of
learning. What is essential is to realize that
children learn independently, not in bunches; that they
learn out of interest and curiosity, not to please or
appease the adults in power, wrote John Holt, a
radical proponent of educational reform in the 1960s,
1970s, and 1980s. A home-schooled child has the freedom
to pursue his passions and interests at his own pace and
in his own time, without fear of punishment from teachers
or peers, and without the roadblock of standardized,
one-size-fits-all curricula.
By comparison, the government-school setting provides
only two options for growing minds: The cookie cutter, or
failure.
Scott McPherson is a policy advisor at The Future of Freedom Foundation. Send him email.
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