Economist.com | Home-schooling
This article on home schooling is from the 26 Feb issue of The Economist. I read it in the print edition but it is available online. A companion article requires a subscription.
I've just posted on Craig Barrett's WSJ editorial on education reform (scroll down). Home schooling is one of the ways that Americans are taking control over their children's education away from the government education monopoly. I had been generally aware of home-schooling, but until reading this article I was not aware of the numbers of people who have converted to home-schooling.
The sub-titles on the article are:
George Bush's secret army
and
A revolution is happening in American education. As it grows in size, it should frighten teachers everywhere
It opens with...
JUST how bad are American schools? And how deeply do conservative Americans distrust their government? One answer to both these questions is provided by the growth of home-schooling. As many as 2m American students—one in 25—may now be being taught at home.
This is a trend that I'm ambivalent about. As the article points out, mass public education has been one of the hallmarks of modern, advanced societies. Throwing our hands up in the air over the poor quality of the public schools and teaching children at home is simply not an option for the vast majority of people. So this is not a fix for our education system. In fact, I wonder if having all of these people opting out of the public schools is actually decreasing pressure to fix the schools. But, I can't argue with the right of people to do home-schooling if they choose - in fact, you have to admire their willingness to make such large personal investments in their children.
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