quote:*nod*
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
These rulings have come and gone many times over the years in CA. People are still homeschooling. I'm betting it will get overturned pretty soon, especially once HSLDA gets involved.
quote:For the record, I am against requiring standardized testing of homeschoolers and state evaluations of curriculum, etc. Kids moving at paces different from the "norm" is a major reason parents homeschool.
I'm all for educational standards being met, requiring the kids to pass annual standardized testing, etc. But obtaining good educational outcomes in homeschooling does not require teaching credentials.
quote:I haven't given this lots of serious thought, so this isn't intended to be a snarky or leading question, I'm just curious.
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
quote:For the record, I am against requiring standardized testing of homeschoolers and state evaluations of curriculum, etc. Kids moving at paces different from the "norm" is a major reason parents homeschool.
I'm all for educational standards being met, requiring the kids to pass annual standardized testing, etc. But obtaining good educational outcomes in homeschooling does not require teaching credentials.
quote:A quick search indicates that the only Supreme Court case referring to "home school" in this context was the recent "Bong Hits for Jesus" case, in which Justice Thomas, in his concurrence, said, "If parents do not like the rules imposed by those schools, they can seek redress in school boards or legislatures; they can send their children to private schools or home school them; or they can simply move."
"Parents do not have a constitutional right to home school their children," wrote Justice H. Walter Croskey in a Feb. 28 opinion signed by the two other members of the district court.
quote:Hey, kq, have you read this site? Also, are you on AlwaysLearning or UnschoolingDiscussion?
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
Oh, and after what I suffered as a gifted child with sensory issues in the local public schools, no, I'm not sending my gifted/SPD child to them.
quote:Kind of. Except you implied that being non-accredited was not a big deal, and I can tell you from personal experience that it is a HUGE deal.
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
Isn't that what I said?
quote:I agree completely.
Originally posted by Christine:
While I completely disagree with this ruling and hope it will be overturned soon, I don't see how we can let children reach adulthood without some check that they are getting the education they need to survive and thrive. It's not common, but there are parents who don't put their kids in school and don't teach them anything either. IMHO, that is a form of neglect. Granted, standardized tests are one of my least favorite things about the school (mostly the part where they teach to the test) but on the other hand, I understand the difficulty in coming up with something -- anything -- that gives us some idea how students are doing and what they are learning.
Even if state tests are part of a home school requirement, I don't see why home school can't be more student centered, go at your own pace, and focus on material that regular schools wouldn't normally cover. I just think it's a good idea to make sure they're also learning to read.
quote:Even without such checks, a kid who is homeschooled is likely to be be better educated (reading ability, etc.) than a kid in public school.
I'm not the world's biggest fan of standardized tests but there must be SOME check to ensure homeschooled kids are being adequately prepared for higher level schooling and beyond.
quote:I'm pretty sure there is good evidence for this holding true in the past. However, the numbers have been going up dramatically and the demographics seem to be changing, so I'm not sure we can rely on past data to predict future outcomes.
Originally posted by mr_porteiro_head:
Even without such checks, a kid who is homeschooled is likely to be be better educated (reading ability, etc.) than a kid in public school.
There doesn't generally appear to be a need to make sure that most homeschoolers are being adequately academically prepared for higher education.
quote:Isn't this true of school-educated students as well?
Generally the opinion is that homeschoolers tend to lump into two groups: those prepared pretty decently to very well for college, and those who have been very poorly prepared for college.
quote:For home-schooled children, the gulf tends to be wider, with fewer children in the middle.
Originally posted by katharina:
quote:Isn't this true of school-educated students as well?
Generally the opinion is that homeschoolers tend to lump into two groups: those prepared pretty decently to very well for college, and those who have been very poorly prepared for college.
quote:(edited to clean up footnotes and hopefuly make it more readable)
The parents in this case assert that when the mother gives the children
educational instruction at home, the parents are acting within the law because mother
operates through Sunland Christian School where the children are “enrolled.”4
(4 In support of the parents’ home schooling, Terry Neven, Sunland Christian
School’s administrator, submitted a letter in which he stated the school is a private
school and the two younger children are enrolled there. The letter fails to mention that
the children do not actually receive education instruction at the school.)
However, the parents have not demonstrated that mother has a teaching credential such
that the children can be said to be receiving an education from a credentialed tutor. It is
clear that the education of the children at their home, whatever the quality of that
education, does not qualify for the private full-time day school or credentialed tutor
exemptions from compulsory education in a public full-time day school.
The parents are not aided by a letter from the Lynwood Unified School District
stating that Sunland Christian School “appeared to be a valid charter school.” Aside
from the fact that Sunland Christian School cannot be a charter school unless it is,
among other things, part of California’s public school system and nonsectarian,5 the
parents present no authority to the effect that a charter school can excuse the statutory
requirement that tutors be credentialed if their students are to come within the tutor
exemption to compulsory public school education.
Likewise, an affidavit of Sunland Christian School administrator Terry Neven
provides no authority for the parents’ home schooling. In the affidavit, Neven talks at
length about “independent study” programs, including his school’s independent study
program. He does not mention any Education Code section that provides for parents
teaching their children by “independent study” through private schools.
Section 51745 et seq. provides for independent study for students, through a school
district or a county office of education; however, its purpose is to provide students with
certain educational opportunities, such as education during travel, or individualized
5 Charter schools are part of, and are under the jurisdiction of, California’s public
school system. (§ 47615; Wilson v. State Bd. of Education (1999) 75 Cal.App.4th 1125,
1137 et seq.) They must be nonsectarian in their programs and all other operations, they
cannot charge tuition, and they cannot be conversions from private schools. (§§ 47605,
subd. (d)(1) & 47602, subd. (b); Wilson, at p. 1131.) Their teachers must be
credentialed as teachers in other public schools would be required to be credentialed.
(§ 47605, subd. (l); Wilson, at p. 1137.)
study in an area of interest or subject not currently available in the regular school
curriculum. Clearly, section 51745 does not apply to mother’s home schooling of the
children.
(5 Charter schools are part of, and are under the jurisdiction of, California’s public
school system. (§ 47615; Wilson v. State Bd. of Education (1999) 75 Cal.App.4th 1125,
1137 et seq.) They must be nonsectarian in their programs and all other operations, they
cannot charge tuition, and they cannot be conversions from private schools. (§§ 47605,
subd. (d)(1) & 47602, subd. (b); Wilson, at p. 1131.) Their teachers must be
credentialed as teachers in other public schools would be required to be credentialed.
(§ 47605, subd. (l); Wilson, at p. 1137.))
Nor is there importance to Mr. Neven’s statement, in a letter to the Lynwood
Unified School District, that Sunland Christian School “has been evaluated by both
Los Angeles Unified School District and the Los Angeles County Office of Education
to be in compliance with state laws.”6 Such representation does not constitute
a statement that the Los Angeles Unified School District and the Los Angeles County
Office of Education knowingly gave their stamp of approval to children being deprived
of an education in a public or private full-time day school setting, or by a credentialed
tutor, through the ruse of enrolling them in a private school and then letting them stay
home and be taught by a non-credentialed parent.
(6 Both the Lynwood and the Los Angeles school districts are mentioned in
Mr. Neven’s letter because the children live in one school district, and the Sunland
Christian School is in the other school district.)
Although Mr. Neven reported to the Lynwood Unified School District that he
makes visits to the parents’ home about four times a year, and although some of the
children in the family reported to the Department of Children and Family Services
social worker that they were given tests at the end of some school years and they took
the tests at the Sunland Christian School, the fact remains that the children are taught at
home by a non-credentialed person. Moreover, the very language of section 48222 is an
implicit rejection of the parents’ position that having someone from Sunland Christian School
monitor mother’s instruction of the children is sufficient. Section 48222
provides an exemption from compulsory public school education for “[c]hildren who
are being instructed in a private full-time day school.” (Italics added.) It is the
language of the statutes that constitutes California’s plan for education of its children.
Thus, under California’s compulsory public school education law, Mr. Neven’s
occasional observation of mother’s instruction of the children and their occasional
taking of tests at the private school is without legal significance.
quote:I disagree. I think it is more wrong to say that the children belong to the State than that they belong to their parents.
I can understand someone's reaction to the idea that their children belong to the State, but it's no more true that the children belong to their parents.
quote:The best chance? I certainly didn't get the best chance to become educated -- I only got to go to public school.
they deserve the best chance they can get to become educated and grow into adulthood.
quote:
I'm all for educational standards being met, requiring the kids to pass annual standardized testing, etc. But obtaining good educational outcomes in homeschooling does not require teaching credentials.
quote:One of the failings I see in our education system is a lack of trade skills being taught and an emphasis on going to college. I think the standardized tests reflect this. And of course there is a oddly enough corresponding lack of focus/money/testing for the arts like drama and music.
For the record, I am against requiring standardized testing of homeschoolers and state evaluations of curriculum, etc. Kids moving at paces different from the "norm" is a major reason parents homeschool.
quote:The problem is when the government has to decide how or whether to restrict parents who do have their children's best interests at heart but happen to be "wrong" about how to act in those interests. There's a lot of potential for government abuse there.
It may seem offensive for someone to suggest that a parent wouldn't have their child's best interest at heart, but we all know those parents exist, just as such schools exist.
quote:I homeschool, and I agree with this.
Originally posted by Christine:
While I completely disagree with this ruling and hope it will be overturned soon, I don't see how we can let children reach adulthood without some check that they are getting the education they need to survive and thrive. It's not common, but there are parents who don't put their kids in school and don't teach them anything either. IMHO, that is a form of neglect. Granted, standardized tests are one of my least favorite things about the school (mostly the part where they teach to the test) but on the other hand, I understand the difficulty in coming up with something -- anything -- that gives us some idea how students are doing and what they are learning.
Even if state tests are part of a home school requirement, I don't see why home school can't be more student centered, go at your own pace, and focus on material that regular schools wouldn't normally cover. I just think it's a good idea to make sure they're also learning to read.
quote:A lot more parents would have a big problem with this one. Because another major reason parents homeschool is that they do not agree with some of the things taught in the public schools (usually for religious reasons.)
I think required distance-learning may be the answer to the whole problem. Maybe. That´s a big maybe.
quote:
I look forward to seeing how the conservative Education thinkers solve this problem.
quote:Get rid of No Child Left Behind. Giving the Federal Government more power of education is not a conservative idea. At the very least take out any requirement of NCLB that the Federal Government cannot finance.
1) Detailed accountability by all governmentally run education programs.
quote:Provided there is no neglect in Reading, Writing, and basic arithmetic, I think home schooling should be supported. A reasonable standard can be agreed upon. I suggest requiring the child to be withing 2 grade levels of his/her current age.
2) Home Schooling as an option for all parents...Testing would put an end to that freedom.
quote:If only a fraction of the cost of educating a pupil went to vouchers and the rest stayed in public education (say 1/3 to 2/3 split with public education getting more money), then the public would have a right to know that the 1/3 spent was teaching life skills (basic reading, writing, and arithmetic).
3) Vouchers--so that our tax money paid to teach children in public schools can be used to pay for the teaching of children in private schools, or even children in Home Schooling.
...
However, if vouchers were to go into effect, then such private schools and home schooling parents that take them would be using public funds to teach their children. As such the public would have the right to know that their funds were being used to actually teach--and tests would be mandated
quote:Yup. Some private schools won't hire teachers who are not credentialed, and many have payscales which reward having a credential, but both are purely voluntary.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
Belle, in CA, no private school is required to have credentialed teachers. I believe *all* public school teachers must be credentialed or actively working towards that credential.
quote:IIRC, there are specific subjects which must be included, but the guidelines are fairly broad. Most schools -- including religious -- basically follow the state's guidelines, and then add or tweak.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
Subjects are supposed to be "comparable to public schools" or something like that, I can't remember the exact language, but there is a lot of leeway, specifically because of private schools that include religious education in their curriculum.
quote:The vast majority of acreddited CA schools are accredited by WASC. Having dealt with them at both the high school and college level, I think their HS standards should be tightened up. (The college requirements are much more detailed and checked more often and are currently making me nuts. )
Originally posted by BannaOj:
Some private schools are "accredited" but the accrediting bodies are also a private organization, not necessarily recognized directly by the state.
quote:No legal requirement. However, there are some pretty severe problems that the school and its graduates get stuck with if it is not.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
There is no requirement that a private school must be accredited or working towards any sort of accrediation.
quote:Rivka would you care to elucidate those problems? I believe the problems you describe are real, but since graduating from a non-accredited school didn't hurt me in the slightest, I have no idea what they are.
Originally posted by rivka:
quote:No legal requirement. However, there are some pretty severe problems that the school and its graduates get stuck with if it is not.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
There is no requirement that a private school must be accredited or working towards any sort of accrediation.
quote:The problem is in the terminology, I think. If my taxes go to pay for my share of my child's public education, and I choose not to take advantage of that particular option, then I should pay less taxes. Calling it a voucher and having the money pass through the government before it comes back to me doesn't make the money public, IMO, but I can see why people might demand accountability of those funds.
However, if vouchers were to go into effect, then such private schools and home schooling parents that take them would be using public funds to teach their children. As such the public would have the right to know that their funds were being used to actually teach--and tests would be mandated, as well as a bunch of other provisions that would lead to them being just another cog in the Educational Industrial Complex.
quote:That is only relevant if you can show that the parents who choose to homeschool their children constitute a representative sample of the population as a whole. It takes a lot of time and effort to properly homeschool children, and I suspect that the parents who choose to do so would tend to skewed towards parents who are more capable because of that. Even then, though, there are still plenty of cases where parents simply turn out to be poor teachers due to lack of dedication or lack of teaching skill.
Originally posted by PSI Teleport:
"Replace "almost any parent" with "fewer then 1%" and I'd agree with you."
Do you think so? Are there some statistics that show that the children of less than 1% of homeschooling parents perform as well in college and in life as the average public schooled student?
?
quote:Without any comment on your personal qualifications, because I don't know you, in general experience tutoring and teaching at the college level does NOT qualify a person to teach young children. Many people who are excellent college or even high school teachers would fail miserably in an elementary or preschool classroom. The skillset (and personality type) to be able to present things at a level understandable to munchkins is a lot more important than knowledge of advanced subject matter.
Originally posted by Jhai:
For instance, I'm currently in a Ph.D program for economics. In a few years I'll be qualified to teach the subject at the college level. I've studied a lot of mathematics, sciences, and social sciences, and have plenty of experience tutoring and teaching. While I doubt I could walk into a high school classroom tomorrow and teach any of the subjects (except math & econ), I don't doubt that I could very adequately homeschool a handful of children. (Abhi could take care of English and some of the sciences. Our knowledge bases are very complementary. )
quote:You'll note that I never said I could be a good elementary teacher - that takes more patience, and ability at crowd control than I have the interest in developing. However, it's a completely difference experience teaching when you have, say, five children at various ages that you know well than when you have a 30 six year-olds running around a classroom.
Originally posted by dkw:
quote:Without any comment on your personal qualifications, because I don't know you, in general experience tutoring and teaching at the college level does NOT qualify a person to teach young children. Many people who are excellent college or even high school teachers would fail miserably in an elementary or preschool classroom. The skillset (and personality type) to be able to present things at a level understandable to munchkins is a lot more important than knowledge of advanced subject matter.
Originally posted by Jhai:
For instance, I'm currently in a Ph.D program for economics. In a few years I'll be qualified to teach the subject at the college level. I've studied a lot of mathematics, sciences, and social sciences, and have plenty of experience tutoring and teaching. While I doubt I could walk into a high school classroom tomorrow and teach any of the subjects (except math & econ), I don't doubt that I could very adequately homeschool a handful of children. (Abhi could take care of English and some of the sciences. Our knowledge bases are very complementary. )
I am an excellent teacher of adults. I am an adequate teacher of children. If I had to try to teach even "a handful" of lower elementary kids more often than one or two afternoons a week I would go stir-crazy.
quote:What is your basis for comparison? Yes, people still do stupid things, and yes, the education system is far from perfect. No one is saying that it is anything else. However, you need to have some baseline here in order to make a comparison. Is there any reason whatsoever to believe that things would be better off without the public education system?
Originally posted by PSI Teleport:
Yeah, I get it. I LIVE in a world where publicly educated people are. I GET it. Do you? Do you see how well public education has served us these last few decades? Look around!
However, as far as having to live in a world where the people are uneducated, I have this to say: I can't do one darn thing about the people I have to live with in this world. People choose every day to do completely idiotic things regardless of the fact that they were "educated". People choose all by their very own selves how hard they are going to try and how much they are going to care. People who were "educated" vote for morons EVERY DAY and put them in charge of our government. (Well, really just on election days. ) And I think that the very best thing that I can do to help those people (and thereby help myself and my family) is to teach them personal responsibility. I understand that it's important to help people in need. But how can we reasonably expect this from people who don't even take care of themselves? Whatever happened to people who want to excel? People who really want to get themselves into better situations? People who want it badly enough to actually try to fix it themselves, rather than waiting for someone else to fix it?
quote:This is where I go nuts when we talk of hs kids being sent to school when they don't meet standards. I'm not opposed to meeting standards; my own kids exceed them. But when we expect and want to require all hs parents to do better rhan the public schools-make me crazy.
Private school and/or home schools could then focus on arts, vocations, or college. Yes, some would only know the basics of the basics, but the public schools probably have around a third who graduate only knowing the basics.
If the child can not keep within 2 grades of tested reading comprehension, writing, and arithmetic, then the state should have a right to force compulsory certified education.
EDIT: This is a rough draft idea of how I think it should be handled. I am sure smarter conservative thinkers could vastly improve it. [/QB]
quote:It's often different when it's your own kids.
Originally posted by dkw:
quote:Without any comment on your personal qualifications, because I don't know you, in general experience tutoring and teaching at the college level does NOT qualify a person to teach young children. Many people who are excellent college or even high school teachers would fail miserably in an elementary or preschool classroom. The skillset (and personality type) to be able to present things at a level understandable to munchkins is a lot more important than knowledge of advanced subject matter.
Originally posted by Jhai:
For instance, I'm currently in a Ph.D program for economics. In a few years I'll be qualified to teach the subject at the college level. I've studied a lot of mathematics, sciences, and social sciences, and have plenty of experience tutoring and teaching. While I doubt I could walk into a high school classroom tomorrow and teach any of the subjects (except math & econ), I don't doubt that I could very adequately homeschool a handful of children. (Abhi could take care of English and some of the sciences. Our knowledge bases are very complementary. )
I am an excellent teacher of adults. I am an adequate teacher of children. If I had to try to teach even "a handful" of lower elementary kids more often than one or two afternoons a week I would go stir-crazy.
quote:Time for the obligitory Sandia Report link. For those not familiar with the Sandia Report, George Bush Sr. (the education president) commissioned Sandia national labs to determine the state of education in the U.S. The study is the ONLY comprehensive study of its kind. When the results came back, Bush suppressed the results, because it didn't suit his political goals to admit that public education is doing just fine thank you.
Do you see how well public education has served us these last few decades? Look around!
quote:I think it might be more than 1% but between everything I've personally seen and everything non-anecdotal I've studied? I'd be real, real surprised if it was over one in fifty.
I have experience with homeschooling methods, and curricula, professionally and personally. And the big thing that the vast vast vast majority of american parents don't have is enough TIME (or understanding of economics to create the time) to implement a good homeschooling program.
I stand by my statement that fewer then 1% of american parents could do better then the state at educating their children.
quote:I think it's typically up to 21.
So does this mean we are including GED's in this? I'm not complaining, just curious. How old can you be and still attend high school?
quote:I think it's about the worst idea I regularly hear thrown out by fringe political types. If we ever wanted to assure that we lose out in the postindustrial economy and drift into the has-beens of history, we should get rid of public schools.
I don't think that undoing public education is a good idea.
quote:There are. Schools are required to provide services to meet the needs of all students. If they can't meed the needs of a particular student within the system, then they can and do send students to private schools that have the facilities to meet those needs. Generally speaking, however, private schools have LESS capacity to provide specialized instruction than public schools do, so more often than not, students that can't have their needs met in a particular public school are sent to another public school, or publicly run specialized school. In New York we have BOCES, which is a cooperative educational system that allows multiple school districts to utilize state-wide resources to be applied to programs that would be too small to implement at the district level simply because students with aparticular disability simply don't exist in large enough numbers to justify the expense otherwise.
I think there should also be provisions-- scholarships, if you will-- for parents whose kids aren't functioning in the public school system but who lack funding options to change that.
quote:AvidReader, I won't make any claims about you personally.
Originally posted by AvidReader:
At some point, we need to accept that not everyone was created equal like we love to claim. Some people are different, and that's ok. I think we should be doing more to find ways to get that different style of education to the kids whose parents can't get it for them on their own. Or won't.
quote:While I think you're exactly right that this is how it is, I'm incredibly sad that we're willing to settle for that. I wouldn't want "good enough" for my kids if I had any. I'd want the absolute best I could give them.
But in the end, the public schools are not there to give THE BEST education possible for every single individual kid-- they're there to serve the majority of kids and give them a decent, functional education.
quote:Almost all of these are available to homeschooled children in many communities if they and their parents want them. My husband's former employer has 10 kids, all homeschooled, and three of his boys were on a homeschool baseball team that went to the national championship a few years back. I know of homeschool association and group dances, conferences for varying interests, yearbooks, science fairs, groups that get together to do chemistry and other subjects often more conduicive to group teaching (especially if you want to hire a lab) and work on group projects, study groups, social groups, Boy Scout and Girl Scout troops, choirs and bands, etc., etc. Many school districts/states also permit homeschooled students to participate in public school extracurricular and other activities, such as, marching bands, academic decathalon, and sports, if they and their parents so desire.
I think of all the things I would have missed out on by no
t attending a public school, like marching band and orchestra, yearbook, running for school office, sports teams, homecoming, dances, class projects, science fair, math olympics, the list goes on.
quote:I wholeheartedly agree with this.
I'm happy to pay my share of taxes to make sure the public schools are as good as they can be. Heck, raise my taxes if it's all going to schools - there's a lot worse it can be spent on.
quote:But it would be a very different experience as a home schooled child than at a high school. I'm not saying that kids wouldn't get value out of these activities, I'm just not sure you can compare (for example) participating in a marching band as a home schooled child without a school affiliation and participating within a school community.
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
quote:Almost all of these are available to homeschooled children in many communities if they and their parents want them. My husband's former employer has 10 kids, all homeschooled, and three of his boys were on a homeschool baseball team that went to the national championship a few years back. I know of homeschool association and group dances, conferences for varying interests, yearbooks, science fairs, groups that get together to do chemistry and other subjects often more conduicive to group teaching (especially if you want to hire a lab) and work on group projects, study groups, social groups, Boy Scout and Girl Scout troops, choirs and bands, etc., etc. Many school districts/states also permit homeschooled students to participate in public school extracurricular and other activities, such as, marching bands, academic decathalon, and sports, if they and their parents so desire.
I think of all the things I would have missed out on by not attending a public school, like marching band and orchestra, yearbook, running for school office, sports teams, homecoming, dances, class projects, science fair, math olympics, the list goes on.
quote:My school *is* there to give the best education possible to every single kid. But in this behemoth we call the public school system, things can be run very differently just across the county line, let alone across the country.
quote:While I think you're exactly right that this is how it is, I'm incredibly sad that we're willing to settle for that. I wouldn't want "good enough" for my kids if I had any. I'd want the absolute best I could give them.
quote:
But in the end, the public schools are not there to give THE BEST education possible for every single individual kid-- they're there to serve the majority of kids and give them a decent, functional education.
quote:1) It's been a couple years since you graduated HS, and my impression is that there has been some cracking down in recent years.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
quote:Rivka would you care to elucidate those problems? I believe the problems you describe are real, but since graduating from a non-accredited school didn't hurt me in the slightest, I have no idea what they are.
Originally posted by rivka:
quote:No legal requirement. However, there are some pretty severe problems that the school and its graduates get stuck with if it is not.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
There is no requirement that a private school must be accredited or working towards any sort of accrediation.
quote:Most people who go to public school are never taught calculus in high school.
how is someone who never even took calculus supposed to teach calculus?
quote:It seems to me that a good public school education is the exception rather than the rule.
I'll bet a good home education is the exception rather than the rule.
quote:A lot of home-schooled kids start taking classes at the local community college.
What happens when they need more instruction than the parent can give?
quote:The study that Glenn posted would seem to contradict that.
Originally posted by mr_porteiro_head:
It seems to me that a good public school education is the exception rather than the rule.
quote:I understand that. North of me ( as in, places I couldn't afford to live in) there are a few amazing school districts. Ours is horrendous. I have several tacher friends who are all amazing people, and the only one really happy is the one in a multi age gifted class. Why? In our poorly funded district, the ONLY thing that matters is passing the WASL. Her kids all have the gifts to pass it naturally; she doesn't have to teach to it. She is free to actually meet their educational needs. One of the moms in my co-op never planned to HS- she has a teacher's degree. Her first year, she was pulled aside at the beginning of the year and told by the principal; "Here's a list of six kids I think can't pass the WASL. The only thing you need to do this year is get them passing". She quit the next year, pulled her kids out of school and enrolled in k12.
Originally posted by Liz B:
OK, here's one of the biggest problems with the public school system. As a public school teacher, I'm sitting here getting annoyed at what KQ and romanylass are saying. And yet what they're saying is an absolutely accurate representation of their experiences.
quote:Like mph said, community college, or one of the many distance programs like k12 or Calvert. If the parents are on top of things there no reason they can't easily find the resources for their kids to excell in the things they don't know. I'll never excell at math, so my son, who does, uses a self teaching program and hubby works with Olivia. Other things we learn togther- I had no background in Greek or Latin, and barely knew my history; I'm learning it with them. That's one fo the things I would never trade in for a school based education.
Originally posted by katharina:
but how is someone who never even took calculus supposed to teach calculus?
.
quote:Pre-calculus which general includes and introduction to the basic theorems and problems in calculus is standard high school math in most areas.
quote:
how is someone who never even took calculus supposed to teach calculus?
Most people who go to public school are never taught calculus in high school.
quote:Well there are studies for performance of the public schools and they don't support that contention. In fact one recent study found that when you control for socio/economic factors public schools do as well at educating students as private schools, in many cases better. In fact if you control for socio/economic factors the worst performing schools are conservative christian schools. Home schools weren't included in the study but based on what I've seen I'd be willing to bet that home schooled children on the average perform significantly worse than their public school counterparts with comparably educated parents.
quote:
I'll bet a good home education is the exception rather than the rule.
It seems to me that a good public school education is the exception rather than the rule.
quote:Agreed. However, timing becomes an issue -- you need to take the test(s) with enough time to get results in time for deadlines (like the recent March 2 deadline for CalGrants).
Originally posted by BannaOj:
I don't have a problem requiring a homeschooled student to take an SAT or GED test. I think it is a reasonable requirement.
quote:Rabbit on this point I agree with you completely. HSLDA is the biggest and most powerful legal advocate group out there, but some of their data drives me batty. They stand for views that are so cognitively dissonant that they tick me off to no end.
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
One of my biggest complaints about home schooling is that its proponents rely too heavily on anecdotes to demonstrate the superiority of home schooling but they specifically exclude any anecdotes that don't fit their conclusions.
quote:Yeah, important was probably the wrong word choice.
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
Well, the yearbooks I've seen looked like they were pretty important to the kids who participated in them; they were usually for the homeschool groups that got together twice a week or so to study science, languages, and play sports and such together.
quote:That's not what I'd call homeschooling. I'd call it abdicating parental responsibility. It's things like that that make me so strongly support testing.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
There are also a significant portion of "homeschooling" parents that decide to "homeschool" because their child is a discipline problem in public school. This is the biggest recipe for disaster. These parents don't actually tend to run in the normal homeschooling crowds that romany or kq would participate in. Often the kids just run totally delinquent, after being removed as well. The parent is happy that they aren't getting calls from the school... until the start getting calls from the cops, and DCFS... The root cause discipline issue 99% of the time is *not* addressed by removing the kid from the school, and normally only makes the child more resentful, and the parent loses even more control than before.
quote:IME, most college-bound students take the SAT or ACT anyway, no?
School cannot certify GPA for purposes of CalGrants. That means students either lose eligibility altogether, or must take SATs, GEDs, or other tests accepted by CSAC
quote:In time to get the results before March 2 of their senior year? And more and more colleges have changed their requirements -- quite a few no longer require either test any longer. Again, it's not that many or even most of these extra steps can't be dealt with; it's that attending a non-accredited school adds extra steps that students may not be aware of until it becomes a problem. You can call them a loser if it helps; I have to help them figure out what the heck to do now that they've missed the deadline.
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
quote:IME, most college-bound students take the SAT or ACT anyway, no?
School cannot certify GPA for purposes of CalGrants. That means students either lose eligibility altogether, or must take SATs, GEDs, or other tests accepted by CSAC
quote:I think this is very true.
Also on bias. There is a wierd dual bias that even with Rabbit's proposed study is very hard to get around.
You see a "sucessful" homeschooler is highly unlikely to put their children back into a public school.
Therefore, all the public school folks are seeing are the "unsucessful" homeschooled children.
quote:I was referring to the CalGrant application deadline, not the deadline for any particular school.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
Also as far as getting the results by March 2nd I think that was pretty standard even when I was applying for schools. You should tell the testing service what schools you want the information sent to at the time you take the test, so that they get them in time.
quote:I'm not sure this is as big a problem as you implied.
Also on bias. There is a wierd dual bias that even with Rabbit's proposed study is very hard to get around.
You see a "sucessful" homeschooler is highly unlikely to put their children back into a public school.
Therefore, all the public school folks are seeing are the "unsucessful" homeschooled children.
Conversely, an "unsucessful" homeschooler isn't necessarily even going to be a data collection point for "homeschoolers" because they put their children back in school.
quote:While I can't honestly disagree with this statement, as a professional educator I do have to disagree with the implication that good teachers are superfluous.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
FYI, It is entirely possible to teach yourself algebra, geometry, trigonometry and calculus, using existing textbooks.
quote:Right, because anyone who relies on the help of a teacher or councillor to point out something they could have looked up if they had known what to look up is a "loser".
Originally posted by BannaOj:
If they are incapable of finding out those deadlines and any other requirements then yes, they are in the unofficial "loser" homeschooling category
quote:I don't think its appropriate to share specific details about students I've worked with but I will give some generalities. My experiences are with home schoolers once they enter the University, not those who move into primary and secondary schools. Most of my experience was at Montana State University, for some reason I saw far fewer home schoolers in Utah. The home schoolers who came to MSU were largely from remote areas of the west and so they didn't generally have the option of taking community college classes or participating in other organized classes. My general observations based on a variety of different types of interactions are as follows.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
While anecdote, is not data, I'd love to hear about some of Rabbit's negative interactions with homeschoolers.
quote:You miss my point. There are advantages to having mentors who know the system. One disadvantage of home schooling is that you forego access to these people. That is a real disadvantage and one parents should be aware of when they choose to homeschool.
Originally posted by Jhai:
That's not what BannaOj said at all. She was specifically referring to the homeschooling population in that post. I agree that if you're incapable of finding out deadlines - as a parent/child team that has been responsible for the child's education for years, then you're probably a "loser" type of homeschooling family. Initiative and the ability to find the information you need are pretty important skills if you're going to be homeschooling.
quote:It's a standard offering, but it's not really normal for most kids to get to the pre-calculus stage.
Pre-calculus which general includes and introduction to the basic theorems and problems in calculus is standard high school math in most areas.
quote:Curious: don't most high schools require four years of math? Mine did, which meant that, unless you were in the super-slow moving track, you'd at least cover Algebra 1, Geometry, Algebra 2/Trig, and Pre-Calc. Although my high school was in an extremely good & competitive district (in California), so maybe it was just the area...
Originally posted by Glenn Arnold:
quote:It's a standard offering, but it's not really normal for most kids to get to the pre-calculus stage.
Pre-calculus which general includes and introduction to the basic theorems and problems in calculus is standard high school math in most areas.
quote:Nope. 3.
Originally posted by Jhai:
Curious: don't most high schools require four years of math?
quote:It is difficult to get out of taking pre-calc at my high school. You can do it by coming in at pre-algebra and only taking three years of math or doing extremely poorly in other math classes so as to not advance. I would say that pre-calc is not only the norm at my school but also at all of the high schools in the area as well.
Originally posted by Glenn Arnold:
quote:It's a standard offering, but it's not really normal for most kids to get to the pre-calculus stage.
Pre-calculus which general includes and introduction to the basic theorems and problems in calculus is standard high school math in most areas.
quote:I never missed your point for a second but you are clearly still missing mine.
Originally posted by Jhai:
You're clearly missing mine. It is the responsibility of the homeschooling family to know this stuff far more than it is the responsibility of the average family that sends their kid to public schools.
quote:No one has said that, or said anything similar on this entire thread. BannaOj didn't say that, and neither did I. Nothing anyone has said would suggest that they think your BIL was a loser because he or his immigrant parents didn't know the system. I responded to your post to point this out, and then responded again when your next post again suggested that you did not understand how your original post was wrongly accusing BannaOj of making a claim that would mean your BIL was a "loser".
Right, because anyone who relies on the help of a teacher or councillor to point out something they could have looked up if they had known what to look up is a "loser".
quote:I would say that it's a movement that judges the value that the child gets from the trained professionals in the current system to be less than the value of the one-on-one help from a parent.
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
[Homeschooling is] a movement that as a whole discounts the value of trained educational professionals.
quote:And as others have said before, not everyone in public schools in every area has access to a good team of professionals.
No homeschool parent can know everything known by a good team of educational professionals. What those professionals have to offer is of value that can not be replaced by a parent whose done some research.
quote:I don't claim to know everything known by a good team of educational professionals. No single teacher can. What I do know is how to seek out great teachers for my children in the areas they need help that I can't provide. THAT is the beauty of homeschooling, to me. The freedom to put my children in optimum learning situations...and remove them from detrimental ones, at my discretion.
No homeschool parent can know everything known by a good team of educational professionals. What those professionals have to offer is of value that can not be replaced by a parent whose done some research.
quote:Yes, that sounds very familiar.
Originally posted by AvidReader:
Luv, I personally don't have the money to send poor or neglected kids to private school. I don't have the people skills to convince a disinterested parent to look into a charter school.
quote:Agreed. I kind of figured my post would come across a little combative, so thank you for the opportunity to clarify.
Originally posted by ketchupqueen:
That seems a little unfair. I'm betting AvidReader can't afford a whole year of private school tuition. But if there was a charity set up that he was aware of that served kids in his area and had a proven track record, I bet he'd be willing to give what he could toward it.
quote:If a homeschooling parent does *not* consider the fact that they are going to need to do their own research on this topic, if they choose to homeschool in some form during high school, then yes, I do consider them "homeschooling losers". If a homeschooling parent can't figure out *how* to find out the hoops that need to be jumped through to get the kid into college, then they are "homeschooling losers".
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
You miss my point. There are advantages to having mentors who know the system. One disadvantage of home schooling is that you forego access to these people. That is a real disadvantage and one parents should be aware of when they choose to homeschool.
Yes its possible to make up for some of that by doing your own research and yes not every child in public or private school gets that kind of mentor. But not knowing a particular piece of information or where to find it doesn't make a person a looser. Good mentoring is a thing of worth.
quote:That's an amazing read. I jumped to this part because I was interested in her personal experience first, but I'm motivated now to read the rest.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
Part V. The Gentle Spirit Controversy. If you are going to skil a section this is the one to skip. It deals with the author's embroilment with being blacklisted by some in the homeschooling community due to a divorce with complicating factors. She she won a lawsuit against influential people in the homeschooling community including some who are now prominent in HSLDA.
quote:I started teaching at the University level in the early nineties and had quite a bit of interaction with home schooled students for about 10 years. I've had a lot less interaction over the past 5 years so its difficult for me to say much about trends.
Rabbit, your points exactly match up with concerns I have about many "2nd generation" homeschoolers (not the best term but the best one I can come up with at the moment).
I'm also curious as to how many years ago you first started interacting with homeschoolers, and if you think anything has changed over that time.
In general, (although homeschooling is still so diverse it is hard to generalize) the "first generation" homeschoolers were much more actively aware of all of the drawbacks you listed, and taking steps to directly counteract all of the negatives you mentioned.
I think the "2nd gen" homeschoolers relied on a lot of data from the "1st gen" homeschoolers, not realizing how hard that group worked to expose their kids to a variety of situations and overcome the exact drawbacks you mentioned.
quote:I've not only encountered that attitude, but had almost those exact WORDS said to me. I've also been told I'm not a good Christian because I send my kids to public school and because I intend to be a public school teacher.
Perhaps I object to the implication that this differentiates parents who choose to home school from those who don't, an attitude I have definitely felt from some home school parents. I've known more than a few parents who had the attitude that they had to homeschool to be good parents.
quote:Agreed. It would be nice if parents put their time and energy into volunteering at the public schools and helping to make education better for all kids.
Perhaps it is simply because I personally think a strong public education systems is the most important part of a strong community. If the parents who care most about their children's education pull out of the public institutions, it condemns those institutions to a downward spiral that adversely affects the entire community -- even those who home school.
quote:I finally had a chance to read the article more carefully. (As well as some other news sources on the topic.)
Originally posted by Jhai:
The LA Times is reporting that a California state appellate court ruled that parents without teaching credentials will not be allowed to homeschool their children.
quote:Actually, the most immediate effects are seen as focusing on ind. study HSers. Then going to the reistered-as-private-school HSers. At least from what I've read.
Originally posted by rivka:
quote:I finally had a chance to read the article more carefully. (As well as some other news sources on the topic.)
Originally posted by Jhai:
The LA Times is reporting that a California state appellate court ruled that parents without teaching credentials will not be allowed to homeschool their children.
First of all, I'm not clear on whether this only affects the be-a-really-small-private-school homeschooling option, or the others as well. Can parents still use the independent-study option? (Which is more popular with the locals I know who homeschool.)
Also, it seems to me that this threatens the ability of private schools to hire teachers without a credential. Does it?
quote:(From the HSLDA site, in one of their articles on response to the ruling.)
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell comes to the defense of homeschool families. “The California Department of Education policy will not change in any way as a result of this ruling. Parents still have the right to homeschool in this state,” he said.
quote:And yet if their roads were in poor shape, no one would imply that they should go out and help patch it. I find it interesting that schools get a different standard than other public services that way.
It would be nice if parents put their time and energy into volunteering at the public schools and helping to make education better for all kids.
quote:Ultimate responsibility should rest with the child.
Do you believe that a parent has the ultimate responsibility for their child's education or not?
quote:True. The problem is,extreme parents on all sides on the dbate can't see that there is no one, right educational solution for all. That's why we need ALL available options-public, home, private, magnet, charter, vo-tech, and everything else. Eliminate one, any one, and kids wil suffer.
Originally posted by The Rabbit:
If parents who home school are truly "bound by their common love and concern for their children and their desire to do what is right by them", they should feel that bond with all good parents no matter how they choose to school their children.
quote:I thought we still had a few years -- projected, not yet actual.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
I'm kind of interested that they are couching it as a "minority" issue, because that it implies whites are in the majority, and as I recall there isn't actually a white majority in CA anymore.
quote:For the whole state I don't know. I do know that the Oxnard Union HS Dist. very much has a white minority. Especially once you remove the high school in Camarillo from the numbers. Probably 2/5 to 1/2 of the Rio Mesa HS (my alma mater) population comes from Camarillo. This and all of the other schools are located in Oxnard which has a majority hispanic population.
Originally posted by rivka:
quote:I thought we still had a few years -- projected, not yet actual.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
I'm kind of interested that they are couching it as a "minority" issue, because that it implies whites are in the majority, and as I recall there isn't actually a white majority in CA anymore.
quote:I'm pretty sure it's actual.
Originally posted by rivka:
quote:I thought we still had a few years -- projected, not yet actual.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
I'm kind of interested that they are couching it as a "minority" issue, because that it implies whites are in the majority, and as I recall there isn't actually a white majority in CA anymore.
quote:While the statistics are striking, and while I admit I haven't lived there for quite a while, from what I know of the area, I truly don't think it is a racial issue as much as a socio-economic one.
According to the 2006-07 California Basic Educational Data System (CBEDS), the OUHSD has a minority student population of 81.5 percent. Therefore, in accordance with the SBE’s and CDE’s general approach to this issue as expressed in the Handbook for Conducting Racial and Ethic Studies in School Districts, the OUHSD does not currently have a “proportionate (balanced or slightly imbalanced)” minority student population—rather, OUHSD is disproportionately minority. Removal of the PVUSD and the SUSD from OUHSD to form the new CUSD, and withdrawing a significant portion of the OUHSD non-minority student population, will increase the OUHSD minority population percentage to 91.3 percent according to information provided by the OUHSD. The minority student population of the proposed CUSD would be 44.5 percent.
quote:When I went to college in Indiana, I had the exact same feeling of culture shock. Coming from a high school where 70-80% of the students were Asian (and most of the others Eastern European or Hispanic immigrants), I didn't know what to do with all the white people who didn't even know what a FOB was. (Note: my best friend in high school was so fobby she was a walking stereotype. I'm not hatin' on the 1st gen immigrants here. )
Originally posted by BannaOj:
Although those numbers do back up the fact that I actually had a minority experience growing up... I grew up in Oxnard, which clearly has a radically different demographic than Camarillo. When I went to Oklahoma for college, it was a bit of a culture shock to adjust to all the white people... even if I was white myself!
quote:Yup. I'd guesstimate that about a third of my school was 1st gen, and another third at least was second. Half my friends were dragged off to Chinese Saturday School every week, and you'd hear a lot of languages around the quad. I moved to Germany for a year after graduating 'cause I was so tired of being the only monolingual person around.
Originally posted by BannaOj:
FOB = Fresh off the Boat right?
quote:I home-school my son, AND volunteer in classrooms at a local public school, as does my home-schooled son and my Mom (who also provides instruction for my son sometimes). My son also does educational presentations in the public school and volunteers at the public library.
Originally posted by Belle:
[QUOTE]Perhaps it is simply because I personally think a strong public education systems is the most important part of a strong community. If the parents who care most about their children's education pull out of the public institutions, it condemns those institutions to a downward spiral that adversely affects the entire community -- even those who home school.
Agreed. It would be nice if parents put their time and energy into volunteering at the public schools and helping to make education better for all kids.
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