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Pros And Cons Of Home Schooling

December 29th, 2008 No comments

A Look At The Pros And Cons Of Home Schooling

Are you trying to decide if home schooling is right for you? Consider these pros and cons of home schooling to help you make your decision.

Pros And Cons Of Home Schooling: The Pros

What are the positive things about home schooling? There are so many, you could read about them for hours. But here are just a few:

Nurturing Home Environment

What can be better than having your child spend his learning time at home, in an environment that you as a parent have complete control over? Public school teachers try their best, but your children simply can’t get the supervision in public schools that they get at home. Virtually every public school has its bullies. If there are bullies in the home school, they are usually the student’s brothers or sisters, and you can stop the bullying before it even starts.

Children Learn Better In The Safety Of Their Homes

This is a sensitive subject to bring up, and no disrespect is meant to the families who have lost children because of violence in schools. But let’s face it, there has never been a home school shooting yet, and chances are good there never will be one. Public school shootings, on the other hand, continue to happen in spite of all the safety measures.

We have to include the issue of safety when we discuss the pros and con of home schooling. With all the violence and dissonance in the world today, there are lots of weird characters out there, and some of them could end up in your child’s public school.

Parents Control The Curriculum

In every discussion of the pros and cons of home schooling, this is the number one reason why parents home school their children. Parents – especially Christian parents – believe the secular public school curriculum teaches too much theoretical instruction about evolution, not enough instruction about sexual morality, and too much of a secular viewpoint about history and social studies.

Parents who home school their children integrate traditional subjects, like math and reading, with a version of other subjects – science, social studies, and history – that fits into the religious and moral beliefs of the family. Home school parents get to teach reading from The Bible.

Pros And Con Of Home Schooling: The Cons

Critics of home schooling say that home school children are not properly socialized. However, home schooling always involves schooling outside the home, where children interact with people of all different ages and diversities, as opposed to just interacting with children their own age.

Homeschooled Children Continue Outperforming Their Public School Counterparts

March 4th, 2010 No comments

In America, there was a time when the idea of homeschooling raised eyebrows of concern and could result in a visit from social services. A lack of trust by the government and public in general in a parent’s ability to educate their own children made homeschooling a bit of a stigma.

Even today in some circles, there are still many “old school” thinkers that go so far as to say that homeschooling is tantamount to deliberate child abuse. As ridiculous as that sounds to most of us, overcoming such ignorance has been a problem for some parents looking into homeschooling.

Overseas, it can be much worse. Homeschooling is illegal in Germany, a law instituted under Hitler and still enforced today. German families who choose to home school must do so in secret and run the risk of arrest; or worse, having the state take their children away.

Performance of home schools versus public and private schools

It doesn’t take much effort or investigation to discover that homeschoolers excel above their public school counter parts in nearly every category. According to a study conducted by Dr. Lawrence Rudner:

• The average home schooled 8th grade student performs four grade levels above the national average.

• One in four home school students are enrolled in a grade level that is above their age level.

• In every grade and in every subject, home schooled students outperform both public and private school students.

Other studies confirm these findings, showing that home schooled students have a much higher college entry rate, score higher on SAT’s and ACT’s, have a higher rate of college graduation, and earn higher incomes in the workforce.

These numbers come despite the fact that about 25% of parents in America who choose to home school either never attended college, or attended but never received a degree. An additional 7-10% have only an Associate degree.

Why do homeschooled children perform so well?

The advantages to homeschooling are many, and are quite revealing as to why homeschooled children do so well.

One on one attention – Whenever a child needs assistance, the parent is there to give him or her full attention, whereas in public schools a teacher must divide their attention between dozens of children.

Ability to focus more time where needed – If a student excels in math, but flounders in science, then a parent can very easily devote as much time as is needed to teaching science. Public schools are regimented, with each subject receiving equal time regardless as to the performance of the student.

Homeschooled students move at their own pace – If a student excels in math then they can advance much quicker than students in a public school, where all students are required to move at the same pace.

Diminished distractions – The parents control the environment, and there is no peer pressure from other students trying to talk a homeschooled student into doing things other than school work or study.

Do parents need some kind of special training or certification?

Some states highly regulate home schools, requiring training and certification in some instances. However, studies show that there is virtually no difference in performance between homeschooled students in highly regulated states versus homeschooled students in states with little or no regulation.

The truth is that homeschooling is gaining in popularity and as such, more and more information and help materials are becoming available. The modern homeschooling parent can now effectively teach their children, regardless of the parent’s own education level, thanks to pre-developed curriculums such as those provided by Heritage Home School Academy.

Parents today can use these curriculums to guide their children. Some curriculums are so effective that parents can study ahead of their children in any subject for which they are lacking and effectively teach the same subject to their children. Furthermore, many children often “learn to learn,” reaching a point where they are able to teach themselves and follow a curriculum with little interaction required from the parent.

Each year more families choose to start homeschooling, spreading knowledge about its benefits, and erasing old stigmas along the way. For more information about homeschooling and home school curriculums, visit Heritage Home School Academy.

Heritage Home School Academy is a provider of accredited home school curriculums for grades K-12. Heritage also provides a Christian home school curriculum based on the Bible for those wishing to incorporate Christian values into their homeschooling, something that is outlawed in public schools.