Question:

Homeschool Critics: Is this the type of society you want?

by Guest64118  |  earlier

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You argue constantly that homeschool students are not getting the socialization they need.

First a definition from the Miriam Webster Medical Dictionary of the word "socialization."

"the process by which a human being beginning at infancy acquires the habits, beliefs, and accumulated knowledge of society through education and training for adult status"

Habits instilled through public school:

- Obsession with pop culture

- Government dependency

- Blind acceptance of authority

- Intolerance of those who do not conform

- etc.

Beliefs instilled through public school:

- Moral relativism

- Anti-intellect / anti-academic attitudes

- Promiscuity (even as young or younger than age 12) is OK

- Being the victim of bullies is necessary for growth

- Violence is a fact of life

- Active children (mostly boys) must be subdued

- etc.

Knowledge gained through public school:

- Empirical evidence is clear that public schools are not educating children as well as in previous generations.

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18 ANSWERS


  1. Some kids get everything they need from homeschooling, but some don't. I am a homeschooler that has been to public school and has been home schooled and it has been better for me than public school. I have experienced everything in homeschooling as in public school. With some kids this is not the case. Some kids want the public school environment, they want to be around their friends for long periods of time which is just not possible in homeschooling. My finial word, as a homeschooler and a public schooler, is that people should not have a problem with ether one. So critics leave us be.

    I feel disgust that some people HATE homeschooling. Getting rid of homeschooling is like taking away our rights as American citizens. We have a right to be taught as we want it.

    Also through homeschooling that it is humanity' nature to be scared of change. Adults, kids being homeshooled is not going to effect you so, there is no reason for there to be critics.

    The reason it seems like this was written by a ten year old it is because it was.

    Being homeschooled is not like being withheld from the world. I understand modern culture as much as anyone else.

    I am smarter than a fifth grader.

    I am only ten years old and am capable of reading and understanding adults books.

    WAR AND PEACE ROCKS!!!!!!


  2. You left out the ability to make friends and get along with people.  I don't blame you, though.  Misrepresenting the positions of those who disagree with you is a totally respectable thing to do.

  3. I don't think those habits are instilled by the school systems, rather they are a product of parents not taking enough initiative in their children's lives. I'm fairly certain that none of these things are directly in the curriculum of any school, and that these trends can be adjusted by a parent's direct involvement in their child's life, as well as setting a solid moral example. These situations arise when parents assume it is solely the responsibility of the school to educate their children, rather than a parent/ school partnership. The school system provides some very valuable lessons to children, in socialization and peer to peer interaction, as well as exposure to different cultures and socio-economic classes that one cannot get through home schooling. Likewise, the parent is responsible for teaching the child to balance these lessons, with the moral upbringing and lessons passed down through parent-child interaction. Obviously, if you're a proponent of home-schooling you are willing to take this time with your children - the problem is with people that see the educational system as compulsory day-care.

  4. I'm not a homeschool critic, yet I just have such a strong desire to respond to what has been said!

    "All 3 kids in my family went to PS and we turned out great, we volunteer, raised good families, etc.

    "Protecting" your child in an artificial bubble is not the answer."

    You know, my grandmother smoked for over 60 years and was fine. And most people eat junk food regularly and probably turn out fine. That doesn't mean that it's actually okay for us all to eat junk food.

    I, too, turned out fine after public school. But I had to stick out like a sore thumb in many ways to turn out fine. And I still have some little issues that are a direct result of the attitude against intellect that was present.

    "All of those habits exist everywhere"

    I disagree--or at the very least disagree to the degree that those habits exist in different environments. Children learn what they live. When surrounded by 30 other kids just as immature, they will learn those immature behaviours far more than if they were in a more natural setting. Obsessions with pop culture are everywhere? How about the adult obsessions we see now are only the result of having grown up in a social setting that had pop culture as a focus? The bulk of homeschooled kids I know do not have an obsessions of pop culture.

    " don't think those habits are instilled by the school systems, rather they are a product of parents not taking enough initiative in their children's lives."

    Yes and no. It's very hard to not learn all those habits when you are inundated with them every day for 12/13 years.

    "Shielding your child from those situations and beliefs isn't helping either. When they get out into society as adults with all those people who were educated in public schools, with all those bad habits, what will happen?"

    First of all, this person makes the faulty assumption that homeschooled kids aren't in society, that they don't have exposure. Homeschooled kids do get the exposure. They just don't live it 7 hours a day like schooled kids do. Imagine yourself working in an environment where people swore all the time. 7 hours a day, 180 days a year. You are VERY likely to start swearing, without even thinking about it, because that's what you live most of the time.

    " will your child be prepared to handle those situations? If your answer is to educate them that these habits and beliefs are wrong, then my answer would be that the same education could be given while your child is attending public schools, and they will learn first-hand."

    As I've said, living these things day in and day out is VERY hard to counteract. Expecting 6, 7, 8yo's to do so is ridiculous--they aren't even developmentally able to really rationalize properly. Not up until 12-13, to be honest, which is why that's an age where rebellion often sets in: because they are able to start really questioning and thinking.

    "And, more importantly, you fail to realize that the majority of individuals -will- be raised in public schools. This means that, no matter what flaws the social environment has (and they are legion) a child must learn to deal in such an environment in order to be a succesful adult. We may wish it otherwise ( I certainly do) but removing the child into a hermetically sealed cultural bubble is not the answer."

    This is almost a complacent attitude: If we can't beat them, join them? (Which is totally beside the point that this person thinks my kids are growing up in a little bubble.) I'm not happy with just allowing society to flow along as it will and insist we all just go with the flow. Somebody has to take a stand for what is right. Does it mean difficulties later on for our kids? Maybe. But they'll have the backbone to stand up for themselves and will actually try to be the change we'd all like to see in this world.

    And maybe that's the real problem with some of the naysayers. They think we are protecting our kids by homeschooling them, when their own words belie them and show that they are protecting their kids from being better, being different, by having them grow up in a system these naysayers feel will show them best the way things are. Kind of like Brave New World, with everybody just going with the flow and the one (Bernard) who's having the hard time is the one who's actually doing the right thing. I don't know about others, but I'd prefer to be Bernard, and prefer my children to be the Bernards, than to just be followers of what exists. WE create society. WE can make a change. The very common complacent attitude shows that people think society surrounds us and we have to conform. What changes we could make if EVERYBODY realized they were creating and maintaning the present society as a result of their decisions and actions.

  5. Your assesment of public schools, while generally accurate, is overly harsh.  And, more importantly, you fail to realize that the majority of individuals -will- be raised in public schools.  This means that, no matter what flaws the social environment has (and they are legion) a child must learn to deal in such an environment in order to be a succesful adult.  We may wish it otherwise ( I certainly do) but removing the child into a hermetically sealed cultural bubble is not the answer.  That will only result in an adult who can not cope in the world of their public-schooled peers.

    The only realistic response is to take action to adjust the lessons taught by public schools, to bring them into line with what we want our children to come up as.

  6. Shielding your child from those situations and beliefs isn't helping either. When they get out into society as adults with all those people who were educated in public schools, with all those bad habits, what will happen? will your child be prepared to handle those situations? If your answer is to educate them that these habits and beliefs are wrong, then my answer would be that the same education could be given while your child is attending public schools, and they will learn first-hand.

    That's just life.

    * I was educated in the public school systems and this does not mean that I live on welfare, bully others not like me, and so forth... by any means. In fact, I specifically set out to make friends with those who were bullied, or were 'different' and I could care less about brittany Spears. The reason for this is because my parents taught me better than that, and to choose more important priorities in life.

  7. I understand your point of view. My parents are homeschooling all of their children...Me my sisters and brother are all homeschooled. And in my personal opinion it sucks, Im bored, Im restless, I wish that I had more people that I could talk to. I do believe that homeschooling is important b/c without homeschooling you probably would not be able to help your kids grow in there education and help them realize themselves as a person, however I believe that at a certain age children should be able to go to a public school, depending on the school district. For one my parents hate our school district they thing that it does not help the students and its proven as one of the worst in the US. So I understand completly. But I also know as a teen who is being homeschooled it is very hard.

    I am not a parent so I dont know what my parents worry about all the time but some of their reasoning on why I cant go to a public school is so prejiduce and hypocrytical.

  8. As a parent with children in a good public school system, I have seen none of the tings you describe as "beliefs." In fact the school makes a point to teach students respect, to question, and to be good students (academic attitude). Finally students in our district are taught to only to be tolerant, but to be accepting of peoples differences.

    I have met a number of home school children, some are great, some are not. It depends on the qualifications of the parent teaching.

    I do believe that "socialization" and their is more than a single definition, by the way, doesn't mean surrounding your children with like-minded children. To work in our world, good or bad, we must learn to work with different people. Children must learn that, yes their are bullies, and yes you are better than them. They need to learn that not everyone holds not only their beliefs, but their parents beliefs as well. This is a critical component of socialization that you do not address in your statements.

    Your question seems very angry and I do not know why. If you are happy with home-schooling and your child(ren) are receiving a quality education from you than why are you bothered by criticisms of others, is that not part of acceptance and tolerance? I do not attack your choice simply because I may disagree with it, yet you attack my choice of public schools based on a number of negative stereotypes that do not apply in every school district in the country.

  9. Why does everyone buy into the garbage rhetoric of paranoid Teacher's Union spokespeople and paranoid School Board spokespeople.

    Those are the only people spitting the socialization rhetoric, along with the mo-cows that belive in them

    Let's separate the wheat from the chaf

    College is taught by people with have a BA/BS plus post grad studies or an MA/MS or a PH D

    College teachers design their own syllubus and pick their own text book

    Some college teachers use their own text book written by them!

    My cousin was one.  He did everything except his dissertation for a Math PH D.  He wrote his own book on The Slide Rule.  He was a full professor.

    Primary and Secondary schools are taught by people with mosts BA and BS degrees and 6-12 units of special teaching courses.

    They MUST follow the state issued syllubus and MUST use the assigned text book.

    They have a TEACHER"S edition with the ansers and the question prompts.

    There job is to take role and teach the course as the STATE says it must be taught.

    School text books are written by University Professors with PH Ds

    Parents have to decide if their kids are in school to LEARN or to kiss the girls and score drugs and find out who is having a beer bong party on friday.

    Homeschool parents supervise their kids and make sure they do the work.

    All one has to do is look here on any given day to see some paranoid homeschooler begging for Penn Foster test answers!

    Obviously homeschool is no easier than brick school.

    Homeschoolers, by the way, are on a separate tier from brick schoolers for admission to Ivy League schools.

    Each Ivy League school picks 1-3 publich schoolers from each state each year and 1 home schooler for each state, each year.

    Seeing as how only 8% of the US homeschools your chances of getting into an Ivy are easier with homeschooling than brick schooling.

  10. Glad to see things never change...  I took a 6 month hiatus from Y!A and I see that Homeschool critics still have not been swayed and the socialization argument is still there.  :)  Ahhhh..... bliss! :)  I was public schooled and it was that bad.  Everything you mentioned happened en masse.  People who slam hs'ing "because of socialization" will always do so.  They were brought up to believe in the status quo.  Anything not in the Status Quo is wrong.  I learned about life from college, not my B&M PS.  As did everyone I associate with now.  I don't see a soul I went to high school with.  All my friends (save one) I met in college or later.

  11. Wow, you really drank the cool-aid, didn't you.  :-)

    All 3 kids in my family went to PS and we turned out great, we volunteer, raised good families, etc.

    "Protecting" your child in an artificial bubble is not the answer.

  12. Ah, yes. The haters: They really know nothing about HS and they want to keep it that way. One hater who insisted that a child must learn to accept bullying as a part of life and was against HSers "sheltering" their children has gone on to write me several emails detailing her own bullying and abuse and how they have negatively affected her. She is apparently the walking wounded and thinks that is bad, but thinks it is worse to prevent this from happening to others. (The mind, she boggles!) She maintains her position. Then, when I pointed out the obvious inconsistencies in her reasoning, she went on to tell me I was attacking her, had a fit and shuffled off in a huff. Allcaps were used in a most threatening manner. *sarcasm* She seemed to have forgotten that she asked to be emailed with details about why I gave her answer a thumbs down. What is fantastic to me is how well she demonstrated the very public school mentality and behaviors I do not want my child to learn as normal or mature.

    Reading between the lines; I keep seeing the haters as insisting that nothing is wrong with the system they were raised in, because if there were something wrong with that system, something might be wrong with them. Thus, we HSers and our children must be weak, stupid and in everyway inferior to them. I wonder where they learned to make such snap judgments without getting all the information first. Where did they learn to fear nonconformity? Could it be that they learned this in the schools they attended? What's more is in many of their opinions, for our own good, we should be halted at once. We should conform to their standards; accept the flaws as though they were some backhanded gift. They seem to say, "The flaws exist to create overcomers, like me." They want to be sure we know that they are fine. They don’t understand why we as parents do not want our children to grow up to be exactly like them. They are threatened. If we have found a better lifestyle and means of education, then their way may be inferior. (No, we don’t think that way. But they seem to.) This scares them because they have been taught that life is about competition, not individual excellence. In psychology this is called Projection. It is basically attributing to others the aspect of yourself that you find too repugnant to examine.

    Do you read Kurt Vonnegut?

    Follow this link. I think you'll like it.

    Before anyone bashes the story, you should be reminded that a little girl was suspended for doing gymnastics in her schoolyard. The reason given was that other less able bodied children might feel bad or be hurt attempting to do cartwheels etc. What a world.

    MattD: Why do you assume that our children would not be introduced to people from different backgrounds? Show me some studies to support you theory. My child is homeschooled to expose her to the real world, not to keep it from her. My local public schools ban books. I do not. What makes you think that they need to be bullied to learn about the existence of bullies? My child knows alot about sharks. I don't make her swim with them.

  13. Do what you want.  If you believe in homeschooling and were possibly homeschooled yourself it would be worthless to try and argue logically with you. Good luck with your kids.

  14. Homeschooling isolation can be really bad for some kids. Matthew Murray is a good example.

    By the way, you should not complain about others' criticisms when you use such lists of habits and beliefs "instilled through public school". If that is the logic you learned at home, good luck in life.

  15. All of those habits exist everywhere, not just school, if your child doesn't build emotional strength early, they'll be blindsided later in life.

  16. And your point is?

    I believe in public school.

    My whole family turned out wonderful from public school.

    It is just one's opinion.

  17. I'll answer your question, since I went to public school, as did all my friends and family. I don't know if I'm a CRITIC of homeschools, but children of homeschooling education that I've met have never impressed me a great deal.

    NONE of us are:

    obsessed with pop culture (I don't even own a TV)

    dependent on the government (I work and pay taxes)

    blindly accepting of authority (talk to my parents if you don't believe me)

    intolerant of those who do not conform (I have a rather diverse group of friends, and we don't care much for tradition)

    NONE of us believe that:

    intellect/academic attitudes should be shunned (all of us graduated from high school and college, and most of us completed or are in graduate schools)

    being the victim of bullies is necessary for growth (although adversity does strengthen the spirit)

    active children must be subdued (we ran off our energy on the playground and focussed in the classroom)

    But some of your points:

    Morals ARE relative. I probably don't share yours, and you probably don't share mine. I probably don't share those of my ancestors 100 years ago. See what I did there? Morals change based upon the culture and society that produces them. Hence, morals are relative.

    As long as you know what you're doing, you're being safe, and you're not hurting anybody, I don't see anything wrong with sleeping with whatever consenting adults you please.

    Violence IS a fact of life. Read the newspaper.

  18. I am not exactly a critic of the home schooling route...after all I was home schooled. While I was being home schooled I did have other activities around other kids my age either through the home schooling club or through local organizations that had classes for different sports...I liked doing the sports but I really didn't feel that I had gotten my fill of being 'socialized' I wasn't around kids as much as I wanted to be. My parents were always quick to point out that the kids who went to public school loved it there and encouraged me to form my own viewpoint by asking them about it. The kids I asked almost always said they went there not to learn but to socialize...which to my mind defeated the purpose of 'school' which is almost always termed 'an institute of learning'

    I also found that when I pressured the kids about learning in school they said they barely paid attention in class...this even came from a girl whose mother was a school teacher!

    Those who oppose home schooling must look at this fact too...more and more pro-athletes for sports that are not played in high-school (gymnastics comes to my mind) are home schooled and more coaches prefer home schooled children to public school children.

    The same goes for colleges. They prefer home schooled children to public school children because they don't feel like re-educating the public school kids.

    So as much as I disliked the social aspect of it I actually liked being home schooled. I learned a lot more and I got higher in the sports I was competing at the time.

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