Those that go to college. Many don't |
Nice use of alliteration. |
MCPS has a high percentage in their VA. This isn't a surprise with COIVD. |
Don't forget how many parents got a chance to listen in on their kids classrooms for a full year and see how the teachers interacted with students and students interacted with each other. I personally excelled as a kid but 30% of my teachers were just there for a paycheck (I had one teacher pregnant the whole year who did nothing during my 10th grade), 30% were stars and extremely dedicated, and another 30% should have retired 10 years ago but need the benefits. I believe teacher value is tied to higher-value school systems and consequently better resources and salaries however I also think that no matter what with a student-to-teacher ratio of 18:1 (in the best districts) students who could excel are getting left behind. And I wouldn't want it to be my child. |
Quick google search: https://www.communitycollegereview.com/blog/is-community-college-the-best-option-for-homeschoolers You may be surprised to learn that homeschoolers actually have a higher rate of attending college than any other group of children. Homeschooled children attend college at a rate of 66.7% while traditional public-school children only attend college at 57.5%. In fact, some of the country’s best colleges like Dartmouth, Yale, and UC Berkeley are recruiting and accepting homeschoolers at a high rate. |
That's because they're are far fewer of them. so it doesnt take many of them going to college move the percentage up |
It also includes all the nutty religious communities like the Amish or Mennonites who home-school their kids and never ever expect them to go to college. Male or female its just not in their community ethic. Instead they give them a year at 18 to 'see the world' and let them realize how much their own community failed to integrate them so they go running back to the farms at absurdly high rates. |
11% of all our children is not that small a number. |
Given how well our schools teach reading - the outcomes for the new homeschoolers are almost guaranteed to be better. Did you watch any K-2 classes last year? |
And MOST kids who attend public school don’t go to college… |
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I’m a fed in DC and at my office I have one coworker and one supervisor who homeschool their children. They both have college degrees, as do their wives, and grew up in the DC area. Their college-aged children are all in college and the older ones have graduate degrees and good jobs.
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Most homeschoolers are fine, but....it is just too darn easy for parents who abuse their kids to "home school" them. Remember this case? https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/house-horrors-case-turpin-parents-sentenced-life-prison-torturing-children-n996326 The father set up a "school" and filed the necessary paperwork. One kid was allowed to go to community college classes, but his mother always went with him.
Now, I KNOW this is an outlier. But when kids go to school, teachers and others can see signs of abuse and report them. Of course, child protective services doesn't always do a great job either. Still, a lot of those who abuse their children do claim to "homeschool" them. I suspect a lot of the "new" homeschoolers are kids whose parents want to protect them from covid. I have serious doubts that all of them are going to be adequately taught. Parents just think "I'm not going to risk my child's life" or "I cannot risk that my children bring something home to grandma and I need grandma to watch them while I work, so they can't go to school." Then, they register to "homeschool" them, but the amount of instruction time they get is negligible. That's especially true if grandparents are watching the kids during the day while mom is at work. I don't think the parents are negligent--far from it. They love their kids. They just don't want them in school right now. |
| These statistics are obviously about last school year. |
| I homeschooled last year because I had a first grader who I knew wouldn’t be served well by remote or hybrid learning. As a working parent, I also wanted flexibility in my schedule. He learned a ton - much more than he would have learned even if he was fully in person. His days He’s now back in person and way ahead of his peers. |
+1 What % are freedom/religious nutters? They will have another generation of brainwashed extremists. |