Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your point OP? This thread demonstrates that a wide variety of people choose homeschooling. It’s like asking why wealthy people send their kids to public school...
This is OP. You clearly have reading comprehension issues because you did not understand my question. I asked why uneducated Americans homeschool. I know there educated people out there who homeschool but it's not what I wanted to discuss.
Ahhh...so you just wanted to begin a thread for the purpose of bashing a certain group of people without hearing positive comments about homeschooling parents.
OP clearly has underlying issues and I’m beginning to think troll.
Disagree completely. It’s a valid, perplexing question. I guess the answer just is that stupid people make stupid decisions.
Exactly. It’s not trolling when most of the thread is on the same page.
Most of the thread is on the same page: spouting misconceptions, generalities and misinformation as if they are facts. Most of you don't know any or enough homeschoolers to even speak on the subject. The reality is that there are as many reasons for homeschooling as there are homeschoolers.
Do you think that homeschooling parents, especially the educated ones, judge parents who send their kids to traditional schools?
Why are you chiming in? This is about *uneducated* homeschool parents. You can't argue that there aren't states where communities of nutjobs have sprung up to unschool their kids where basically nothing structured is happening. Child abuse.
Child abuse is typically considered to be physical and or sexual abuse or neglect. Not providing structure isn't child abuse. You are using your values to judge someone.
America is a great country in which its citizens are guaranteed many rights and freedoms set forth in our Constitution. Each American has to be tolerant of differences, because (I'm certain) each of us has values, beliefs and practices which definitely offend someone else. Would you like your rights to be taken away, for example, for being a judgemental twit?
Anonymous wrote:Why do homeschooled kids outperform the national average by a wide margin on standardized tests?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your point OP? This thread demonstrates that a wide variety of people choose homeschooling. It’s like asking why wealthy people send their kids to public school...
This is OP. You clearly have reading comprehension issues because you did not understand my question. I asked why uneducated Americans homeschool. I know there educated people out there who homeschool but it's not what I wanted to discuss.
Ahhh...so you just wanted to begin a thread for the purpose of bashing a certain group of people without hearing positive comments about homeschooling parents.
OP clearly has underlying issues and I’m beginning to think troll.
Disagree completely. It’s a valid, perplexing question. I guess the answer just is that stupid people make stupid decisions.
Exactly. It’s not trolling when most of the thread is on the same page.
Most of the thread is on the same page: spouting misconceptions, generalities and misinformation as if they are facts. Most of you don't know any or enough homeschoolers to even speak on the subject. The reality is that there are as many reasons for homeschooling as there are homeschoolers.
Do you think that homeschooling parents, especially the educated ones, judge parents who send their kids to traditional schools?
Why are you chiming in? This is about *uneducated* homeschool parents. You can't argue that there aren't states where communities of nutjobs have sprung up to unschool their kids where basically nothing structured is happening. Child abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your point OP? This thread demonstrates that a wide variety of people choose homeschooling. It’s like asking why wealthy people send their kids to public school...
This is OP. You clearly have reading comprehension issues because you did not understand my question. I asked why uneducated Americans homeschool. I know there educated people out there who homeschool but it's not what I wanted to discuss.
Ahhh...so you just wanted to begin a thread for the purpose of bashing a certain group of people without hearing positive comments about homeschooling parents.
OP clearly has underlying issues and I’m beginning to think troll.
Disagree completely. It’s a valid, perplexing question. I guess the answer just is that stupid people make stupid decisions.
Exactly. It’s not trolling when most of the thread is on the same page.
Most of the thread is on the same page: spouting misconceptions, generalities and misinformation as if they are facts. Most of you don't know any or enough homeschoolers to even speak on the subject. The reality is that there are as many reasons for homeschooling as there are homeschoolers.
Do you think that homeschooling parents, especially the educated ones, judge parents who send their kids to traditional schools?
Why are you chiming in? This is about *uneducated* homeschool parents. You can't argue that there aren't states where communities of nutjobs have sprung up to unschool their kids where basically nothing structured is happening. Child abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s your point OP? This thread demonstrates that a wide variety of people choose homeschooling. It’s like asking why wealthy people send their kids to public school...
This is OP. You clearly have reading comprehension issues because you did not understand my question. I asked why uneducated Americans homeschool. I know there educated people out there who homeschool but it's not what I wanted to discuss.
Ahhh...so you just wanted to begin a thread for the purpose of bashing a certain group of people without hearing positive comments about homeschooling parents.
OP clearly has underlying issues and I’m beginning to think troll.
Disagree completely. It’s a valid, perplexing question. I guess the answer just is that stupid people make stupid decisions.
Exactly. It’s not trolling when most of the thread is on the same page.
Most of the thread is on the same page: spouting misconceptions, generalities and misinformation as if they are facts. Most of you don't know any or enough homeschoolers to even speak on the subject. The reality is that there are as many reasons for homeschooling as there are homeschoolers.
Do you think that homeschooling parents, especially the educated ones, judge parents who send their kids to traditional schools?
Why are you chiming in? This is about *uneducated* homeschool parents. You can't argue that there aren't states where communities of nutjobs have sprung up to unschool their kids where basically nothing structured is happening. Child abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. There are actually a bunch of us who think homeschooling is by and large terrible for the kids involved, if only that they can't get what they need to survive in life. And FYI, it's great that PP was a "well-prepared" high school grad who was capable of reaching 1-12. But I would absolutely wager that a kid that is prepared out of high school for the responsibilities of teaching children is the exception rather than the rule.
How many homeschooling parents are so well-prepared? That's right, **you don't know**. Abuse, incompetence, idiots run rampant and unchecked. Look at the Turpins
You can't compare the worst of the homeschooling to an average public school. Compare it to reality. D is a passing grade in many school districts and you get it for just showing up in some schools. It is scary inside some of them, scary even in elementary. Do you really think that a school where less than 20% of students are proficient in math or English is a better option? I guess one does learn a trade like selling drugs by the end of it. Those schools are nothing but "babysitting" services while parents work.
That is not the "reality" for the vast majority of public schools and I doubt all of you homeschoolers live in an inner city failing school.
I've been an educator for a long time and worked many years in both rural and inner city areas with a lot of poverty. Probably not the majority, but is indeed the reality for MANY public schools.
Great, then it shouldn't be a problem for there to be standards for parents who homeschool. I mean, if we are looking at public school performance being poor, lets make sure the homeschooled kids are being better served. No problem right?
You are arguing that since regulations and controls have a proven record of NOT working in the public school school we should introduce them to homeschooling. Excellent idea. Let's take what's not working and implement it further.
You're making some huge fallacies of logic. What is failing some kids at some schools is point of debate, but no where is it settled that the cause is the "regulation and control" and structure provided by schools. If anything, it's the lack of family support, high crime rates in communities, lack of education among parents, that is causing the poor performance of those students.
You assume that homeschoolers "do well" because of a lack of control and regulation - I'm arguing that these kids by and large do okay DESPITE the lack of oversight and, had they been given a high functioning, high quality school, they would have excelled further.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. There are actually a bunch of us who think homeschooling is by and large terrible for the kids involved, if only that they can't get what they need to survive in life. And FYI, it's great that PP was a "well-prepared" high school grad who was capable of reaching 1-12. But I would absolutely wager that a kid that is prepared out of high school for the responsibilities of teaching children is the exception rather than the rule.
How many homeschooling parents are so well-prepared? That's right, **you don't know**. Abuse, incompetence, idiots run rampant and unchecked. Look at the Turpins
You can't compare the worst of the homeschooling to an average public school. Compare it to reality. D is a passing grade in many school districts and you get it for just showing up in some schools. It is scary inside some of them, scary even in elementary. Do you really think that a school where less than 20% of students are proficient in math or English is a better option? I guess one does learn a trade like selling drugs by the end of it. Those schools are nothing but "babysitting" services while parents work.
That is not the "reality" for the vast majority of public schools and I doubt all of you homeschoolers live in an inner city failing school.
I've been an educator for a long time and worked many years in both rural and inner city areas with a lot of poverty. Probably not the majority, but is indeed the reality for MANY public schools.
Great, then it shouldn't be a problem for there to be standards for parents who homeschool. I mean, if we are looking at public school performance being poor, lets make sure the homeschooled kids are being better served. No problem right?
You are arguing that since regulations and controls have a proven record of NOT working in the public school school we should introduce them to homeschooling. Excellent idea. Let's take what's not working and implement it further.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From research homeschooled kids are from better environments, more educated parents and fewer divorced parents. That's why the kids are smarter. Interestingly they watch less tv too.
According to Burns, homeschoolers are more likely to come from homes with educated parents and higher incomes. Homeschooling parents are less likely to divorce (which is true of higher income couples in general). Homeschooled kids watch less television. All of this results in higher academic achievement. As a result, Burns says that there is "inconclusive evidence of the actual quality of homeschool instruction.
Link?
https://wehavekids.com/education/Do-Homeschoolers-Really-Do-Better-on-Tests
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. There are actually a bunch of us who think homeschooling is by and large terrible for the kids involved, if only that they can't get what they need to survive in life. And FYI, it's great that PP was a "well-prepared" high school grad who was capable of reaching 1-12. But I would absolutely wager that a kid that is prepared out of high school for the responsibilities of teaching children is the exception rather than the rule.
How many homeschooling parents are so well-prepared? That's right, **you don't know**. Abuse, incompetence, idiots run rampant and unchecked. Look at the Turpins
You can't compare the worst of the homeschooling to an average public school. Compare it to reality. D is a passing grade in many school districts and you get it for just showing up in some schools. It is scary inside some of them, scary even in elementary. Do you really think that a school where less than 20% of students are proficient in math or English is a better option? I guess one does learn a trade like selling drugs by the end of it. Those schools are nothing but "babysitting" services while parents work.
That is not the "reality" for the vast majority of public schools and I doubt all of you homeschoolers live in an inner city failing school.
I've been an educator for a long time and worked many years in both rural and inner city areas with a lot of poverty. Probably not the majority, but is indeed the reality for MANY public schools.
Great, then it shouldn't be a problem for there to be standards for parents who homeschool. I mean, if we are looking at public school performance being poor, lets make sure the homeschooled kids are being better served. No problem right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. There are actually a bunch of us who think homeschooling is by and large terrible for the kids involved, if only that they can't get what they need to survive in life. And FYI, it's great that PP was a "well-prepared" high school grad who was capable of reaching 1-12. But I would absolutely wager that a kid that is prepared out of high school for the responsibilities of teaching children is the exception rather than the rule.
How many homeschooling parents are so well-prepared? That's right, **you don't know**. Abuse, incompetence, idiots run rampant and unchecked. Look at the Turpins
You can't compare the worst of the homeschooling to an average public school. Compare it to reality. D is a passing grade in many school districts and you get it for just showing up in some schools. It is scary inside some of them, scary even in elementary. Do you really think that a school where less than 20% of students are proficient in math or English is a better option? I guess one does learn a trade like selling drugs by the end of it. Those schools are nothing but "babysitting" services while parents work.
That is not the "reality" for the vast majority of public schools and I doubt all of you homeschoolers live in an inner city failing school.
I've been an educator for a long time and worked many years in both rural and inner city areas with a lot of poverty. Probably not the majority, but is indeed the reality for MANY public schools.
Great, then it shouldn't be a problem for there to be standards for parents who homeschool. I mean, if we are looking at public school performance being poor, lets make sure the homeschooled kids are being better served. No problem right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From research homeschooled kids are from better environments, more educated parents and fewer divorced parents. That's why the kids are smarter. Interestingly they watch less tv too.
According to Burns, homeschoolers are more likely to come from homes with educated parents and higher incomes. Homeschooling parents are less likely to divorce (which is true of higher income couples in general). Homeschooled kids watch less television. All of this results in higher academic achievement. As a result, Burns says that there is "inconclusive evidence of the actual quality of homeschool instruction.[/quote
Link?
https://wehavekids.com/education/Do-Homeschoolers-Really-Do-Better-on-Tests