Anonymous wrote:Or at least think their kids are receiving an inferior education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.nheri.org/research/nheri-news/homeschool-sat-scores-for-2014-higher-than-national-average.html
On average, homeschoolers perform better than their public school counterparts on standardized tests. This doesn't control for demographic factors, but to say that homeschoolers perform worse on the SAT/ACT is not true. It's just not.
Do you know how they go to the test scores for the homeschool population? I can follow the total population scores to the College Board website easily by clicking the link, but my googling and searching on the College Board website hasn't turned anything up for this reference: College Board. (2014a). SAT 2014 college-bound seniors state profile report, U.S. home school students. New York, NY: Author.
It kind of looks like the author is only using results from NY? Or maybe ran his own analysis and came up with something? I can't follow.
Anonymous wrote:No. But I do wonder about their kids social skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do, yes. I knew a number of homeschoolers of the religious variety growing up. They all liked to talk about how far they were above grade level, but the ones that actually enrolled in school were enrolled a grade behind their age group and weren't exactly academic all stars. Also, yes, they tended to be a bit odd.
I can see some situations where homeschooling can be the best option for a particular child, but I think most kids do better in a more structured school environment.
I'm the 15:07 PP and this was true for my relatives as well. Constant talk about how the kids were just so advanced and how homeschooling was providing a much better education than the school could. My relatives would try putting their kids in public school every few years or so (the mom was and is a hypochondriac so it usually coincided with her deciding she had one major illness or another and needed rest) and the kids would be so far behind, they ended up in classes grades below kids their own ages. This was, of course, all just a grand conspiracy to punish homeschoolers according to my relatives and the kids would be taken back out quickly (usually right around the mid-year report cards when it was clear the kids were failing all their classes except for gym).
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nheri.org/research/nheri-news/homeschool-sat-scores-for-2014-higher-than-national-average.html
On average, homeschoolers perform better than their public school counterparts on standardized tests. This doesn't control for demographic factors, but to say that homeschoolers perform worse on the SAT/ACT is not true. It's just not.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nheri.org/research/nheri-news/homeschool-sat-scores-for-2014-higher-than-national-average.html
On average, homeschoolers perform better than their public school counterparts on standardized tests. This doesn't control for demographic factors, but to say that homeschoolers perform worse on the SAT/ACT is not true. It's just not.
Anonymous wrote:I do, yes. I knew a number of homeschoolers of the religious variety growing up. They all liked to talk about how far they were above grade level, but the ones that actually enrolled in school were enrolled a grade behind their age group and weren't exactly academic all stars. Also, yes, they tended to be a bit odd.
I can see some situations where homeschooling can be the best option for a particular child, but I think most kids do better in a more structured school environment.
Anonymous wrote:My only exposure to homeschooling was my ultra conservative and religious family members who homeschooled to keep their kids away from the evil heathens at our public school. The parents weren't well educated themselves (barely graduated high school, I'm talking finished by the skin of their teeth here) so the kids learned very little beyond extensive bible study. That colors my thoughts on homeschooling in general and I have a knee jerk negative reaction to it.