Anonymous wrote:No, I don't. Kids need to socialize, and not just with others who think the way any particular family does. It is good for them to be exposed to those who are different from themselves (different ethnicities,different religions, different socioeconomic backgrounds, different political values, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is why I think the stigma against homeschooling is in part deserved: do you ever hear about fathers being the homeschooling parent? It seems like homeschooling automatically defaults the mother to the domestic/non-income-earning role, and that’s what makes it inherently conservative to me.
THANK YOU. The number of times people of have said to ME - in our search for the right school for our two kids - "oh why don't you homeschool?" is crazy. NO one has ever said this to my husband, arthough we've both played an active role in looking. I feel like calling people on it (I work full time and make slightly more $ than my husband)
Anonymous wrote:Here is why I think the stigma against homeschooling is in part deserved: do you ever hear about fathers being the homeschooling parent? It seems like homeschooling automatically defaults the mother to the domestic/non-income-earning role, and that’s what makes it inherently conservative to me.
Anonymous wrote:YES it indeed has a stigma. A religious or conservative one especially. I have no issues with homeschooling because of medical issues or being in a rural area where schools are not easy to get to, but here in DC for example, with so many outstanding public and private schools in the area, why on earth would you homeschool anyway? The few homeschooled kids I’ve met, I don’t like. They are weird. Something is off about them, and their parents as well. So I frankly stay far away from them. Another family I know didn’t do homeschooling properly and their daughter fell way behind in reading level.
Anonymous wrote:YES it indeed has a stigma. A religious or conservative one especially. I have no issues with homeschooling because of medical issues or being in a rural area where schools are not easy to get to, but here in DC for example, with so many outstanding public and private schools in the area, why on earth would you homeschool anyway? The few homeschooled kids I’ve met, I don’t like. They are weird. Something is off about them, and their parents as well. So I frankly stay far away from them. Another family I know didn’t do homeschooling properly and their daughter fell way behind in reading level.