What motivates parents to home school thier children?
Robert m asked:
Where they home schooled as children?
What are the laws regaurding home schooling?
Where in the U.S. is home schooling most popular?
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Where they home schooled as children?
What are the laws regaurding home schooling?
Where in the U.S. is home schooling most popular?

April 1st, 2009 at 3:48 am
A lot of Evangelical Christians home school to protect their babies from the bad old world. That way they can completely control everything that enters their children’s brains. The kids do need to be tested periodically, and if they aren’t at a certain level they are required to attend regular school. I imagine it’s most popular wherever you find small-minded religious right people. (kinda everywhere these days)
April 1st, 2009 at 12:50 pm
As per motives, in this day and age, with school shootings, at the beginning of the school year, this year, were at their worst, I believe safety plays a big part. I do not think it matters whether a parent was home schooled or not and the laws regarding same vary from state to state. I don’t know where it is most popular, but I am finding that a lot of parents in New Jersey do home school.
April 4th, 2009 at 6:33 pm
most people do it cause the are over protective some people have to because their children are ill or disabled
April 5th, 2009 at 5:58 am
The primary reason that parents homeschool their children is that they do not want their children exposed to negative indoctrination by marxists who have infiltrated our schools systems. This is a WIDESPREAD problem where the schools don’t provide an education anymore but instead, try to instill certain values at an age before the person is capable of critical thinking. Since those values are against the wishes of the parents and, quite frankly, evil, many parents choose to bear the burden of educating the children at home.
The homeschool movement is a serious sign of problems in our society. The fact that so many parents need to do this, simply to prevent bad people from doing bad things to their children is something to be concerned about. This begs for intervention. But our current political client ignores the issue….no matter how many people complain about it. And let me tell you, the number of people trying to get government to listen is in the hundreds of thousands.
April 8th, 2009 at 3:35 pm
There are probabaly as many answers to the question as there are home schoolers. In various studies it seems that home schooled students do better on standardized test. It maybe becuase of the individual attention. There are tons of home schooling resources.
April 11th, 2009 at 4:47 am
Each state is different on Hsing, but is is legal in all states. Hsing is pretty popular all over, you would be surprised, but I think the mid west has the highest %, but don’t quote me. I’m still learning and researching about the whole thing. Just google it and you will get lots back.
Hsing is becoming very popular, not just for religious reasons. I plan on UNschooling my child, right now he is only 2. My main reason is here in FL the public schools are just quite frankly CRAP. Religion has nothing to do with my decision.
I want my son to love learning not dread going to K, they want them to be little adults in K with spelling words! SPELLING WORDS in K. What happened to just learning how to get along and playing etc?
I don’t plan on Hsing him forever but I hope to at least until 5th grade. and socialization is not an issue, at least not here, there are lots of resources for homeschoolers.
April 11th, 2009 at 6:38 pm
Can’t speak for everyone, but here are my reasons
1. My disabled daughter was learning absolutely nothing at school. Even though the school received extra cash from the feds specifically for educating her, they consistently chose to babysit her rather than doing the work it would take to teach her.
2. My oldest son is gifted. Even though our schools receive local extra cash for funding programs, his gifted program consisted of gathering once a week to play board games.
3. I want my children to learn how to learn, not learn how to regurgitate useless facts that every single adult I know has forgotten.
4. I have certain values that I hold dear, mostly consisting of hard work and pride in self. Schools remove that by forcing each child to work at a mediocre level, rather than their highest ability. They teach children that they are only worth something if they are part of a crowd, and follow the status quo. The point of the American educational system is to create middle-class white collar workers for the industrial society we depend on, and our current policies are not holding that feasible. Entrepreneurs who are willing to strike out and work hard are the ones who will be successful.
I was not homeschooled. Neither was my husband.
Laws vary from state to state, but in every state and most countries, homeschooling is legal.
I have no idea where homeschooling is most popular. That’s not the reason i started homeschooling. It’s very obvious that even though this is a homeschooling string, there are quite a few dissenters.
April 12th, 2009 at 7:55 am
sometimes their little angels are Hollywood actors or are children of government agents, where they travel a whole lot, or military kids, so homeschooling is alot easier on them.
and in certain states public schools just plain suck, thats all.
April 14th, 2009 at 6:29 am
Well for my parents, I’ve always been told it was because of safety issues and teachers ability to teach REAL subjects. like the evaluation theory, It has been provin time and again by science not to be true and has a foundation as wobbly as jello. evolution is not science, it is a theory based on faith and is as shaky as as a house made by a frightened sow. and that’s enough for me to know they wouldn’t tell me the truth about much at all.
April 17th, 2009 at 4:46 pm
I, personally, homeschool my son because he was having a hard time at school. Not that he wasn’t doing well. He got excellent grades (and still does with the homeschooling). But because he is gay, he used to get teased horribly and sometimes even beaten up! So I pulled him out of school, and decided to teach him myself. There are a lot of parents out there who homeschool their children for the same reason.
April 21st, 2009 at 4:28 am
public schools are like public restrooms, you just don’t go there unless you have to.
April 21st, 2009 at 9:41 am
Parents who home school are interested in their children learning a lot more than they get in Public school.
The Parents want to avoid exposing their children to distorted values of sex education and perversion. If I had a child about to enter school and the local school board was having lesbians come in and talk about fisting and masturbation to the middle school, I would definitely choose either home schooling or private school.
No doubt there are many excellent public schools around the country, but if you are unfortunate enough to live in the wrong spot, I can see a real need for home schooling.
The laws are different from state to state, mostly on the degree of follow-up and testing.
April 23rd, 2009 at 12:17 pm
• What motivates parents to homeschool?
There are a lot of stereotypes of why parents homeschool. But honestly, the reasons are all over the board. The only thing that you can say for sure, is that homeschoolers choose not to use classrooms because in some way, it doesn’t meet their children’s needs. Here is a webpage FULL of information to find out what the various people have decided to homeschool.
• Do homeschooled children tend to homeschool their own children?
In my experience, this is the norm. But there are a lot of variables involved that have nothing to do with where person received their education. So, it’s not that rare for homeschoolers to decide to use classroom schools.
• What are the laws regarding homeschooling?
Homeschooling and educational laws vary from state to state. You’ll have to do research to find out what the laws are in your state . Here’s an introduction to homeschooling laws:
• Where in the US is homeschooling most popular?
Well, that’s an interesting question. I would say that generally, the more people you have, the more likely there will be a large homeschooling community in that area. Surprisingly, religion doesn’t really play a huge rule on the number of homeschoolers. It’s more tied to cultural perceptions. The states I see most often on my nation-wide homeschool support lists are California, New York, Florida and Texas. But every state has a strong homeschooling community.
It sounds like you are interested in hard facts. So here’s a page with a lot of links to that kind of information:
April 26th, 2009 at 12:29 pm
Schools are ineffective entities to educate our children. They teach to the lowest level of intelligence. The fail to educate it’s all repetition and regurgitation, no learning thinking or thought process.
So if your child is mediocre at best and you want nothing more from them than to get by, by all means go ahead and send them to school. If your child learns at a rate faster or slower than the average, and that average seems to decrease every year, or if you actually want you child to succeed in life then home school them.
I was not home schooled though I wish I was, in retrospect I’m sure the staff and faculty wished it also.
Laws vary from state to state, but it is legal in all states in the US.
April 29th, 2009 at 12:39 pm
I am homeschooling because my husband and I are educators and we feel it is our personal responsibility to educate our children. There are things we want them to be taught that they would not learn in public school and vice versa. In our case it is not because of religious beliefs.
Also because my children’s birthday fall late in the year and we think it ridiculous that they have to be behind a year just because of their birth date.
I was not home schooled as a child but I went to private Catholic school.
Like others have mentioned there are laws but it is legal everywhere.
May 2nd, 2009 at 11:00 am
When our Grandson was 14 he was unchallenged in public school. He came down with diabetes and depression. We took him in our home and ordered a curiculum not one that was religious based but did teach ethics and moral responsibility. He finished his high school work just before he turned 16. Applied at the local two year college which took him on condition that he get his GED. At age 16 he passed his GED…he had scored 32 on the ACT. Went to work at age 16 started a job at steak and shake and went full time to school. He is now 22 working on his masters degree. I am sure had we tried to manintain the public school system, we would have lost him.
Even the law coming to the house could not make him go to school. Instead they threatened to arrest his Mother for him not going. So I know there are a lot of reason’s to Home School. I am convinced that there is no better education system than “one on one”if the parent is committed and the material is good.
May 3rd, 2009 at 11:36 am
I’m am schooled because there is no school of good reputation within 1 hours drive. the closest school is five minetes away. but that is a tiny one classroom school that has only 15 students and stops at grade 5. I was traveling 2 &1/2 hours to get to a school that had the courses that i wanted to do.
I have not gotten the contact with other teenagers my age. I’d rather not. I’d rather go to a nursing home and talk to the people there or into a hospital.
May 4th, 2009 at 3:00 pm
each state has different laws you need to check on the laws in the state which you live. no I was not homeschooled as a child, what motivated my husband and I to homeschool our children was mainly our son, he was falling way behind, and no one cared, we asked the school to hold him back because his grade were so low and he was so far behind they refused and passed him, we did not want him to graduate not knowing anything, he hated school because he did not understand what he was doing, he was picked at all the time, his nerves were bad. he has ADHD and for three years we have homeschooled him, and he is now doing great. when we started homeschooling him we tested him and he was in 4th grade on a second grade level, so we backed up and started over in a 2nd grade level and now he is on a 10th grade level, and enjoys learning, my childrens happiness and their education is the most important thing to me, and they are happy and so smart, when they graduate I will know they have earned it.
May 4th, 2009 at 5:27 pm
good question, I wished I would have asked it
I would GUESS HSing is most popular in the semi-autonomous nation of Deseret or the whole of the mountain time zone. But that is a sweeping generalization!
I am still convinced most HSing is really a ruse abusive parents claim to avoid having the children (especially their daughters) get in contact with the authorities and break the cycle.
So , abuse , I suspect is the number one motivation, color me cynical
what’s the difference? I might as well as a junkie ‘how many grams in a ‘kilo’ ?’