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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=94TT1494>
<link 94TO0213>
<title>
Oct. 31, 1994: Cover:Education:Home Sweet School
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Oct. 31, 1994 New Hope for Public Schools
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER/EDUCATION, Page 62
Home Sweet School
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Seeking excellence, isolation or just extra "family time," more
and more parents are doing the teaching themselves
</p>
<p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Dan Cray/Los Angeles, Scott Norvell/Atlanta and
Bonnie I. Rochman/Williamsburg
</p>
<p> When Bonnie Vautrot realized her daughter was dead bored in
school, she decided to take on the system. She became the PTA
president at the Williamsburg, Virginia, elementary school and
challenged the teachers to challenge the kids. "I would go in
and beg the teachers: `What can I do?' If you have a curriculum
that says you're in third grade now, but your child is ready
for fourth-grade material, you hit a brick wall." The response,
she recalls, was, "Well, obviously you've got nothing better
to do. Why don't you teach your kids at home?" So she did. Thus
was born another home school. Beverly and Brad Williams had
similar reasons but different circumstances. They were not only
unimpressed with their local schools, they were scared of them
as well. The idea of sending their four children through the
cross fire of South Central Los Angeles was too harrowing. With
ruthless budgeting, they managed to pay for private schools
for six years, but tuition was just too high, and they were
not satisfied with what it bought. So the couple converted their
basement into a classroom with three desks, bulletin boards
and two computers. Now their children get dressed every morning
as if headed to school and are required to report to the basement
by 9 a.m. Brad, who doesn't start work as a Federal Express
delivery man until 3 p.m., handles most of the teaching. They
work until 1:30, then break for the day.
</p>
<p> If the Williamses and Vautrots do not seem like traditional
home schoolers, that may be because there's no such thing anymore.
A movement once reserved largely for misanthropes, missionaries
and religious fundamentalists now embraces such a range of families
that it has become a mainstream alternative to regular public
or private education. In inner cities and rural farm towns all
across the country, periodic tables hang on the dining-room
walls, and multiplication tables are taped to the back of car
seats for practice during field trips. Home schoolers hold conventions
at which hundreds of companies offer curriculum guides, textbooks
and support groups. There are home-school chat sessions on the
Internet, even home-school proms and graduation ceremonies.
</p>
<p> Since the late 1970s, when roughly 12,500 children were taught
at home, the number has grown as high as half a million. It
remains true that most parents who choose to withdraw their
children from the school system, or never send them in the first
place, do so for religious reasons, seeking to shape their children's
learning in accordance with their spiritual values. In addition,
there are still the hermits and occasional hatemongers, observes
Joe Nathan, director of the University of Minnesota's Center
for School Change, "people who have made it clear that the reason
they educate at home is that they don't want their children
exposed to people of different races, or that they don't want
their children exposed to ideas with which they disagree."
</p>
<p> More and more parents, however, are embracing home schooling
for secular reasons. "I've also seen people who are very progressive
or liberal," Nathan adds, "and think children are not well served
by schools that are too stifling." Others, like the Williamses,
are concerned mainly about the safety and the quality of public
schools. Parents stress the chance to design a curriculum that
is challenging, flexible and tailored to their particular child;
to escape the "hidden agenda"--ranging from capitalist conformity
to secular humanism--that they believe is promoted in public
schools; and to have a teacher utterly devoted to their children's
welfare.
</p>
<p> For years the courts treated children who were kept home as
truants; but home schooling is now legal in every state. Thirty-four
states have passed specific statutes and regulations, and 29
require standardized testing for home-schooled students to ensure
that they are passing muster. Last June the Texas Supreme Court
upheld a ruling that exempted home-schooled children from the
state's compulsory-attendance laws. As long as parents use a
curriculum that includes written materials and meets "basic
education goals," the court ruled, the state has no authority
over the matter.
</p>
<p> If there was a turning point in the public image of home schooling,
it came in 1987, when Grant Colfax got into Harvard after having
been taught by his parents his entire life. Grant graduated
magna cum laude, became a Fulbright scholar and graduated from
Harvard Medical School. One by one, his home-schooled brothers
followed suit. "Our kids were more or less the guinea pigs,"
says Micki Colfax, who along with husband David home schooled
all four Colfax children from their home in Boonville, California
(pop. 750). "Their going to Harvard validated what home schooling
was all about."
</p>
<p> The Colfaxes make compelling spokespeople for the movement they
did so much to legitimize. "We feel every parent is qualified
to teach," Micki says. "If it doesn't work, fine, go on to something
else. Even within one family, the learning skills might be different,
so one ((child)) might work at home, the other might work at
school. But I think the more the government gets involved, the
less freedom parents have."
</p>
<p> Some critics of the movement argue that parents may have too
much freedom under current laws. Only 10 states require parents
to have a high school diploma or General Equivalency Diploma
to be able to teach. "It's a giant step backward," argues Thomas
Shannon, executive director of the National School Boards Association,
which represents more than 15,000 public-school boards across
the country. "People tend to think, as one old basketball coach
said, that everybody can boil water and coach basketball, and
they kind of feel the same way about teaching. They just don't
know what they're talking about." If these parents spent their
time supplementing their children's educations rather than substituting
for it, he adds,"their children would be remarkably well off."
</p>
<p> But home-school advocates counter that a teacher's certificate
is no guarantee of success. They cite study after study showing
that home-schooled children excel on standardized tests. While
the national average is in the 50th percentile, the average
home-schooled students register between the 65th and 80th percentiles.
Nor is this unconventional background necessarily a disadvantage
when students apply for college. With no grade-point averages
or class ranks, no chance to edit the yearbook or captain the
soccer team, home-schooled students must have top test scores
to win admission to the most selective schools. But many colleges
are eager to welcome freshmen who bring different experiences
of learning. "What it really boils down to is getting a sense
of a student's intellectual drive," says Jon Reider, associate
director of admissions at Stanford.
</p>
<p> But critics are also concerned about lessons that can't be measured
on exams. A home-schooled child, they note, is not exposed to
the diversity of beliefs and backgrounds that a child would
encounter in many public schools and is deprived of an opportunity
for "socialization." The after-school baseball leagues and Boy
Scouts and dance classes don't make up the difference. "When
you send them out to soccer and scouting, you're usually sending
them out to a very select group of people who share, to a considerable
extent, your own values," says Shannon. "That's a controlled
group. The problem is, when they finally do get to working,
they won't be in that controlled group."
</p>
<p> Home-school parents retort that the socialization children experience
in schools is not necessarily healthy: it may be competitive,
even intimidating and violent. "I do not think that gang membership
is proper social development," says Donna Nichols-White, who
has home schooled her three children after having to teach herself
how to write. "Whenever people mention the problem of gang membership,
I mention that the common factor amongst all gang members is
that they attended school at some time in their lives."
</p>
<p> Do the children miss out on something essential? They don't
seem to think so. "Sometimes I like playing school," confides
Lydia Kiefer, 6. "I'll get up in the morning, get my backpack,
put some books in it, come downstairs, and sit down at my little
brown table and pretend I have a teacher and other kids next
to me." She pauses to think. "But I'm not so sure it would be
so fun in real life."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>