All your children are belong to us
This writer at Salon.com argues that liberals should not homeschool their kids, Liberals, Don’t Homeschool Your Kids:
Homeschooling is so unevenly regulated from state to state that it is impossible to know exactly how many homeschoolers there are. Estimates range from about 1 million to 2 million children, and the number is growing. It is unclear how many homeschooling families are secular, but the political scientist Rob Reich has written that there is little doubt the homeschooling population has diversified in recent years.* Yet whether liberal or conservative, “[o]ne article of faith unites all homeschoolers: that homeschooling should be unregulated,” Reich writes. “Homeschoolers of all stripes believe that they alone should decide how their children are educated.”
Could such a go-it-alone ideology ever be truly progressive—by which I mean, does homeschooling serve the interests not just of those who are doing it, but of society as a whole? ….
This overheated hostility toward public schools runs throughout the new literature on liberal homeschooling, and reveals what is so fundamentally illiberal about the trend: It is rooted in distrust of the public sphere, in class privilege, and in the dated presumption that children hail from two-parent families, in which at least one parent can afford (and wants) to take significant time away from paid work in order to manage a process—education—that most parents entrust to the community at-large.
Read the whole thing, there’s some sociological gibberish thrown in, but really it comes down to power.
One less child of liberal parents in a school means fewer liberal children and parents to control the public school agenda:
Lefty homeschoolers might be preaching sound social values to their children, but they aren’t practicing them. If progressives want to improve schools, we shouldn’t empty them out. We ought to flood them with our kids, and then debate vociferously what they ought to be doing.
The agenda always seems to reveal itself.
Related: All Your Thoughts Are Belong To U.S. and Everything you have belongs to us












Comments
As Browndog noted above, the comments over at Slate are fascinating. The responses of the liberal homeschoolers is pretty impressive. I am sure Goldstein’s head is exploding.
One of the few comments which agree with her descibes homeschooling as “anti-social — no ANTI-SOCIETY.” Homeschooling parents should put their kids in public school and donate that time to the school and help other children succeed (instead of their own). Right.
Holy cow.
It really is an amazingly badly written article. (Does SLATE have editors? Does anyone have editors anymore?)Really really sloppy and very poorly researched. (Unschooled and homeschooled are different creatures, for one thing. And she never gives any hard data.)
But when one has an agenda, the facts are not important.
When minorities discover the power of homeschooling …
(Disclosure: I am /was not a homeschooler but have absolutely no problem (and would encourage it) for my grandkids these days. The many homeschool parents and kids(some now adults) I know are responsible, well grounded — and well educated — people. They are not the wealthy or the elite — all are middle middle class.)
Aw, poor progressives. It can be so difficult to live up to their lofty ideals.
I teach my child at home. I have known since junior high that if I had children they would be homeschooled. The very thought of handing my daughter over to a government school for 7 hours a day turns my stomach.
My god! She actually says that only government can be trusted with schooling!
Herm comes 3rd . Homeschooled kids ready for college at 16.
Janitors kids second. Ready for college at 15.
Retire05’s friends win . College at 16 -quite average but the reading of Latin & Greek a bonus . The Decider was the 4 year old who is about to begin The Peloponnesian War (in Greek ) in the morning & Plato in Latin after his /her afternoon toddler nap.
Keep it up guys. America will soon be back up in the top 20 nations .( Last time I looked it was between 24 (English ) & 48 (maths).
Ps How many English speaking countries are there? About 8.
Just a note that early college entry isn’t the end goal. For science types, maybe. But not if one wants varsity sports and high school years are important for that (e.g. Tebow). Or if he’s wanting a service academy.
My apologies . USA is now ranked 35th in the world for Maths (15 year olds ).
The English test in 2011 was not able to be calculated for USA because it had PRINTING errors
LOL -You would not read about it.
“To get your head around what a liberal stands for…
…You’ll need at least 8 heads.”
I don’t have 8 heads but let me try to infuse some 8 legged insight…
This Slate article ties together some recent quite trains of thought.
Newt and the Ryan Budget Plan.
That you can be a big govenment democrat and support religious liberty and/or claim to be a Christian.
(Obama demand that the Church pay for BABY KILLING.)
And the Michigan public school official who recently stated that parents don’t know what’s best for their children.
The single mom with six kids who is “not an economically advantaged liberal” is about to have her quality of life downgraded by Obama spending that is inherently immoral and Progressives always project their intentions.
-to wit, don’t despair home schooled liberals, the progressive indoctrination in public schools has got your back, because you won’t have a choice anyway as the state ultimately will dictate what your values should be.
ie Fascism: Canadian Supreme Court overturns right to religious liberty.
Interesting. We started homeschooling our son in 5th grade. He tried out the new charter high school in town for a year, but found the students disrespectful and disruptive to the learning process. We resumed homeschooling and, last fall at the age of 15, he entered the local community college as a part-time student. He tested out of all freshman English classes and was required to take a remedial math class, probably due to my weakness as a teacher in that subject.
I have never regretted homeschooling him, though my daughter is in the local elementary school, which we are very happy with. If that changes, we will homeschool her as well. A veteran homeschooling family said their policy was to homeschool their kids in the middle school years even if the kids were happy in public school otherwise.
For us, the best thing about homeschooling is that we have a choice. We are not locked into a failing system and we are comfortable with “going Galt” on public education when and if we see fit. That freedom is incalculable.
While reflecting on this subject, I’ve come to the conclusion that public school has some very good elements and opportunities that, yes, a homeschooling family can incorporate, but that make public schools a potentially positive experience. It is not as black and white as some make it out to be.
Furthermore, Wisconsin demonstrated that the public education “cartel” is crumbling. Here in NY, Gov. Cuomo is addressing the union involvement in education as well – you should have heard the union bosses on the radio show “Capital Connection” raving about Cuomo’s State of the State line when he said that unions represent everyone but the students and he would have to represent the students. Oh my… This is a very savvy politician in a very blue state pointing out the failings of the current model in a very public fashion. Don’t think that didn’t hurt the education cartel.
Frankly, I fail to see a way forward that doesn’t involve some method of public school system privatization, which is why the establishment is fighting charters and vouchers tooth and nail. They see the end of the gravy train. How long will it take? Depends on if the Federal government bails out states.
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