The most common type of inquiry has been from a parent with a child
in school. To these people, I usually present a very short and innocuous
answer designed to be as non-confrontational as possible. "Well, my
wife and I used to be classroom teachers, and we have always dreamed of
such small class sizes! Anyway, can you believe the weather we’re
having? And how about that ozone layer thing? I mean, is it shrinking or
growing?"
I have found that it is often necessary to change the subject
quickly, otherwise I’m stuck listening to total strangers defend their
decision to place their kids in school, defend their need for two
incomes, and then ask me if I’m worried about issues associated with my
own children’s socialization experiences. It still amazes me that people
I barely know will readily draw me into such intimate and personal
discussions. And worse yet, the defensive nature of the conversation
inevitably yields to the expression of guilt on behalf of the person who
has children in school. Guilt, defense, and the probability that I’m
messing up my children – all from somebody I may have just met.
I direct a different response entirely toward other
homeschooling parents I meet. I may be a little paranoid, but I often
feel as though fellow homeschoolers ask me the "why" question in an
effort to categorize my family. Perhaps I feel this way because I have a
tendency to categorize homeschoolers I meet for the first time based on
their response to the ?Why? question too. So my response to the
question from a homeschooler is usually something like "Oh, we
homeschool for many different reasons. What are some of the main reasons
why you have chosen to educate your children full-time at home?" Often,
the first response provided reflects the fundamental, philosophical
perspective of the asker. I have received a range of responses, from "My
child was having a terrible time at school!" to "My husband and I want
to provide a true Christian upbringing for our children." Once I get a
feel for where other homeschooling parents are coming from, I can then
share a little bit about my own perspective without opening the door to
argumentative and defensive posturing by people I don’t know very well.
Don’t get me wrong, I actually enjoy a healthy argument with my friends
and colleagues, especially when conversing about educational problems
and issues. But it usually takes me a long time to get comfortable with
others before inviting them into the confidence of my educational
philosophies. Besides, I’d rather spend time getting to know new parents
by asking questions about their children and their previous life
experiences.
I offer my third type of response to educational
professionals. As a faculty member and instructional technologist, I
have had many occasions to work closely with other faculty, teachers,
school administrators, and education graduate students. Through my
interactions, the subject of my children inevitably arises and,
consequently, our decision to homeschool is questioned.
I am very
careful about how I respond to other educators because I don’t want to
undermine my own professional goals, which include trying to help
improve an institution that is very resistant to change. I also want to
protect my perceived objectivism regarding educational issues. Since I
work closely with students and colleagues who might be immersed in
activities that, in my estimation, perpetuate the educational status
quo, I want them to regard my differing perspectives and opinions as
being relatively unbiased. So I tend to respond to their "why" questions
as a researcher. ?As teachers, my wife and I have always wanted to
experiment with a variety of methods and strategies. And our children
happen to be the only guinea pigs we could get permission to experiment
on for twenty continuous years. You could say we’re part of a grand
social-educational experiment. You’ll need to check the prison records
over the next couple decades to decide whether or not we succeeded.?
This response usually leads to interesting and positive discussions
about the nature of educational research, and the values versus
limitations of conducting personal ethnographic studies. At least it
diverts the conversation away from the topic of homeschooling. Again, I
welcome the opportunity to discuss homeschooling with anybody. But too
many colleagues and students have accused me of "copping out" of
problems associated with public schooling.
According to their logic, I
can’t be part of the solution if my children are not part of the
problem. What may be hard for them to grasp is simply that I value my
children much more than I do my profession. And this is not something I
ever want to address in a classroom full of practicing teachers, most of
whom are parents themselves.
Three different answers provided for three different types of
people asking why my wife and I choose to homeschool. Three different
answers, and none reflecting the REAL reason why we homeschool.
What
follows is the answer I wish I could give to anybody asking me why we
homeschool. It is an answer that does not make light of the role
education plays in the life of our family. It is an answer that has been
formulated from years of learning, teaching, and homeschooling. It is
an answer born in the classroom and the dining room. It is a
multi-faceted response to that "why" question that begs to be argued. In
fact, it is an answer that includes 10 really good reasons why we
homeschool. These ten reasons include: learning, instruction, time,
identity, control, socialization, shelter, college preparation, family,
and religion.
Reason #1: Learning. The most important reason why my wife and
I chose to homeschool was simply that our values about learning were
quite different from those of the schools in which we worked. One of the
fundamental responsibilities of all teachers is to decide what is
important for their learners to try and learn, followed by arranging the
classroom environment (activities, events, and information) to ensure
that the intended skills, knowledge, and/or attitudes will be acquired
by all the learners. My wife and I believe that all learning should be
worthwhile; that is, the outcomes facilitated within any learning
environment should reflect: 1) skills that will be useful in the real
world outside school, 2) skills that are needed in order to acquire
other, more useful skills, 3) skills that the teacher wants the learners
to learn in order to enrich their lives (and the learners will have
opportunities to use these skills in their life if they choose), or 4)
skills that the learners really want to learn for themselves. Applying
these criteria to the standards mandated by our local school district
revealed that many of them ranked rather low on the worthwhile scale
for our particular children. But more importantly, my wife and I
continue to develop a list of skill sets that we feel are very
worthwhile for our children, and these outcomes would never define
public school curricula. For example, every day we arrange our
children’s learning environment to facilitate such skills as making good
decisions about personal nutrition and exercise, prudent money
management, conflict resolution, dealing with grief, effective
communication (including listening, speaking and writing well), loving
God and neighbor, caring for living things and the environment, choosing
to incorporate many forms of art into their expressions, doing science,
minimizing consumption for its own sake, enjoying cooking, gardening,
working with computer-based technologies, playing, and critically
analyzing the news. Although some people might feel that these outcomes
could be adequately addressed in addition to school, I disagree. It
seems that every day, we barely have enough time to experience our
planned instructional activities. Yet every day, other big and important
worthwhile skills reveal themselves to us.
Reason #2: Instruction. Instruction is learning’s partner. As
previously stated, instruction represents the manner in which
activities, events, and information within the learning environment are
arranged in order to make sure the students learn what the instruction
intends. The art and science of arranging learning environments is call
"instructional design," and good (effective) instructional design is
seldom employed within most classrooms, either by the teacher or by the
materials available to schools (i.e. textbooks). Here is an example of
what I mean. Suppose a fifth-grade teacher wanted students to learn
skills associated with the Civil War because questions about the Civil
War were to be included in the fifth-grade standardized test (of course,
whether this constitutes a worthwhile reason to learn about the Civil
War is another matter). Some skills would most likely be categorized as
verbal information or "declarative knowledge," such as stating names,
dates, places, and labeling pictures and descriptions of specific
events. In order for students to effectively learn such skills, certain
strategies need to be incorporated into the learning environment in
accordance with good instructional design principles. These include the
creation of a meaningful, purposeful learning context (i.e. creating
simulations or games); help in relating new terms and definitions to
preexisting knowledge; the presentation of a variety of concrete
examples; practice using the newly-acquired skills in the same way they
will be assessed in the future, with immediate feedback; and
opportunities for learners to summarize the key ideas emerging from the
learning experience (i.e. the generation of a concept map).
These strategies, among others, have been proven to help
people learn verbal information skills. Helping people learn other types
of skills, including intellectual skills (i.e. rule application), motor
skills, and attitudes necessitate the use of different types of
strategies. Unfortunately, many teachers never receive adequate
instruction themselves over the design of effective learning
environments. And making matters worse is the fact that books and other
learning resources are rarely developed by competent instructional
designers.
In addition to a lack of effective instructional strategy
implementation, many classroom teachers fail to take full advantage of
the different media that can be used to help define meaningful learning
environments. For example, cable television presents a wide range of
very well-produced and motivating programs, and computers offer the
world’s largest collection of information resource via the Internet as
well as providing opportunities to create and publish a variety of
multimedia projects. But learners in typical classrooms seldom have
enough time to devote to interacting with television and computers, not
to mention literature and other forms of art and information that
require from learners a relatively high degree of sustained mental
effort. I’m not necessarily blaming teachers, because policy decisions,
limited resources, and the need to spend a great deal of time addressing
information related to worthless standards often prevent teachers from
using television, computers, and literature as viable means of effective
instruction.
Reason #3: Time. If I had to pick one phrase that summarily
communicates why we homeschool, it would simply be "school is a waste of
time." This isn’t to say that people don’t learn important things in
school, or that school is a total and complete waste of time. It is
simply that, from an instructional perspective, too much of the precious
time allotted to childhood is wasted in school, primarily because of
the two reasons stated above (poor instruction, and learning outcomes
that are not worthwhile). A simple way to conceptualize the amount of
time spent engaged in meaningful, purposeful and effective
learning-related activity is to think about a typical student in a
typical day at school. Imagine how much time this child might spend
throughout the school day practicing worthwhile skills while receiving
personal feedback. Although there are other factors related to effective
instruction, none are more important than practice with adequate and
timely feedback. I have actually used a stopwatch while observing
classrooms to measure the amount of time individual students spent
actively engaged in practice over worthwhile skills throughout an entire
day in school. Believe it or not, I have never observed more than 30
minutes of effective practice experienced by an individual learner
within the six hours constituting a school day. It was usually closer to
10 minutes. On a more grand scale, I asked education graduate students
(enrolled in one of my instructional design courses) who took four years
of Spanish in high school to complete a basic assessment of
conversational Spanish skills (translating common Spanish phrases into
English). In most cases, their scores were not significantly higher than
those of the students in my class who had never taken Spanish. I then
helped them calculate the amount of time spent in high school studying
the Spanish language. Five hours per week in class, plus two hours per
week doing homework, multiplied by 36 weeks per academic year,
multiplied by four years. This equals 1008 hours devoted to Spanish. I
asked my students if they felt this was a good use of their time during
their teen years, considering their level of Spanish proficiency as
adults. Most agreed that, in fact, it was a rather significant waste of
time.
It isn’t just the amount and type of learning that doesn’t
take place IN school because of ineffectual instruction that leaves me
such a strong sense of time wasting. I also recognize that quite a bit
of learning cannot occur OUTSIDE school because of the limited number of
hours in the day. When our oldest daughter Grace was ten years old, we
moved to a small rural town in Virginia. It was difficult for us to
connect with other homeschoolers. Grace felt particularly isolated and
disconnected from the world, so we decided that she might benefit from
attending the local school. After less than a full semester, we had to
remover her. It wasn’t that she was turning into a monster, or crying
every morning as she left for school. It was primarily that she spent a
great deal of her time at home completing math homework and working on
other school-related projects at the expense of practicing piano and
playing with her siblings. In fact, she stopped enjoying the piano.
Rather than taking time through her day to practice playing and
experimenting with music, Grace had to fit in basic music lessons
between homework and chores. She really had no time for piano, or
performing in plays, or playing games. Other people may rightfully
disagree with our priorities, but my wife and I both feel that enjoying
and performing music, playing in the outdoors, cooking, performing in
the theater, learning ballet, and immersing ourselves in long and
complicated games with siblings and friends is much more important than
99% of the math we were compelled to try and learn in school. I know
that some people are capable of doing it all: school, music, theater,
ballet, soccer, family. But not us.
Reasons #4 & #5: Identity and Control. Another very
important reason why we homeschool is because we want our children to
develop clear pictures of their own individual intellectual identities,
and we want them to know how to take full advantage of the fact that
they are always in control of their own learning. As a classroom science
teacher, I noticed that too many of my students had difficulty learning
some of the important critical thinking skills associated with being
able to act like scientists. Many were happiest when they had the
correct answers told to them, rather than really thinking for themselves
about scientific problems and their possible solutions. I may have been
over-generalizing, but I attributed their noticeable lack of
intellectual creativity to bad habits developed and reinforced in
school. [ ..]
Reason #6: Socialization. In my experiences, concerns about
socialization constitute some of the most immediate response to
homeschooling by the general public. People seem to think that it is
potentially harmful to isolate children from the 30+ hours per week of
social interactivity that occurs between same-age peers with minimal
adult supervision in school. But it may surprise most people to learn
that concerns about socialization are one of the most important reasons
why we choose to homeschool. As I previously detailed, people learn
primarily through the process of practice with adequate feedback. Based
on my observations, children in typical homogenous classrooms need to
provide their own social modeling and behavioral feedback as they
interact with each other throughout the school day. And in many cases, I
have clearly seen that children are not usually the best teachers of
constructive communication skills (listening, asking for clarification,
evaluating without criticizing, etc.) or skills associated with conflict
resolution. Stripping away the surface social behaviors observed among
members of homogenous groups of children often reveals a more basic set
of behaviors that are more in communion with the social order depicted
in The Lord of the Flies. And why not? With a ratio of 25 or 30 students
to one teacher, the children themselves must establish most of the
rules of childhood. We homeschool so that our children can receive
adequate instruction over learning how to interact constructively with
people younger, the same, and older than themselves. And my wife and I
are present a good deal of the time to provide modeling and practice
with adequate feedback over socialization skills that will be very
useful for them throughout their entire lives.
One of the funniest things about people voicing their concerns
to me regarding socialization is that they will often talk to me about
their concerns after complimenting me on how well my children conversed
with them. And I have received nothing but praise from the elderly
people who wish my children well after receiving their meals delivered,
as a family, through the Meals-on-Wheels program. My children get
practice socializing with the elderly because they have the time to do
so, and I don’t know anybody who would see this as a problem. On a
related note, there has been some pride recently in the homeschooling
community because homeschooled children have won both the national
spelling bee and the national geography bee. I watched these children on
television, and like many others I was impressed. But I thought the
most impressive thing wasn’t the knowledge they communicated. I thought
the most impressive thing was their composure. They took the time to
think about their answers, and they spoke with clarity and confidence in
front of a national audience. In my opinion, these homeschooled kids
passed the socialization test with flying colors.
Reason #7: Shelter. One of the criticisms I get occasionally
during discussions about homeschooling is whether or not I’m concerned
about the fact that our children are sheltered too much from reality. If
I could be painfully honest during these discussions, I would respond
that I am very concerned about sheltering my children from reality,
especially the reality defined by the culture of school. Bullies
physically harm smaller, weaker kids in the reality of school.
Individual differences are rarely valued in the reality of school, and
children in school are regularly abused emotionally by their peers if
they possess personal characteristics that stray too far from the norm.
The values of consumerism (i.e. wearing the right clothes) and status
associated with money are the realities of school. Deadly concealed
weapons are a reality in school. And an accelerated sense of sexuality
and dating are a reality in school. I understand that these are also
realities outside school, and my children will someday claim membership
in this reality. But not today.
Reason #8: College. Our homeschooling environment could be
regarded as 'college prep,' but not because we push our children
academically. On the contrary, my wife and I recognize that admission to
college isn’t a race, and the days of childhood are precious and
numbered. But even though we don’t see our children as
adults-in-waiting, we do want to prepare them for success in college
because we know that a fruitful college experience may help them reach
their own personal professional goals as adults (if college is indeed a
path they need to take). We feel that our homeschool environment is
really helping our children prepare for college because they are
learning how to manage every aspect of their individual lives. They
won’t need to try and figure out how to take care of themselves through
the feedback and modeling provided by their peers in college. It has
been my experience that students who struggle to learn the skills
necessary to take care of themselves while in college wind up wasting an
awful lot of tuition money as they fail to learn what their classes
intend.
Reason #9: Family. Perhaps the most profound reason why we
homeschool is our desire to truly appreciate the daily sanctity of
family. Growing up in a large urban community, my wife and I were both
immersed in the fast-paced world of endless activity that revolved
around school, church, and extra-curricular experiences. Looking back,
we both agree that our sense of family was greatly compromised by the
lack of shared familial experiences. Time is a precious commodity, and
it is much more worthy of family than many of the non-family experiences
that filled our days growing up. The fact that we gather around the
table morning, noon, and night is a testimony to the genuine value we
place on family, and we hope that our children will continue to grow in
appreciation of family and make choices to include us in their lives
when they mature into adulthood.
Reason #10: Religion. Finally, we homeschool for religious
reasons, not because we want to make certain our children are sheltered
from secular ideas, or because we want them to be able to pray whenever
they want to pray. No, we characterize religion in a rather broad sense.
Our daily rituals define our faith, and vice versa. We homeschool
because it is part and parcel of our faith experience. Serving others,
praying together, and living lives that are not defined exclusively by
the values of our society all reflect the important elements of our
religion. In fact, all the facets of our educational philosophy manifest
themselves into the rituals, habits, and priorities that are
inseparable from our faith journeys.
Why do we homeschool? Some day I hope to figure out how to
answer this question truthfully, no matter who asks. I suppose the best
way to summarize my honest response would be to say what we practice we
learn, and what we don’t practice we don’t learn. If this were all I
said, perhaps people might regard me as eccentric and mysterious.
If I were really clever, however, I would have directed the
woman in the grocery store to ask Grace, Lucy, and Patrick why they were
homeschooled. I have no doubt that their answers would have provided
the woman with more insight than anything I could have offered.
© 2002 Greg Sherman
About the Author: Greg and his wife Shelly homeschool their
three children, Grace (13), Lucy (11) and Patrick (9) in beautiful
Flagstaff. AZ. Greg earned his Ph.D. in Instructional Technology and
currently works as a consultant for the Arizona K-12 Center and Northern
Arizona University as an instructional designer and technology
integration coordinator.
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