|
and a hard one to answer. I homeschooled in a pretty liberally applied regulation state. I've talked with people who live in highly regulated and restricted states. If I had to choose - as a homeschooler - it would certainly be the one with fewer regulations.
That said, as a citizen - and knowing "some" hs'ers - SOMETIMES it's hard not to want "more regulations".
The thing is, I wish the powers that being enforcing those regulations had a better understanding of learning processes and children and styles, etc.
For instance - UNSCHOOLING - is rarely understood by ANYONE who has not seen it up close and personal in action.
We practiced an eclectic mix - after the first year or so (ages 8-9) I was no longer my son's "teacher" - I was his facilitator. I abandoned the "state suggested curricula" as we knew he would NOT be returning to a traditional school setting at the time. I let him study whatever the hell he WANTED to study. And study he did. The depth and breadth of what/how he learned far surpassed he traditionally schooled counter-parts. He may not have been learning "4th grade" blah blah blah, but he was learning Algebra, Chemistry, Chinese, and Ancient History. And NO, he is NOT a "genius" - I will admit that he IS a little smarter than average, though.
He was a top-down global learner, conceptual to specifics. MOST schools teach in just the opposite manner. They moved way too slowly and hated all the questions he asked. (You're not supposed to know that yet... you're confusing the other students . . . I have no idea! . . . Why don't you go read while the other children work on this, m'kay?)
I'm saying this to point out that *some* of those highly regulated states, you're just doing "school work" at home. Their curriculum, their lesson plans, their time-table. While there will be some freedom, you won't have the freedom you need to provide the best style of learning for your child.
While I ABHOR the whole fundamentalist "HAPPY HEARTH" bullshit being taught to those poor "christian girls" - to deny their parents the right to teach them as they see fit, would deny all those UNSCHOOLERS the right to teach their children the best way that they will learn.
It's a very hard call. I think a moderate amount - registering your school, and your children. Yearly achievement testing proving progress. However, you need informed regulators/educators that understand that a vast majority of hs'ers (the non-fundy ones) are doing so because of the learning differences - and DIFFERENCES - that many of these children possess - so that you will see uneven progress.
Hs'ers are quirky. They're aspie. They're autistic. They're very damn smart. They're slow. They're disabled. They're disordered. They're geniuses. They're different. They're athletes or music or art prodigies. They're suffering from severe anxiety disorders or shyness. They hate loud noises. Fluorescent lights cause them to behave as if they have ADHD! They have time sense disorders. They're cute. They're funny. They're personable.They're more mature. They're less mature. They are wonderful and they deserve to learn in the way that works best for them.
Overcrowded classrooms. EXTREMELY-ill-behaved children who should not be in the same room. POLITICS!!! Ill-suited teachers. Overbearing administrators. TEST TEST TEST TEST TEST bullshit that tests nothing but how to take tests. Cookie-cutter soulless lesson plans.
For some kids, it's not biggie - they deal with it and move on. For some kids - you may has well drown them as put them in that environment.
|