Good Public School Education Vs. Bad Homeschool Education
What is the difference between the two? A few years ago, if you had asked me, I would have always gone on the side of a good public school education over a bad homeschool education. That was before I observed by watching my daughter's neighborhood and church friends who attend public schools. After watching them (some of whom go to the highest rated schools in my state), I'm beginning to think that there is no longer such a thing as a good public school education.
Let's look at what happens when someone gets a bad homeschool education. What do they get from their education? What do they learn? Well, they might get what could be considered a lopsided education or a biased education. Yes. That's possible. I don't see a problem with that though because they get a biased education in public school. They may pick up bad study habits. They may be allowed to focus on one or two subjects to specialize in, instead of learning every subject that is taught in public schools now.
Yes. There are a few things that could be considered bad if a child gets a bad homeschool education. Do those few things mean that we should require all children to go to public schools? Well, maybe we should look at what our children learn in public schools before we decide something so drastic. These are things that happen in a "good" public school.
Our kids learn that it's okay for them to have sex outside of marriage. In fact, they are given free birth control because kids "are going to have sex no matter what anyone says or does." Our daughters are told that if they get pregnant, they don't have to tell us and that they can just get an abortion. Our kids are taught that homosexuality is normal and that they don't have to just accept that they like someone of the opposite gender; they can be homosexual or bi-sexual. It's no one's business but their own. Our kids are taught that if they want something they should demand it "now". And, heaven forbid, anything bad happen to them. It's "not their fault." They learn that no one should have any authority over their lives except for them, even though their parents are legally and financially responsible for any damages that they may cause. Since the "No Child Left Behind Act" came into being, it's more like No Child Gets Ahead. Instead of seperating our children into groups that learn similarly, they seperate them into similarly aged groups of twenty or more children. If any of the children are intelligent, they are made to slow down so that those who may be slower can catch up. In fact, anymore, the children who are in the middle range between slow and gifted children are made to slow down for the slower children. More than one teacher has told me that they're not supposed to let anyone go ahead because the slower children get jealous. What's this? Isn't school supposed to prepare our children for real life?
Let's look at a question that many people are afraid to ask. Who taught the children before public schools came into being? What happened to those children? Let's name off some of those children:
There are many more. It looks like a public school education does not make or break the man. Take a long, honest look at the two options, side-by-side. Make an honest evaluation. Then, decide for your own children which is the best option. I know that not every parent can teach their children. But, there are people, much like myself, who thinks that homeschooling is so valuable that they're willing to step up and help those parents out by teaching those children alongside their own. There are people who will help a financially struggling single mom by renting her a room or two and then homeschooling her children alongside their own. We've been throwing more and more money at the public school system year after year after year. It's not helping any. If anything, it's making the problems worse. I think it's about time we put this one out of it's misery.
E. L. Benz
4/24/07
What is the difference between the two? A few years ago, if you had asked me, I would have always gone on the side of a good public school education over a bad homeschool education. That was before I observed by watching my daughter's neighborhood and church friends who attend public schools. After watching them (some of whom go to the highest rated schools in my state), I'm beginning to think that there is no longer such a thing as a good public school education.
Let's look at what happens when someone gets a bad homeschool education. What do they get from their education? What do they learn? Well, they might get what could be considered a lopsided education or a biased education. Yes. That's possible. I don't see a problem with that though because they get a biased education in public school. They may pick up bad study habits. They may be allowed to focus on one or two subjects to specialize in, instead of learning every subject that is taught in public schools now.
Yes. There are a few things that could be considered bad if a child gets a bad homeschool education. Do those few things mean that we should require all children to go to public schools? Well, maybe we should look at what our children learn in public schools before we decide something so drastic. These are things that happen in a "good" public school.
Our kids learn that it's okay for them to have sex outside of marriage. In fact, they are given free birth control because kids "are going to have sex no matter what anyone says or does." Our daughters are told that if they get pregnant, they don't have to tell us and that they can just get an abortion. Our kids are taught that homosexuality is normal and that they don't have to just accept that they like someone of the opposite gender; they can be homosexual or bi-sexual. It's no one's business but their own. Our kids are taught that if they want something they should demand it "now". And, heaven forbid, anything bad happen to them. It's "not their fault." They learn that no one should have any authority over their lives except for them, even though their parents are legally and financially responsible for any damages that they may cause. Since the "No Child Left Behind Act" came into being, it's more like No Child Gets Ahead. Instead of seperating our children into groups that learn similarly, they seperate them into similarly aged groups of twenty or more children. If any of the children are intelligent, they are made to slow down so that those who may be slower can catch up. In fact, anymore, the children who are in the middle range between slow and gifted children are made to slow down for the slower children. More than one teacher has told me that they're not supposed to let anyone go ahead because the slower children get jealous. What's this? Isn't school supposed to prepare our children for real life?
Let's look at a question that many people are afraid to ask. Who taught the children before public schools came into being? What happened to those children? Let's name off some of those children:
- Leonardo Da Vinci
Claude Monet
Irving Berlin
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Douglass MacArthur
George Patton
Alexander Graham Bell
The Wright Brothers
Abraham Lincoln
Theodore Roosevelt
Dwight L. Moody
John Wesley
Albert Einstein
Booker T. Washington
Winston Churchill
Patrick Henry
C.S. Lewis
Mark Twain
There are many more. It looks like a public school education does not make or break the man. Take a long, honest look at the two options, side-by-side. Make an honest evaluation. Then, decide for your own children which is the best option. I know that not every parent can teach their children. But, there are people, much like myself, who thinks that homeschooling is so valuable that they're willing to step up and help those parents out by teaching those children alongside their own. There are people who will help a financially struggling single mom by renting her a room or two and then homeschooling her children alongside their own. We've been throwing more and more money at the public school system year after year after year. It's not helping any. If anything, it's making the problems worse. I think it's about time we put this one out of it's misery.
E. L. Benz
4/24/07