Homeschooling

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Homeschooling is opting out of formal public and private schools in order to educate children in the home or in specially arranged classes or cooperatives. Parents take a more active role in the education of their children when they homeschool.

The primary reason for homeschooling is to give the child a better education. A close second in reasons, however, is to avoid the culture of public school and its many adverse effects of hostility to Christianity and parental control, political bias, boredom, confusion, depression, etc.

In the United States, opting out of public schools is not new. When Thomas Edison's public school teacher said he was "addled," Edison's mother took him out of public school and taught him at home. But because of compulsory education laws—the first was passed in Massachusetts in 1852, and by 1918 every state had them—schooling at home was a violation of truancy laws, and was rare until the 1970s.

The origin of the U. S. homeschooling movement is often credited to John Holt and his 1964 book How Children Fail. Holt was "a left-winger who regarded schools as instruments of the bureaucratic-industrial complex."[1] However, the movement was also catalyzed when social conservatives became alarmed at the 1962 U. S. Supreme Court ruling which banned prayer in public schools.

Truancy laws brought pioneering homeschoolers into conflict with local officials. The first New York Times story on "home schooling" appeared in 1974, and concerned two parents charged with "educational neglect" by the Westchester County Department of Social Services. Tests showed that they performed at or about grade level "except for one who is a little slow in reading," and the parents received strong support from a state senator.[2] By the mid-1980s the Times was running articles with titles like "Schooling in the Home: A Growing Alternative" and "There Are Benefits In Homeschooling," and states were legalizing homeschooling[3] A 1997 article said "It's not only Christian fundamentalists any more" and a 2003 article noted "Unhappy in Class, More Are Learning at Home."


High-achieving Christians who were educated at home

A disproportionate number of high achievers have throughout history have been Christians who were educated at home. Though it should be noted that prior to the 19th century most children worldwide were educated within their family. Here is a list of some of them:


Leonardo da Vinci[Citation Needed]
Claude Monet[Citation Needed]
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart[Citation Needed]

Stonewall Jackson[Citation Needed]
John Paul Jones[Citation Needed]
Robert E. Lee[Citation Needed]
Douglas MacArthur[Citation Needed]
George Patton[Citation Needed]

Alexander Graham Bell[Citation Needed]
Thomas Edison[Citation Needed]
Cyrus McCormick[Citation Needed]

George Washington[Citation Needed]
John Quincy Adams[Citation Needed]
James Madison[Citation Needed]
William Henry Harrison[Citation Needed]
John Tyler[Citation Needed]
Abraham Lincoln[Citation Needed]
Theodore Roosevelt[Citation Needed]

Joan of Arc[Citation Needed]



William Cary[Citation Needed]
Jonathan Edwards[Citation Needed]
Dwight L. Moody[Citation Needed]
John Newton[Citation Needed]
Charles Wesley[Citation Needed]
John Wesley[Citation Needed]
Brigham Young[Citation Needed]

George Washington Carver[Citation Needed]
Pierre Curie[Citation Needed]
Charles Louis Montesquieu[Citation Needed]
Blaise Pascal[Citation Needed]
Bernhard Riemann[Citation Needed]
Booker T. Washington[Citation Needed]
Adam Yahiye Gadahn[1]
John Walker Lindh[2] Checkered educational history, in and out of public schools, partly homeschooled
Franklin D. Roosevelt[3] (private tutors at home through age 14, then entered Groton)


Patrick Henry[Citation Needed]
William Penn[Citation Needed]
Henry Clay[Citation Needed]

John Jay[Citation Needed]
John Marshall[Citation Needed]
John Rutledge[Citation Needed]

Hans Christian Andersen[Citation Needed]
Pearl S. Buck[Citation Needed]
Agatha Christie[Citation Needed]
Charles Dickens[Citation Needed]
Bret Harte[Citation Needed]
C.S. Lewis[Citation Needed]
Sean O’Casey[Citation Needed]
George Bernard Shaw[Citation Needed]
Mark Twain[Citation Needed]
Daniel Webster[Citation Needed]

George Clymer[Citation Needed]
William Livingston[Citation Needed]
George Mason[Citation Needed]
Charles Pickney III[Citation Needed]
George Wyeth[Citation Needed]

Ansel Adams[Citation Needed]
Clara Barton[Citation Needed]
John Burroughs[Citation Needed]
Andrew Carnegie[Citation Needed]
George Rogers Clark[Citation Needed]
Florence Nightingale[Citation Needed]
Leo Tolstoy[Citation Needed]

Charles Fletcher Lummis[Citation Needed]
Christopher Paolini[Citation Needed]

Persons of the Bible


John the Baptist[Citation Needed]
Jesus Christ

Footnotes

  1. Micklethwait, John and Adrian Wooldridge, The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America. Penguin, 2004. pp. 190-1
  2. "Parents Accused in Home Schooling," The New York Times, July 28, 1974, p. 45
  3. Belluck, Pam (1998), "Life After Home Schooling," The New York Times, November 1, 1998, p. ED26: "Some 15 years after states began legalizing home schooling in earnest, these early graduates are starting to make their way in the world."