EDUCATION
REPORT - Home-Schooling
By Jerilyn Watson
This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
A new school year has begun in America. But
some children do not go to school. Instead, they learn at home, usually
with their parents as teachers. Educational companies, libraries, school
systems and the Internet provide families with teaching material.
Homeschooling is increasingly popular. Homeschooling
groups estimate that two-million children, around two percent, learn
at home. The last government estimate was eight-hundred-fifty-thousand
in nineteen-ninety-nine. Current numbers are not expected until next
year.
Some parents choose homeschooling because of
their religious beliefs. Others say it provides more time for the family
to be together.
Many parents also believe homeschooling avoids
problems of a lot of traditional schools. One problem is classes with
too many students.
Critics, though, say children need to attend
school with other children to help them learn things like social skills.
They also say that some homeschooled children do not get a very good
education.
All fifty states and the District of Columbia
permit homeschooling. Some, however, require more preparation by parents
or testing of children than others do.
Homeschooling is as old as the country. In farm
areas, people often lived far from a school. Then, in eighteen-fifty-two,
the state of Massachusetts passed the first law to require children
to attend school.
The public education system grew. By the nineteen-sixties
and seventies, however, some Americans believed that traditional education
was not helping their children. So a number of parents began homeschooling.
Homeschool expert Linda Dobson says some parents
began to teach their children at home when some religious schools closed.
This happened after changes in tax laws in the nineteen-eighties. Since
then, she says, more people have joined the movement -- rich and poor,
and people from many races, religions and political beliefs.
There is even a National Home School Honor Society.
Membership is based in part on the same tests that students take in
school.
Homeschooled children go to college and have
also won top competitions. These include this year's National Geographic
Bee. Fourteen-year-old James Williams knew that the Indian state of
Goa is a former colony of Portugal.
This VOA Special English Education Report was
written by Jerilyn Watson.
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