Globalists panic as homeschooling explodes across US

Globalist spokesmen in media and government are voicing concern over a huge boom in homeschooling across the USA that has the trend becoming more mainstream

An analysis from the Washington Post last week found that the number of homeschooled children in the US has jumped from 1.5 million in 2019 to as many as 2.7 million this year — some estimates say 3.7 million — suggesting that many children did not return to schools when they reopened during the pandemic.

The analysis — which looked at 60 percent of the school-aged population in 7,000 school districts across 32 states and Washington, D.C. — found that homeschooling defies political, geographical and economic borders.

For example, while Republican Florida has the largest homeschool population with 154,000 homeschooled children, Democratic New York is showing the fastest growth with nearly 52,000 children homeschooled, more than double since 2017.

New York City boroughs Manhattan, Brooklyn, and the Bronx saw the highest growth rates with the homeschool population in some districts surging over 300 percent in the last six years.

The trend is also gaining popularity even in areas with high academic achievement. Last year over 60,000 children were homeschooled in districts which ranked in the country’s top fifth for scholastic aptitude.

Florida’s Hillsborough County has become the nation’s homeschool “capital” with 10,680 homeschoolers in the district.

“Today, Hillsborough home-schoolers inhabit a scholastic and extracurricular ecosystem that is in many ways indistinguishable from that of a public or private school,” reports the Washington Post. “Home-schooled kids play competitive sports. They put on full-scale productions of ‘Mary Poppins’ and ‘Les Miserables.’ They have high school graduation ceremonies, as well as a prom and homecoming dance.”

But Hillsborough officials are displeased with the trend.

“It’s a tremendous imbalance,” said Hillsborough County School Board member Lynn Gray, who says she worries about homeschoolers’ “academic preparation and lack of exposure to diverse points of view.”

“I can tell you right now: Many of these parents don’t have any understanding of education,” she said. “The price will be very big to us, and to society. But that won’t show up for a few years.”

But studies show that homeschoolers outperform their state-educated counterparts in nearly all areas. Standardized tests reveal that homeschoolers on average score over 30 percentage points higher than public schoolers in core studies such as reading, language and math.

SAT test results show that homeschooled children score higher than state-educated children by as many as 70 points in critical reading and 48 points in writing. They are also more likely to achieve higher GPAs.

Minority children who attend homeschool also show higher results than their counterparts. Black homeschooled students, for example, have been shown to outscore Black public schooled students by 23–42 percentage points.

According to government figures, 41 percent of homeschoolers are Black, Asian, Hispanic, and others (i.e. not White/non-Hispanic).

Most homeschoolers also report being excited about life and satisfied with their work, joined by a minority of public schoolers.

As school districts lose students to the homeschool method, governments and teachers’ unions are looking for ways to show more impressive numbers and boost enrollment.

The Oregon State Board of Education, for example, has dropped essential skills and standardized testing requirements, which it said was necessary to fight racism. This decision was ardently backed by the Oregon Education Association, the state’s 40,000-strong teachers’ union, which stands to lose members if graduation and enrollment rates falter.

Following the decision, Oregon public high schools boasted an 81.3 percent graduation rate last year despite only 43 percent of students being proficient in English and less than 31 percent being proficient in math.

The picture is bleaker in Baltimore where standardized test scores for 2021 revealed that 85 percent of students are not proficient in math and four out of ten public high school students earn lower than a 1.0 GPA.

At one public high school, students were found to read at an elementary school or kindergarten level.

But higher academic achievement among homeschoolers — including minority children — has not stopped media operatives from painting homeschool as a racist initiative.

“It may seem harmless, but the insidious racism of the American religious right’s obsession with homeschooling speaks volumes, writes @AntheaButler,” MSNBC tweeted.

Last month comedian John Oliver dedicated a segment on Last Week Tonight to slamming homeschools. Without data to show that homeschooled children are disadvantaged, Oliver argued that homeschools should be regulated by the state to ensure that homeschooling parents are “moral” and “safe” for their children.

Oliver is joined by other media figures in his opposition to homeschooling.

“Imagine putting ‘homeschool mom’ in your bio and not understanding you’ve just ruined the lives of five innocent children,” tweeted MSNBC host Joe Scarborough last year.

See more here frontline.news

Header image: USA ThoughtCo

Editor’s note: what the opposition to homeschooling is really about is the fear children will miss out on state-endorsed indoctrination about race, gender, vaccines and the climate.

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Comments (7)

  • Avatar

    Wisenox

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    The numbers are large, but small in comparison with the population. I suspect that the actions and requirements put on the kids by the schools factored into their decision.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    VOWG

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    Have to stop that independent thought.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

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    Hi PSI Readers,

    As I write this there are only two contrasting opinions. Do you see them? The world, in which I have lived, has had individuals whose efforts have made a great difference upon the lives of the masses.

    have a good day

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Lorraine

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    All the right people object to homeschooling, therefore it is the best choice for educating critical thinkers.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      RockyTSquirrel

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      agree Lorraine,
      when those without vision, agree to blind others to the truth, a questionable agenda is exposed..
      The growth of our infant nation, was rooted in “Homeschooling”,
      Even when community schools began to flourish, it was the parents that decided who would be teachers..
      ..
      RTS
      (as requested, this is an opinion and or SARCASM)
      “Let’s Go, Brandon” – “Pedo-Joe” (F.J.B.)

      Reply

  • Avatar

    Jerry Krause

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    Hi Readers,

    Have any of you considered the history of Miami-Dade Community College?

    Have a good day

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Alex

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    Hannah Arendt wrote about the crisis in education in 1957, and since then what she identified has only intensified. A universal education project deals with the transmission of tradition, in the form of knowledge. When the school starts to deal with politics and militancy, knowledge loses ground. We stop reading the classics and debate whether a man is a woman, and vice versa. In fact, what she says is reality: a poorly educated person defends himself poorly from the world, and will be the new proletariat to be exploited.

    Reply

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