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Home-School Reasons
BY The Editors
June 28-July 11, 2009 Issue |
Posted 6/19/09 at 11:10 AM
At a recent
home-schooling convention in Massachusetts, Thomas More College’s new
president, William Fahey, gave a talk that one blogger compared to a grenade.
Home schooling puts an almost unmanageable strain on mothers, he said.
Home-schooling mothers are expected
to be several things at once: mothers, homemakers, teachers, disciplinarians,
wives and, for some, wage earners, too.
If home schooling seems like too
much, he said, it’s because it is. We are political creatures, in the Socratic
sense, and students learn best with other students. Schools are the best
alternative for teaching children, he said.
Fahey also had some very positive
things to say about home schooling. But if a keynote speaker at a
home-schooling convention can call schools the best option, why is there a
home-schooling boom? Why is an ever-increasing number of moms willing to
shoulder that almost unbearable burden?
Here are two negative reasons and
two positive ones.
Family finances leave no choice
It is a strange irony that the
Catholic families most committed to their Catholic faith are precisely the
families who are most unable to make use of Catholic education.
Not all Catholics who accept the
teaching of Humanae Vitae (on birth control) have
large families, and family size is not always an indicator of Catholic
commitment. But, naturally, Catholics who embrace the Church’s teaching on
contraception tend to have larger families.
It is often larger Catholic families
who home school — and it isn’t always by choice. The math is simple. The more
children a family has, the more expensive schooling is.
Catholic schools are expensive.
Multi-child discounts are rare, and sometimes they are beside the point when a
family has one income and children whose ages fall in the high school, grade
school and toddler ages simultaneously.
The irony is not lost on them (nor,
often, on the schools themselves): A Catholic education is often out of reach
for precisely those families who are most likely to want it.
The moral climate has become
poisonous
Sending children off to school has
always been a challenge to parents’ natural protectiveness, and the world has
always been a place of moral challenges.
But the moral climate has gotten far
worse for children at a far younger age than it has been in memory.
The pop-culture marketing machine
pushes atrocious role models on very young children, reaching into the schools
through libraries, the Internet and through other students who have cable
television and little supervision.
For parents, the line between being
overprotective and exercising common sense is often difficult to discern.
On the one hand, hiding children
away from life’s temptations does them no favors in the long run. This world,
like it or not, is the one they have been given. Catholics need to engage it,
not hide from it.
On the other hand, modern technology
has made its seductions so cunning and attractive that children can be
destroyed by them.
Many home-schooling parents have
made the calculus that the best way to train their children to engage the world
is to give them smaller, more controlled doses of it than schools do.
But apart from the expense and
hazards of schools in the 21st century, there are positive reasons parents home
school.
Academic excellence
The predominance of home-schoolers
in the finals of the Nationl Spelling Bee and National Geographic Bee shows
that a certain level of academic excellence is often better facilitated at home
than at school.
Home-schooled children explore areas
of academics they rarely could at school.
For one thing, the student-teacher
ratio in the largest Catholic family is better than nearly any schools’ ratio.
Parents can tailor their teaching to
individual students much better, and, by getting involved in specialized
home-schooling groups, they can allow their children to pursue a particular
interest much more easily than they could were the child attending a
traditional school.
Home schooling is thus the ultimate
expression of the Catholic principle of subsidiarity, which says that the
person best able to address a problem is the one most intimately related to it.
Religious and moral instruction.
Apart from fearing the climate at
school, parents have a positive reason to school their children at home. They
can teach their children the faith without qualification and without fear. They can tackle areas of the faith that are
too thorny or too high level to be taught at school.
Of course, school children’s parents
will point out that home-schooled children are also thus deprived of contact
with the differing opinions and beliefs that they will face when they leave
school behind. Also, they ask, if the families most committed to their faith
take themselves out of the schools, how will the school environment ever
improve?
Alongside the home-schooling
movement are signs of renewal in Catholic schools. Parish schools are often the
best in academics and discipline. Now, many dioceses are shoring up the faith
content of their schools as well, using the Catechism of the Catholic Church as
a standard for religious instruction texts.
Maybe the new interest in home
schooling is part of a larger trend toward better schooling in general.
Maybe the rise in home schooling
will cause schools to improve in order to compete. That would make home
schooling a sign of hope for the future of education.
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