Thursday, February 12, 2015

Draft for Position Paper

Why homeschooling should not be placed on a higher standard than public school


I went into some deep thought about how homeschooling is thought of by the world as well as in America in various states. The state governments in the extreme corners of the states do not seem to be very allowing of any regular homeschool regiment. Speaking from a perspective of living in the four corners of the United States at some point in my homeschooling life, I can say that homeschooling is a very efficient process when properly used and enjoyed, but can be diluted by the system surrounding it which is regulated by the state government's school board which has mostly public school oriented administrators. Homeschoolers should not be placed on a higher standard than public school students because the systems are designed together and both have valid curriculums.


Georgia state legislatin requires that every homeschool student have at least a single four and a half hour unbroken session of learning each day, and requires a detailed report on how much the student only seemed to learn. Though this as a concept isn't bad, the sheer fact that it needs to be an unbroken session (meaning no breaks and constant "Learning") just restricts the freedoms of a homeschooler to make them work more to get a proper education on their schedule. Florida has less of a time frame but still requires that the session be unbroken and uninterrupted even with family emergencies.


Texas is one of the few states that actually understands homeschooling and frees it up to where someone just needs to say they are homeschooling their child to qualify and be able to graduate. Granted, this may just add to the stereotype of "Dumb texans", there are plenty of intelligent people who have come out of those systems because they were able to achieve more in recalling detail of what they learned versus what a manuscript from a public high school had told them. Several Commanders and Captains in the Navy in modern day America came out of homeschooling programs, including Commander Hennings, Commander Andrew Wiest, and Captain Perry.


Though there are instances where homeschoolers and parents of those homeschoolers end up abusing the system to "Make up" a diploma so that they're not forced into spending more money or having to send in the actual reports and various paperwork involved to make sure education is being given to the child.

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