(Excerpted from Homeschoolers’
Success Stories: 15 Adults and 12 Young People Share the Impact That
Homeschooling Has Made on Their Lives by Linda Dobson (Prima
Publishing, © 2000)
Posted here with the permission of the author.
Many regard homeschooling as a new educational phenomenon, but that is
simply a reflection of the bias of our times. If somehow we could help
our caveman see into the future, he would regard government-sponsored
schools as the variant, as would the majority of his descendants at
least until the middle of the nineteenth century. Until then, the mostly
agrarian American society lived a family-centered lifestyle; education
happened at home, if only by default.
Through involvement in daily life’s work, children gathered knowledge of
everything from growing food, construction, caring for livestock, and
making tools, clothing, soap, and whatever few other resources they
needed. Lessons necessary to turn them into readers, writers, and
cipherers proficient enough to handle their own affairs and grow into
responsible citizens took only a fraction of the time that they consume
today, and they stopped when the season demanded their time and
attention in the field or elsewhere. The lessons were provided by
parents, older siblings, or perhaps a young single woman hired for a
pittance by the community’s families to teach the basics. No laws
existed, though, to compel (force) attendance.
The development of the modern educational system may be said to have
been well on its way (over the objections of many teachers, parents, and
public press) with the first state compulsory attendance law, courtesy
of Massachusetts in 1852, coupled with the shift from an agrarian to an
industrial society and its accompanying, vigorously enforced child labor
laws. Modern-day switches from one pedagogical plan to another are hard
enough to keep up with, but the complete story of how we got to our
current state of school affairs takes so many twists and convolutions
that I can only recommend that you read John Taylor Gatto’s The
Underground History of American Education: A Schoolteacher’s Intimate
Investigation into the Problem of Modern Schooling (The Oxford
Village Press, 2000) to attempt a complete understanding of the
evolution.
It’s only because we are now looking back over a 150-year history of
government-supported, compulsorily attended schooling, one that most of
us accepted as perfectly natural as we grew up (as did our parents and
many of our grandparents), that homeschooling is perceived as something
new. The current homeschooling movement is only new in that it has
occurred following compulsory attendance laws and has grown sizeable
enough to be noticed.
It is difficult to peg the exact origin of modern homeschooling. Some
might say the seeds were being planted in the sixties and seventies by
educational reformers and authors who questioned both schooling’s
methods and results. Notable among them are Ivan Illich (Deschooling
Society, Harper & Row, 1971), Charles E. Silberman (Crisis in the
Classroom: The Remaking of American Education, Random House, 1970),
and the prolific John Holt (How Children Fail, Dell Publishing,
1964; How Children Learn,
Dell Publishing, 1967; What Do I Do Monday? Dell Publishing,
1970), a teacher who eventually gave up his original vision of school
reform as hopeless. He began advocating instead no school for
youngsters, and in 1977 began publishing Growing Without Schooling,
a magazine that continues today even though John passed away in
1985. (AUTHOR’S NOTE IN 2005: Unfortunately, the inheritor no longer
publishes this magazine.)
Around the same time, Dr. Raymond and Dorothy Moore were busy conducting
and collecting early childhood education research. They, too, began
publishing articles and books that questioned the wisdom of conventional
schooling with a focus on the harm that can be created by rushing
children prematurely into the existing school regimen (see Better
Late Than Early: A New Approach to Your Child’s Education, Reader’s
Digest Press, 1975; School Can Wait,
Hewitt Research Foundation, 1985).
By the late seventies and early eighties, the message was spreading. The
nationally acclaimed Home Education Magazine made its humble
start in 1983. As the number of homeschoolers slowly grew so did the
number of support groups focused on helping other parents get started in
homeschooling. Networking homeschoolers worked to educate legislators
and eventually changed state laws that prohibited the practice. The
grassroots movement kept growing.
In the 1980s, changes in the tax regulations for Christian schools
forced the smaller among them to close down by the hundreds. Suddenly,
the parents of the students attending these schools were faced with a
choice between government school attendance and homeschooling. For many,
this really wasn’t a choice at all, and these Christian families became
part of a large second wave of homeschooling, joining earlier
homeschoolers and boosting the numbers to record highs. Christian
curriculum providers, already well-established businesses that had just
lost a large chunk of their original market, followed the money and
easily courted the new market of homeschooling parents.
Since then, the media has identified yet another wave of homeschoolers –
“the mainstreamers.” These are families from every conceivable
religious, economic, political, and philosophical background in the
United States. This wave has been impelled by: homeschooling’s greater
visibility as an educational option; local, state, and national
homeschooling support groups; easy networking and information sharing
via the Internet and e-mail; and continuing government-school problems,
such as dumbed-down curriculum, violence, drugs, bullying, and more.
These forces have brought up the number of homeschooled children in the
United States an estimated 15 to 20% each year for the last 15 years.
The ballpark figure now stands at two million and growing.