Thursday, April 17, 2008

The Homeschooling Philosophy

Homeschooling - The Homeschooling Philosophy

Parents for an assortment of reasons choose to homeschool their children. Some have religious goals, others object to particular topics taught or methods used in public or private schools. Many parents simply believe they can provide a superior education for their children themselves. Nevertheless, one thing all these parents appear to agree about is the belief that the public school system does a relatively poor job of educating children.

Homeschooling is actually not a radically new idea that calls for striking out on one's own to reshape education. Before compulsory education laws were established in the mid-19th century, virtually all children were educated at home, if they received any formal instruction at all.

Throughout the 20th century, public education, with a small percentage provided by private institutions, became the overwhelming norm. The adoption of the authoritarian Prussian model of the 1800s (still followed fundamentally today) was the major reason.

In the mid-1960s, challenges to those educational trends came from several directions. From different sources, including a response to several well-known books by authors such as John Holt, farmed the decision used by many parents to withdraw from the public education system.

Some were early libertarians, anxious to be free of the State as much as they could. Others harkened back to an older tradition of Classical Liberal training, both from offshoots of the Roman Catholic Church (such as the Jesuits) and the Greek-origin Enlightenment ideals.

Whatever the roots of the philosophy, a common set of ideas evolved that became dominant in homeschooling. One central idea is that an individual is a naturally active learner. The idea goes back at least to Aristotle who begins his famous book Metaphysics with the words: 'All men possess by nature the desire to know.' A view shared and echoed in many places and forms throughout the homeschooling movement.

In essence, given the proper environment and resources learning does not have to be enforced. Rather, a child eager to explore the world around him or her actively and eagerly will embrace learning. Different schools of thought within homeschooling diverge on what should take place next.

Those who embrace 'unschooling' believe that no curriculum or direction needs to be given by parent or tutor. Simply provide the child with books, natural phenomenon, or other sources and he or she will learn whatever strikes their natural interest.

Others look to a more formal structure, even going so far as to teach exactly the same topics with the same materials as are taught in public and private schools. In this case, the parent is simply substituting for the state educator and the home replaces the school.

Montessori takes a somewhat middle ground, allowing children to develop at their own pace while providing materials and guidance. Exercises in sensory and motor development, followed by language learning form part of the program. The teacher pays attention to the child, rather than the reverse, allowing imagination to stimulate learning. The emphasis is on self-correction, rather than external corrections.

Across this broad spectrum of approaches and motivations, there is a consistent line of thought. The child is the focal point of the experience and his or her proper development is the goal. That goal, homeschoolers argue, is best achieved outside the public school system that has not and cannot supply the same level of quality in instruction of most parents.

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