Archive for May, 2006

Charter Schools: Trojan Horses of Homeschooling

BevK May 22nd, 2006

Charter Schools: Trojan Horses of Homeschooling
By Judy Shewmake

You’ve all heard of the legendary ten-year battle between the Greeks and
Trojans. It ended when the Greeks sent a huge gift horse with Greek
soldiers secreted inside. While the city of Troy slept, the soldiers
sneaked out and opened the gates to let in their comrades, and the city
of Troy was taken captive.

The same thing is happening to homeschoolers today. Many of you are too
new to homeschooling to know what the “pioneers” of the homeschool
movement went through 15-20 years ago to secure the right to educate
their children at home and to ensure this right for you today. Mothers
were jailed, Child Protective Services removed children from their
homes, and families fled their homes in the night. Talk to any long-time
homeschool parent and you will hear how battles were fought in state
legislatures and courts to obtain the right to homeschool. You’ll learn
of the many hours that went into setting up support groups and
organizations to help homeschoolers to be independent from government
involvement and to learn how to homeschool. You’ll also find out how
there was virtually no homeschool curriculum available. ABeka wouldn’t
even sell materials to homeschoolers (until they found out how
profitable it was!).

In the county where we live, the principal of the local public school
along with the superintendent of education sent homeschoolers letters
and tried to coerce us into the public schools with threats of dire
consequences and pressure to conform to their interpretation of the
state law. It was a long battle, but we didn’t give in. We sought
advice, resisted the pressure, and helped in our small way to win the
freedom to homeschool our children in the way that God had impressed us
and our constitutional rights allowed. Many other more serious battles
were fought at the same time around the United States.

Presently, it is estimated that 1.5 million children are being educated
at home, and the number increases 15% each year. These homeschooled
children are winning awards, their test scores are off the charts, and
their accomplishments are in the news daily. Colleges around the country
now covet these exceptional young people. The National Educational
Association of teachers and their socialistic ideas of Goals 2000 are
unable to control these 1.5 million homeschooled children. Or are they?

Enter the Trojan horse of homeschooling–the Charter School. Charter
schools are public schools in disguise. Homeschoolers are lining up to
enroll and get their “free money.” Charters offer you “free” money for
signing up, “free” computers and Internet service, “free” textbooks,
“free” horseback riding or gymnastic lessons, ski passes, courses, etc.
The state gives around $5000 to the charter school for each child
enrolled. About $1000 goes to your “Educational Facilitator” (a public
school teacher who is your overseer); $1000 goes to you (of course not
in one lump sum or to use at your discretion–more on this later); and
the remaining $3000 goes to the charter school (for administrative
expenses). A few schools divide the $5000 into thirds. Either way,
someone is making lots of money!

The charter school is a public school and the students enrolled are
public school students. Three years ago there were 17 state-mandated
guidelines in California. This school year (2002-03) there are 250
guidelines.

By enrolling in a charter school you are:

* Inviting the government into your home. Your children are now
public school students, and your children’s homeschooling records
are now public information. When you bring government money into
your home, you give the government control over the activities in
your home.
* Agreeing to allow your assigned Educational Facilitator into your
home to observe your family once each month. (Some are now asking
for twice a month visits.) Did you know they are trained to look
for abuse and neglect, to observe children’s behavior and to read
and analyze written answers on tests and papers? Did you know it
could be just about anyone? The government is not as
discriminating in hiring teachers as you would be!
* Permitting the government to dictate what resources you use to
teach your children. You must file a purchase order that will be
authorized before you receive your books. Usually the resources
you order must be returned to the charter after you have used them.
* Encouraging the government to increase taxes to pay for all these
charter schools to grow, as “needs” demand. More students create
the need for more money, the need for more administrators and the
need for more accountability. This encourages growth of
government, not cutbacks.
* Affirming to the government that it has a say in how your children
are educated, and that the charter schools are necessary.
* Consenting to governmental control of homeschoolers now just as of
public school students. Their controls have only just begun.
* Letting the government dictate what you teach your children. The
state laws prohibit religious instruction in public schools.
* Giving up your freedom to raise your children as God has
instructed you.

Most states have a similar law: I’m quoting California Law, Article IX,
Section 8. “No public money shall ever be appropriated for the support
of any sectarian or denominational school, or any school not under the
exclusive control of the officers of the public schools; nor shall any
sectarian or denominational doctrine be taught or instruction thereon be
permitted, directly or indirectly, in any of the common schools of this
State.” Translation: By law, if your children are enrolled in a public
charter school, you cannot teach them using a Christian curriculum,
neither can you teach Christian values or doctrine in your home.

So you say to yourself, “I’ll buy Bible curriculum from my own budget.”
That won’t work. Notice this part: “nor shall any denominational
doctrine be taught…or permitted, directly or indirectly.” For now,
charters want students (and the money that comes with them), so most are
ignoring Christian instruction at this time. But there is the danger
that the charter could get in trouble in the future. As the government
gets more and more involved, the noose will continue to tighten on
homeschoolers–it already has!

Trust God to provide finances for homeschooling resources and a
computer. You don’t have to have gymnastic lessons and ski lift tickets
or even a computer to homeschool successfully. It’s not so expensive to
homeschool your children that you can’t do it without the government’s
help. This just plays into their “cradle to grave” mentality.

I’m really not “anti-government,” because government has a purpose and a
place in our society. I teach my children how our government works,
about our right to vote and the government’s rightful place in our lives
and in society. However, I am totally against the government telling us
how to teach our children. “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s and unto
to God what is God’s,” means that there is a dividing line. Charter
schools cross over that line when it comes to my children.

It’s almost as if the fight for the right to homeschool 15-20 years ago
was for naught, because now parents are running to the government and
giving back all that was gained. Never forget how God has led
homeschoolers in the past and know that He will be faithful to us in the
future, if we are faithful to Him. It is our God-given responsibility
and right to “teach them [God’s words] diligently to our children.”
Prayerfully consider this Biblical advice with regards to the education
of your children. Proverbs 23:1-4, Genesis 14:21-23, 1 Timothy 2:1-2,
Joshua 24:15, Isaiah 26:13, Hebrews 13:5, and 1 Timothy 5:8.

Pray for guidance and blessing, and “tell God your needs and don’t
forget to thank Him for His answers” (Philippians 4:6). God never
intended for the government to teach your children; He gave that
wonderful privilege and responsibility to you, the parent (Deuteronomy
6:6-9).

© 2002 by Judy Shewmake, a homeschool mother since 1985, author and
homeschool newsletter editor.

Permission granted to reproduce completely, in entirety, from title to
copyright notice, without alteration, for non-commercial, homeschool
educational purposes only.

Council flunks duty on school board vacancy

BevK May 20th, 2006

Craddock said that Brooks would give the school board “a new perspective.” Yet just as it is unclear whether his lobbying tactics were within the law, it is also unclear whether council members realized that Brooks home-schools her children.

Many parents have opted to home-school their children with great success. Home-schooling is both a legal and a reasonable choice.

Still, Brooks’ decision to home-school her children calls into question her commitment to public education, particularly her commitment to budget and curriculum issues.

And if council members voted for Brooks knowing that she is a home-schooler, then their commitment to public education is doubtful.

Brotherly Education

BevK May 20th, 2006

The four brothers, Freshwater natives, also have something else in common: they are all going to simultaneously graduate from College of the Redwoods today with associate of arts degrees and hope to all attend UCLA in the fall.

Peter, 18; Ben, 19; Nathaniel, 20 and Matthew, 21, are four bothers with big plans for the future. Born and raised in Humboldt County, the Wisan brothers were home schooled from kindergarten through the 12th grade.

CA: Home schooling poorly monitored

BevK May 19th, 2006

Marin’s public school districts have failed to provide proper oversight of home schools, according to a report issued this week by the Marin County Civil Grand Jury.

Under state law, home schools must file a private school affidavit with the state Department of Education for exemption from the compulsory public school system.

In turn, state law requires that public school districts check that the affidavits comply with state education rules, meaning that the home schools keep attendance records and teach comprehensive subjects in English.

In a May 8 report titled “Caught in the Middle: Home Schooling Neglected in Marin County,” the grand jury found that local school districts had neither checked the affidavits, nor were they aware of how to do so.

The grand jury found that some public school districts, such as Gilroy Unified, check private school affidavits when they receive complaints from the public.

It is unclear precisely how many children ages 6 to 18 are being home-schooled, McKown said. “It is probably benign neglect,” she said.

A total of 58 home schools in Marin County, serving six or fewer students, had filed affidavits with the state as of September 2005, the grand jury noted.

Until about five years ago, the affidavits were filed with local school districts.

Now they are filed with the state Department of Education.

The grand jury report was sparked by a complaint from a local citizen, who was concerned that a Marin student was being improperly home-schooled.

I don’t know the ins and outs of homeschooling in California. The HomeSchool Association of California gives information about the affidavit that musts be filed and their interpretation of what the affidavit represents.

Nearly a third of the faculty members at Patrick Henry College are leaving the school

BevK May 19th, 2006

It’s a small school so that’s only five professors. Still this has to be rocking Patrick Henry College.

Nearly a third of the faculty members at Patrick Henry College in Loudoun County are leaving the school because of what they described as limitations on their academic freedom, causing unusual introspection at the politically connected Christian liberal arts college.

They claim that Patrick Henry College, established in 2000 to attract academically gifted home-schoolers with the hope of send them on to work on Capitol Hill or at the White House, does not value equally both parts of its mission: to offer students a strong biblical perspective while educating them according to a classical liberal arts curriculum. In one case, the professors said, faculty members were reprimanded for writing that the Bible “is not the only source of truth.”

Thoroughly Modern Mill

BevK May 19th, 2006

May 20 sees the 200th anniversary of the birth of John Stuart Mill, the greatest exponent of 19th-century liberalism, whose philosophy still dominates jurisprudence in the English-speaking world. Mill was a many-faceted intellectual who wrote on all aspects of philosophy, on law and morals, on political economy, and on poetry and the arts. His home-schooling at the hands of his father, the economist and historian James Mill, was a model of rigor, causing him to read and write Greek aged 6, to master Latin aged 9, and to have acquired a thorough grounding in history and mathematics aged 10, when he began work on a history of Roman government. Mill later developed a taste for poetry, acquired a perfect knowledge of French, and, despite his agnostic upbringing, read deeply in the Bible, which he believed to be one of the two Great Books, the other being Homer.

Update: Brothers returned to parents

BevK May 19th, 2006

A judge has ordered that a severely diabetic boy and his older brother who were put into foster care be returned to their parents, effectively ending a three-month battle between the couple and youth protection services.

But Judge Ginette Durand-Brault imposed strict conditions yesterday on issues of health care and education to which the parents readily agreed.

What the parent’s agreed to:

To get back their children, the parents were forced to compromise on issues of schooling and health care for the boy who has Type 1 diabetes, the most severe form of the disease.

The parents had been home-schooling their children and had settled on a regimen of diet and insulin with the boy’s previous doctor, who retired last year.

The judge ordered the parents to follow a diabetes treatment regimen set by Dr. Constantin Polychronakos of the Montreal Children’s Hospital.

The parents and the two boys, age 9 and 10, must also meet at least once a week with a youth protection worker. The social worker will also have access to the diabetic boy’s medical file.

As well, the judge ordered that the boys finish their school year at the schools where they are enrolled.

The parents are also not allowed to discuss with the children in any negative way what has happened to them.

“There is to be no discourse, in order to protect their psychological peace of mind so they won’t be damaged by this,” she said.

Finally, the judge ordered that both parents undergo a psychological examination.

The case is not over, however. A new date is to be set for final witnesses and arguments concerning youth protection’s motion to have the children put in foster care until the end of the year. The judge said she will rule on this motion before June 15, when she begins a three-month leave.

If the parents adhere to the provisions set out by the judge, the children will not go back into foster care, Grant said.

OK, this is Canada, not the United States, but I can’t believe the level of intrusion into this family’s life.

Controversy over homeschooling mother winning seat on Nashville School Board

BevK May 19th, 2006

Having a home-schooling parent on the Metro School Board thrills some taxpayers who’ve long felt disenfranchised from the system, but it worries traditional education advocates who say Kay Brooks doesn’t have the experience or background to do a good job.

“I am concerned with someone’s experience not being in public schools and what she brings to the table,” school board member Marsha Warden said. “She doesn’t have the experience, she doesn’t have the knowledge base.”

But Bonnie Hoskins, an Old Hickory mother teaching two sons at home, said Brooks, a well-known and vocal home-schooler, will bring a lot of passion and knowledge to the table.

“Maybe Kay can act as a bridge to see it from both sides. It’s clear that the public schools need people in there that have a passion for education,” Hoskins said. “Kay can be a great source of ideas, and hopefully they’ll listen to her.”

Do You Know the Secret to Successful Homeschoooing?

BevK May 19th, 2006

This extraordinary 5-part mini-ecourse gives you an exclusive look at the homeschooling secrets you need to know to succeed. Taken straight from the pages of the new “Homeschooling Secrets Revealed,” ebook you will be one of the first to see the valuable resources that are available to you!

Such are the claims at a new website dedicated to helping you learn the secrets of successful homeschooling. The site is at www.homeschooling-secrets-revealed.com.

Sorry, but there are no secrets to successful homeschooling. If you’d like information about homeschooling, you can find more than enough at the Eclectic Homeschool Online. Yes, I’m the senior editor for the aite. But with over 500 articles, 1944 reviews, all kinds of helpful downloads, and an advice section that answers the most frequently asked questions I think I can say that. Successful homeschooling is found through hard work, perseverance, patience, love, prayer, and dedication to finding what works for your child. You won’t find that in one ebook.

I don’t usually go off on anyone wanting to market homeschool information. This just sort of set my teeth on edge because so much is available free either online or through your local bookstore, that for someone to say that the secrets are now available is just silly.

Happy homeschoolers

BevK May 19th, 2006

Tate’s own frustrations with teaching to children within the public school system was perhaps the main reason she opted to homeschool her own children. While a teacher, she felt an underlying pressure to, as she put it, “teach to the test.” She is primarily referring to assessment tests that measure student and school improvement.

Despite Tate’s apprehension with the public school system, she was just as leery with the concept of home education. She even admitted to being somewhat naive in her thoughts on homeschooling, loosely equating it with cults. This belief is rather common for those who are uninformed about home education.

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