Archive for the 'Homeschool Sports' Category

Home-school swimmers win the right to be regarded as team

BevK February 26th, 2007

Tennessean.com

For the last two years, the home-school swim team VanRyckeghem coaches in Brentwood has worn garish, slightly defiant swim caps.

“Last year was bright green,” VanRyckeghem said. “This year we made them pink and black. I liked the green better. You could spot them all the way across the pool.”

For the last three years, their swim caps have provided the only recognition VanRyckeghem’s team was going to get. Tennessee high school swimming, which is governed by a different organization than most Tennessee high school sports, recognized home-schooled swimmers as individuals but not as a team.

Why not, VanRyckeghem figured, wear caps that said different?

All that changed Thursday night on the eve of this season’s state swimming championships at the Centennial Sportsplex in Nashville, when high school coaches from across the state voted to allow home-school teams to participate in next year’s meet as official teams.

Make youth sports community-based

BevK October 29th, 2006

Preach it John, preach it!

Your Oct. 8 edition featured three stories relating to home-schoolers who want to play on public school sports teams but can’t because of a state regulation. I run the New York Home Educators’ Network (http://www.nyhen.org), the statewide group that’s open to all home-schooling families. I can tell you that this issue is more complex than your stories indicated. If home-schooled athletes want to give up educational freedom for a spot on a team (for example, by enrolling in school), that’s their choice. But that choice must not diminish others’ educational freedom. The real solution isn’t to allow home-schoolers on public school teams; it’s to replace interscholastic sports with community-based sports. If the same leagues were run by municipalities instead of schools, there would be no distinctions between public schoolers, private schoolers, and home-schoolers. There would be only residents, all on an equal footing.

Home-schoolers want to play too

BevK October 10th, 2006

Home-schooled students from 26 other states also are barred from interscholastic competition. Eight other states allow home-schoolers to compete if they meet certain criteria, such as taking a few classes at the school.

This is just wrong.

“High schools have a monopoly over the age group. Once you get to high school, there’s no town team,” said Rob McDougal, the father of Josh McDougal. “If you were playing a team sport and you wanted to move on to the next level, it would be devastating.”

University of Minnesota rowing coach Wendy Davis, who has a former member of the Mohwak team on her roster, also takes issue with the state’s policy.

“Are we about educating people? Why would you shut the door on kids?” she said. “It bothers me, students getting denied access. It’s not right. It’s just sad.”

And the key here is monopoly on team sports over the age of 15. But this monopoly is even worse in my opinion because it limits the total number of kids that ever get to play sports. Football teams are larger, so need more players, but other teams sports like basketball are limited to a twelve man roster. That means that 36 kids play boys basketball in a typical high school season. That would be in schools of more than a thousand students. We keep hearing about fat kids. Well, take schools of the sports industry and see what parents will come up with in its place.

Said New York State United Teachers spokesman Dennis Tompkins: “Obviously home-schooling works for families. Most of coaches, they don’t mind if home-schoolers came out to try out for teams. Not sure the reasoning behind the rule. I’m sure it’s logical.”

And I’m just as sure it has more to do with not having complete control over the student.

Over the years, national home-school competitions have burgeoned. There’s a Home-school World Series Association in baseball and the National Christian Home-school Basketball Championship, a 15-year-old event that, in March, welcomed 266 home-school basketball teams from 20 states, more than double what it drew six years ago.

If homeschoolers can make away around the public school monopoly, so can other parents. Just think of the tax savings if we stopped funding school sports.

Letters on Homeschooling Proposal Requested

BevK September 7th, 2006

If you live in Indiana, you may want to take advantage of this opportunity.

Courier & Press Advisory Editorial Board member Kelley Coures has proposed in a Viewpoint page commentary published Wednesday that Indiana discuss greater regulation of home schooling.

Among his proposed topics is whether Indiana should require home-schooled students to pass grade-specific examinations each semester. Related to that, should a home-schooled child who does not pass the test be required to re-enroll in public schools?

Should home educators be required to have minimum educational requirements and follow a specific curricula? Should home-school children’s physical exams be made a part of the public school records, and should children be visited by social service representatives throughout the year to evaluate their condition?

Tell us what you think.

You will have the best opportunity of having your letter published if you keep it short, no more than 250 words.

Include a daytime phone number. Send your letter by Wednesday.

Those selected will be published Sept. 17.

Send it by mail to Letters, Evansville Courier & Press, P.O. Box 268, Evansville, Ind. 47702; by e-mail to letters@courierpress.com; or by fax to 422-8196.

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.

Home-schooling doesn’t keep these athletes from playing

BevK May 9th, 2006

Three different homeschool stories of kids playing sports for the local public school.

In the insular world of high school, where a few hundred kids spend six hours a day together and everyone knows everyone else’s business, the transition from the classroom to the athletic field is virtually seamless. Same faces, different setting.

For the handful of home-schooled students who suit up for their local high schools, however, it’s not always so easy. In some cases, earlier participation in youth sports programs like Little League means the faces are familiar regardless of the educational situation. When that happens, a player like Brian Shorey can be the co-captain of the baseball team from a school he’s never attended.

Other times, though, the transition requires more finesse. For the Frisbie brothers, it meant playing as freshmen and potentially taking playing time away from their more experience Kearsarge teammates. For Concord High’s Mark Sullivan, also a freshman, it meant trying to fit in on the varsity team not just as an underclassman, but as a stranger to Concord and the school.

As easy or as tough as the adjustment may be, all three cases illustrate one immutable rule of high school sports: If you can get the job done after 3 o’clock,

where you were for the rest of the day takes a back seat.

Schooled on soccer - Another homeschooler goes on to college sports

BevK May 5th, 2006

When most college signings are done, they’re set up at the high school the student attends.

That wasn’t possible with Jonathan Pelts. Unless it was done at home.

Being home-schooled, the opportunity to play a sport in college appeared to be a slim possibility. Not to Pelts or his family.

“My parents decided when I was young that God was leading them to home-school me instead of going to the public schools,” Pelts said. “I believe it’s been good, especially with the way my soccer career has been going and everything that has happened, I believe that it has been really great for me.”

Home Schooling Athletics - Scholarships

BevK May 5th, 2006

After attending Franklin High his freshman year, it became apparent that tennis was going to be a top priority. With the heavy scheduling of events during the school calendar, home schooling became an option. It paved the way for a DI scholarship.

“One of the reasons for deciding for Virginia was that they were little more flexible in accepting credits for courses I’ve been home-schooled in,” he said.

The NCAA is tightening eligibility rules over the next several years. If you have a son or daughter who wants to pursue college sports, you need to make sure that they meet the eligibility rules.

NCAA Initial Eligibility Clearinghouse

NAIA Guide fot the College Bound Student_Athlete

National Spelling Bee - Broadcast in Prime Time on ABC

BevK May 3rd, 2006

For the first time in its 79-year history, the National Spelling Bee the original “reality TV” will go prime time for next month’s drama-filled finals. Thanks to recent movies, books and even a Broadway musical, young spellers are suddenly hot. After 12 years of showings by the sports cable network ESPN, the final rounds of the two-day Scripps National Spelling Bee will be shown live Thursday evening, June 1, on the ABC network.


Scripps National Spelling Bee

There are 37 homeschooled students in this year’s bee.

The stats:

School Type:
196 public (71.28%)
37 home (13.45%)
26 private (9.45%)
13 parochial (4.73%)
3 charter (1.09%)
Of last year’s 273 spellers, 63.37% were public-schooled, 12.45% were home-schooled, 13.92% were private-schooled, 9.16% were parochial-schooled, and 1.1% were charter-schooled.

Striking at the heart of the schools

BevK May 3rd, 2006

The level of enthusiasm varies from region to region, but there is no question that sports is more important than education to most high-school students. This is as true of homeschooled children as of their private- and public-school counterparts. For while personal instruction tailored to the individual is a much superior method of learning algebra, Latin and Shakespeare, it is impossible to play football alone unless a Playstation is involved.

The laws vary from state to state, but in those school districts where homeschool participation in sports is banned, parents who wanted to give their children the chance to participate in team sports often opted for lawsuits and political lobbying in the interest of forcing public schools to allow athletes not attending those schools to play on their sports teams. However, this is a short-sighted and sub-optimal strategy for five reasons.

Im going to address the following of his points.

Second, by creating an emotional involvement with the local public school, athletic participation strengthens the very institution that should be encouraged to wither away.

Perhaps, but with budgets tightening, sports may finally be separated from schools. Until then, for my son, playing for the public school has been his only option. There just aren’t enough high school homeschoolers in my small community to create a homeschool team.

Third, even if such efforts are successful, the ability to participate is unlikely to be permitted for long, as what a legislature can give under pressure, it can also take away.

Perhaps, but the real pressure needed to be applied to state educrats who weren’t going to change without it. That pressure needed to come from someone with power.

Fourth, it fails to build an alternative structure for future generations of homeschooled children.

Where alternative structures are viable, they have been built. Homeschooling sports is available in many areas of the country. When homeschooling grows enough to create homeschool sports programs in less populated areas, I’ll bet they’ll grow there, too. Until then, playing for the local public or private school is the only option for homeschoolers serious about playing sports.

And fifth, it often doesn’t work.

This last argument is just silly. There are all kinds of things we wouldn’t do if we took the notion that it often doesn’t work means I shouldn’t even try.

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