HOME
SCHOOLING.
Homeschooling
or homeschool (also called home education or home based learning) is the
education of children at home, typically by parents or by tutors, rather than
in other formal settings of public or private school. Although prior to the
introduction of compulsory school attendance laws, most childhood education
occurred within the family or community, [1] homeschooling in the modern sense
is an alternative in developed countries to attending public or private
schools. Homeschooling is a legal option for parents in many countries,
allowing them to provide their children with a learning environment as an
alternative to public or private schools outside the individual's home.
Parents
cite numerous reasons as motivations to homeschool their children. The three
reasons that are selected by the majority of homeschooling parents in the
United States are concern about the school environment, to provide religious or
moral instruction, and dissatisfaction with academic instruction at public and private
schools. Homeschooling may also be a factor in the choice of parenting style.
Homeschooling can be an option for families living in isolated rural locations,
living temporarily abroad, to allow for more traveling, while many young
athletes and actors are taught at home. Homeschooling can be about mentorship
and apprenticeship, where a tutor or teacher is with the child for many years
and then knows the child very well. Recently, homeschooling has increased in
popularity in the United States, with the percentage of children 5-17 who are home
schooled increasing from 1.7% in 1999 to 2.9% in 2007.
[2]
Homeschooling can be used as a form of supplementary education, a way of
helping children learn, in specific circumstances. For instance, children that
attend downgraded schools can greatly benefit from homeschooling ways of
learning, using the immediacy and low cost of the Internet. As a synonym to
e-learning, home schooling can be combined with traditional education and lead
to better and more complete results. Homeschooling may also refer to
instruction in the home under the supervision of correspondence schools or
umbrella schools. In some places, an approved curriculum is legally required if
children are to be home-schooled.
[3]
A curriculum-free philosophy of homeschooling may be called unschooling, a term
coined in 1977 by American educator and author John Holt in his magazine
Growing Without Schooling. In some cases, a liberal arts education is provided
using the trivium and quadrivium as the main model.
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