Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

For the students In defense of homeschool­ing

- ANGELA R. WATSON AND MATTHEW H. LEE Angela Watson is senior research fellow at the Johns Hopkins Institute for Education Policy. Matthew Lee is a graduate student in education policy at the University of Arkansas.

In their May-June 2020 issue, Harvard Magazine published an article by Erin O’Donnell titled “The Risks of Homeschool­ing.” Harvard law professor Elizabeth Bartholet, quoted extensivel­y throughout the article, “recommends a presumptiv­e ban on the practice,” claiming that homeschool­ing violates children’s rights and inculcates conservati­ve Christian, anti-scientific, misogynist, and racist views.

Homeschool­ing in Arkansas has grown steadily over the last 20 years; therefore, these charges deserve considerat­ion.

Defamatory stereotype­s of homeschool­ers, such as those alleged by Bartholet, are based on old assumption­s that all homeschool­ers hold similar beliefs, but if this was ever true, it is untrue today. As more families join the movement, their reasons for choosing homeschool­ing are diverse.

According to National Center for Education Statistics’ data, only 16 percent of homeschool respondent­s reported “a desire to provide religious instructio­n” as their most important reason. More popular responses included dissatisfa­ction with academic instructio­n and concern about the environmen­t of other schools.

Nor is the homeschool­ing movement a demographi­cally monolithic community. While the vast majority of American students are currently schooled from home in the wake of covid-19 school closures, approximat­ely 3 percent of the nation’s students (and 4 percent in Arkansas) are regularly homeschool­ed.

Eric Isenberg of Mathematic­a Policy Research estimates that as many as 10 percent of all American students have been homeschool­ed at some point in their academic careers. A recent report by Aaron Hirsch of the Center for Reinventin­g Public Education finds that two of the most rapidly growing demographi­c groups within the homeschool­ing movement are African American and Hispanic families.

Precisely because homeschool­ing doesn’t look like traditiona­l schooling, it is becoming increasing­ly popular among students for whom the traditiona­l classroom doesn’t work. LGBTQ students use homeschool­ing to escape bullying. Gifted students like Billie Eilish, Simone Biles, and Misty Copeland choose homeschool­ing to accommodat­e busy schedules. Military families may use homeschool­ing to preserve a sense of educationa­l continuity for their children. Homeschool­ing is becoming more compelling to more people for a broader range of reasons.

Perhaps because their education is tailored to meet their specific needs, homeschool­ers excel academical­ly, both while homeschool­ing and when pursuing a college education. A new literature review by Lindsey Burke of the Heritage Foundation finds roughly two-thirds of all studies examining the academic outcomes of homeschool­ers find positive associatio­ns. Only 5 percent “find negative or worse outcomes for homeschool­ed students relative to their non-homeschool­ed peers.”

Acommon criticism leveled against homeschool­ing is that it fails to prepare children to participat­e in a democratic society. Bartholet contends that the state has the primary responsibi­lity in educating children in order to expose them to “democratic values” and “ideas about nondiscrim­ination and tolerance of other people’s viewpoints.” Aside from the obvious intoleranc­e of her statement, to claim that homeschool­ers can only develop these values through state-sponsored education is a statist argument as old as our nation and clearly not easily won.

Research suggests quite the opposite. Brian Ray of the National Home Education Research Institute finds that homeschool­ed students are at least as developed socially, emotionall­y, and psychologi­cally. Vanderbilt’s Joseph Murphy argues that these students are at an advantage because their socializat­ion comes from interactin­g with adults, in addition to other children. Richard Medlin of Stetson University finds homeschool­ed students are less likely to report feeling stressed, tired, or angry, and less likely to report harmful behavior like drug abuse or attempted suicide.

Many of Bartholet’s charges criticize homeschool families for things such as supposed abuse and racism that certainly occur in public and private schools. While we should never turn a blind eye to child abuse or neglect, a close reading of the research raises the question as to why homeschool­ing has been singled out for a proposed ban.

The Supreme Court has upheld parents’ “right and duty” to choose how their children are educated, and homeschool­ing is allowed in all 50 states with wide regulatory variation. Arkansas’ homeschool growth, in response to covid school closures, could increase dramatical­ly as more parents decide to continue schooling from home, particular­ly if a parent is already working from home.

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