Royal Oak Tribune

Homeschool­ing doubled from pandemic’s start to last fall

- By Mike Schneider

The rate of households homeschool­ing their children doubled from the start of the pandemic last spring to the start of the new school year last September, according to a new U.S. Census Bureau report released this week.

Last spring, about 5.4% of all U.S. households with school-aged children were homeschool­ing them, but that figure rose to 11% by last fall, according to the bureau’s Household Pulse Survey.

The survey purposeful­ly asked the question in a way to clarify that it was inquiring about genuine homeschool­ing and not virtual learning through a public or private school, the Census Bureau said.

Before the pandemic, household homeschool­ing rates had remained steady at around 3.3% through the past several years.

“It’s clear that in an unpreceden­ted environmen­t,

families are seeking solutions that will reliably meet their health and safety needs, their childcare needs and the learning and socio-emotional needs of their children,” the report said.

Nearly half of the nation’s elementary schools were open for full-time classroom learning as of last month, but the share of students learning in-person has varied greatly by region and by race, with most nonwhite students

learning entirely online, according to results released Wednesday from a national survey conducted by the Biden administra­tion.

Like the school openings, homeschool­ing differed by race and region, with the report attributin­g variations to local rates of coronaviru­s infections and local decisions about how school was being conducted during the pandemic.

Black households saw

the largest jump in rates of homeschool­ing, going from 3.3% in the spring to 16.1% in the fall. The rate for Hispanic households of any race went from 6.2% to 12.1%. It went from 4.9% to 8.8% for Asian households, and from 5.7% to 9.7% for non-Hispanic white households.

Some states saw bigger jumps than others. Alaska went from 9.6% of households to 27.5% of households. In Florida, the rate jumped from 5% to 18.1%, and it grew in Vermont from 4.1% to 16.9%.

Even Massachuse­tts, which has some of the nation’s best public schools, went from 1.5% of households to 12.1% of households with school-aged children homeschool­ing.

Among the nation’s largest metro areas, Detroit, Phoenix and Boston had the largest increases.

The Household Pulse Survey was created by the Census Bureau last year to provide real-time data on the effect of the new coronaviru­s on the lives of U.S. households.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Donya Grant, center, works on a homeschool lesson with her son Kemper, 14, as her daughter Rowyn, 11, works at right, at their home in Monroe, Wash.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Donya Grant, center, works on a homeschool lesson with her son Kemper, 14, as her daughter Rowyn, 11, works at right, at their home in Monroe, Wash.

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