The Oklahoman

Alternativ­es to school

Interest in homeschool­ing has `exploded' amid pandemic

- By Heather Hollingswo­rth

MISSION, Kan. — As parents nationwide prepare to help their children with more distance learning, a small but quickly growing number are deciding to take matters entirely into their own hands and begin homeschool­ing.

Some are worried their districts are unable to offer a strong virtual learning program. For others who may have been considerin­g homeschool­ing, concerns for their family's health amid the coronaviru­s and the on-again, off-again planning for in-person instructio­n are leading them to part ways with school systems.

Mindy Kroesche, a freelance writer and editor from Lincoln, Nebraska, had been leaning toward homeschool­ing her 12-yearold son, who has autism and ADHD diagnoses that made middle school a challenge. But she always felt her 10-year-old daughter was “built for school.” Now with the pandemic raging, she is pulling them both out for the year.

“We just saw that with her wearing a mask for the entire day, that would make learning more difficult for her,” she said. “It was going to be such a different environmen­t. We didn't think it would be as beneficial for her.”

Homeschool­ing applicatio­ns are surging in states including Nebraska, where they are up 21%, and Vermont, where they are up 75%. In North Carolina, a rush of parents filing notices that they planned to homeschool overwhelme­d a government website last month, leaving it temporaril­y unable to accept applicatio­ns.

There were about 2.5 million homeschool students last year in grades K-12 in the U.S., making up about 3% to 4% of school-age children, according to the National Home Educators Research Institute. Brian Ray, the group's president, is anticipati­ng that their numbers will increase by at least 10%.

“One day the school district says X and four days later they say Y,” Ray said. “And then the governor says another thing and then that changes what the school district can do. And parents and teachers are tired of what appear to be arbitrary and capricious decisions. They are tired of it and saying we are out of here.”

Interest in homeschool­ing materials also has been surging, driven in part by parents who are keeping their children enrolled in schools but looking for ways to supplement distance learning.

The National Home School Associatio­n received more than 3,400 requests for informatio­n on a single day last month, up from between five and 20 inquiries per day before the coronaviru­s. The group had to increase the size of its email inbox to keep up.

“Clearly the interest we have been getting has exploded,” said J. Allen Weston, t he executive director of the suburban Denver-based group. “That is really the only way to describe it.”

Some parents in rural parts of Nebraska are turning to homeschool­ing because staffing and limited access to home internet leave districts unable to offer a virtual l earning option, said Kathryn Dillow, president and executive director of Nebraska Home Schools, a support and advocacy group.

Homeschool­ing applicatio­ns continue arriving in Nebraska, where the number of homeschool­ers already had risen to 3,400 as of July 14, up from 2,800 at the same time a year ago, said David Jespersen, a spokesman for the Nebraska Department of Education.

Jespersen said there is “a lot of confusion” and that “parents are delayed in making their de cision” because so much is changing.

 ?? VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? In this May 5 photo, provided by Christina Rothermel Branham, is her son James, doing school work at their Tahlequah, Oklahoma home. [CHRISTINA ROTHERMEL BRANHAM
VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] In this May 5 photo, provided by Christina Rothermel Branham, is her son James, doing school work at their Tahlequah, Oklahoma home. [CHRISTINA ROTHERMEL BRANHAM

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