Vancouver Sun

More Canadian parents opting to home-school their children, Fraser Institute study finds

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TORONTO — A growing number of Canadian families are choosing to home-school their children, according to a study from the Fraser Institute.

It says 21,662 Canadian children were registered as homeschool­ed students in 2012, an increase of 29 per cent over a five-year period, but acknowledg­es there are more homeschool­ed kids not officially registered.

The study released Tuesday suggests that while decisions to home-school in the past were driven by ideology or religion, families are now choosing the option for more pragmatic reasons. For example, homeschool­ing correspond­s with personal circumstan­ces such as having children in time-consuming extracurri­cular activities, a child with a health or learning disability or because the family lives in a remote location or travels extensivel­y.

The study notes policy-makers are paying attention to the jump in numbers, with at least five provinces having updated or expanded home-schooling regulation­s since 2007.

All provinces require parents to register or notify authoritie­s they are home-schooling. Three provinces — Alberta, Saskatchew­an and Quebec — require submission of an educationa­l plan and evidence of student progress.

The Fraser Institute says research in both Canada and the United States has consistent­ly found that home-schooled students score in the higher percentile­s compared with children in public schools on standardiz­ed tests in reading, writing and mathematic­s.

“Parents are increasing­ly looking for more choice in how their children are educated and home- schooling is proving to be a viable choice,” said Deani Van Pelt, study author and director of the Fraser Institute’s Barbara Mitchell Centre for Improvemen­t in Education.

“These figures point to a growing number of Canadians who, for a variety of reasons, feel that their child’s interests are best served by an education program that occurs largely outside of a traditiona­l institutio­nal setting.”

 ?? ED JONES/AFP/GETTYIMAGE­S ?? A new study from the Fraser Institute suggests more Canadian parents are choosing to home-school their children for practical rather than ideologica­l or religious reasons.
ED JONES/AFP/GETTYIMAGE­S A new study from the Fraser Institute suggests more Canadian parents are choosing to home-school their children for practical rather than ideologica­l or religious reasons.

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