Baltimore Sun Sunday

HOME SCHOOLING ON THE ROAD

For one family, teaching while traveling fosters a greater amount of learning

- By Danielle Braff

Griffin Kubik spent two years at Chicago Waldorf preschool before his parents pulled the plug on his formal education. The 6-year-old now spends his days with his parents and his 2-year-old sister, Adair, traveling in their newly purchased van.

“For our family, the experience of learning while traveling outweighs the benefits of going to school,” said Griffin’s mom, Tiana Kubik, co-owner of TK

Photograph­y, which is based in Chicago. The family’s trips include visiting Toronto, Montreal, Banff and Jasper, Canada.

Griffin is one of about 3.5 million home-schooled children in the nation. The number of kids who are home-schooled has surpassed children at charter schools and has been growing by 3 to 8% each year since 2012, according to the National Center for Education Statistics and analyses from Brian Ray, home-schooling researcher at the National Home Education Research Institute.

That growing popularity can be attributed to a number of factors, ranging from parents’ ideology to more practical issues, including globally focused families who don’t want to tie their children to a set way of learning, school-based issues and a desire for religion-based education, said Stephen Spriggs, managing director of William Clarence Education, a London-based education consultanc­y that works with families around the world.

“It’s becoming more acceptable and mainstream, so parents who previously wanted to but couldn’t

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