College For the Home Schooled is shaping Leaders for the Right

ReiAyanami

Diamond Member
Sep 24, 2002
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isn't that just called University of Phoenix?

or actually University of Phoenix Online
 

alchemize

Lifer
Mar 24, 2000
11,486
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Makes sense. We already have the huge inefficient liberal college system for those satisfied to send their children somewhere to binge-drink and max their credit cards on guys like Dean :) I bet this will be incredibly successful.

I doubt I'd send my kids there though...sounds a touch over the top...

That is an alarming prospect to some on the left.

"Mike Farris is trying to train young people to get on a very right-wing political agenda," said Nancy Keenan, the education policy director at People for the American Way, a liberal advocacy group, and a former Montana state superintendent of public education. The number of Patrick Henry interns in the White House "scares me to death," she said. "It tells us a little bit more about the White House than it does about the kids."
I think that tells me a little bit more about her than it does anything :)



<-went to all public schools, homeschooling his kids.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
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Originally posted by: alchemize
Makes sense. We already have the huge inefficient liberal college system for those satisfied to send their children somewhere to binge-drink and max their credit cards on guys like Dean :) I bet this will be incredibly successful.

I doubt I'd send my kids there though...sounds a touch over the top...

That is an alarming prospect to some on the left.

"Mike Farris is trying to train young people to get on a very right-wing political agenda," said Nancy Keenan, the education policy director at People for the American Way, a liberal advocacy group, and a former Montana state superintendent of public education. The number of Patrick Henry interns in the White House "scares me to death," she said. "It tells us a little bit more about the White House than it does about the kids."
I think that tells me a little bit more about her than it does anything :)



<-went to all public schools, homeschooling his kids.

Pretty happy with my inefficient liberal college electrical engineering education :D
Apparently inefficient liberal college education was good enough for Bush, and I don't see him sending his daughters to Patrick Henry.
But if evangelical Christians want to get their efficient conservative home school college education, more power to them :D
 

Orsorum

Lifer
Dec 26, 2001
27,631
5
81
I've gone to public schools all my life, and in all fairness to myself I can't say I turned out too badly.
 

Martin

Lifer
Jan 15, 2000
29,178
1
81
The economist did an article on this place. F-ing insane, that's what it is.

The students are all pro small goverment, yet alcohol and tobacco are banned on the campus, public affection is a no-no, and they got a local video store to shut down their adult section (as part of a course!).

IF ANY building symbolises the ambition of the home-schooling movement, it is Patrick Henry College in suburban Virginia. This conservative university, which opened in 2000, may have only 242 students; but it plans to expand its undergraduate school to 1,600 and to add a law school of 400. More than four in five of its students are home-schooled.

Next stop, Capitol Hill
The college's two passions are ?liberty and God?. Its walls are covered with portraits of the Founding Fathers, with dormitories named after their houses (Monticello, Mount Vernon and so on). Although lively debate goes on between the college's Jeffersonians and Hamiltonians about exactly how small the government should be, the general idea is that it should be tiny. The college gets no government money.
Yet religion is also omnipresent. The ubiquitous pictures of the Founding Fathers often show them in prayer: Washington, for example, on bended knee at Valley Forge. The college has copies of the first prayer said in Congress. One of its roads is called ?Covenant Drive?. Student applicants have to write an essay describing their ?relationship with Jesus Christ and [their] personal walk of faith?, and the professors sign a ?Statement of Biblical Worldview? that emphasises the literal truth of the Virgin birth and the creationists' account of the origins of the universe. Alcohol and tobacco are banned, and students are strongly encouraged to involve their parents if they start a relationship with another student. The college's founder, Michael Farris, describes the place as ?a refuge from sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll. Well, at least sex and drugs.?
The college wants to produce not just good Christians, but effective ones. ?Just as your parents' calling was to turn around a generation for Christ,? Mr Farris tells his charges, ?your calling is to turn our nation back to a Godly foundation.? The academic dean, Paul Bonicelli, thinks that Christian schools ought to put as much emphasis on academic excellence as on spiritual values. Patrick Henry's curriculum includes philosophy, logic, a foreign language, history, biblical studies, economics, literature, sciences, Euclidian geometry and classical Greek or Latin.
The students practise confronting alternative world views. One student mounted a successful campaign, as part of his college course, to close the adult section of a local video store. ?I do not want a graduate's first encounter with nihilism or materialism to be at a banquet on Capitol Hill surrounded by atheists and worldly antagonists,? says Robert Stacey, chairman of the government department. Students have been dispatched to work as interns in Karl Rove's White House office and on Capitol Hill, and one graduate now works in Paul Bremer's office in Iraq. The college is also considering setting up a film school, having already brought in members of a Christian screenwriters' group in Hollywood to teach a class in screenwriting.
Despite this abiding sense of mission, the students are far from identikit conservatives. Steven, for instance, who was home-schooled in Midland, Texas, litters his conversation with references to Michel Foucault and is so worried about his home state's ?over-application? of the death penalty that he wants to get a job with an organisation that seeks to reform, though not abolish, it. Several students admit to being puzzled by much of George Bush's foreign policy and by the divisions between America and Europe.
That said, their political sympathies are clearly with the president. ?I just like the guy,? explains Abigail, who thanks God that Mr Bush was in office on September 11th. Kristen hopes to work for the Bush re-election campaign, and in the longer term she plans to focus on foreign policy. She believes that Christians have opted out of the debate, and should use their God-given talents to reshape global institutions in the same way as they have remoulded domestic policy.
Patrick Henry makes no secret of its links with the wider conservative movement. There are signed Christmas cards from the Bushes. Ian Slatter, the college's press officer, used to work for the Weekly Standard, a conservative magazine. Mr Bonicelli displays a National Review cover showing John Ashcroft with devil's horns under the slogan ?Every liberal's favorite devil?, with the picture signed by the Devil himself. Mr Ashcroft's wife is on Patrick Henry's board of trustees.
 

Pennstate

Diamond Member
Oct 14, 1999
3,211
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I see. Usually homeschooled kids get straighten out in college. Now they want to wreck their social skills for the rest of their lives. BTW, this sounds awefully like what SCIENTOLOGISTS do to their kids
 

bozack

Diamond Member
Jan 14, 2000
7,913
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1,320s are average.....sounds alot better than the uber liberal waste dump of a college I graduated from, especially with the courses on intelligence, something I wished I could have taken...