- Jun 23, 2001
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http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1968099-1,00.html
Okay, I admit, I'm not always the biggest fan of public schools. Nor private schools for that matter. I am, however, a proponent of choice. Unfortunately, I also have issues with parents homeschooling their children. There's so much variance in their qualifications and 'lesson plans' that its impossible to say whether or not the children are getting a quality education. Attending school isn't about just reading text books or listening to lectures either. There's a critical social aspect that children attending school must learn. It seems that many home schooled children, while they can be very book smart, have extremely limited social skills. One of the points they bring up is the issue of bullies. And yes, I too was bullied through most of elementary and middle school. It is a fact of life, though, that everyone will, at some point, have to interact with people they don't like. You may have to work for, with, or alongside people that are complete jerks and extremely rude. Its a fact of life.
Okay, I admit, I'm not always the biggest fan of public schools. Nor private schools for that matter. I am, however, a proponent of choice. Unfortunately, I also have issues with parents homeschooling their children. There's so much variance in their qualifications and 'lesson plans' that its impossible to say whether or not the children are getting a quality education. Attending school isn't about just reading text books or listening to lectures either. There's a critical social aspect that children attending school must learn. It seems that many home schooled children, while they can be very book smart, have extremely limited social skills. One of the points they bring up is the issue of bullies. And yes, I too was bullied through most of elementary and middle school. It is a fact of life, though, that everyone will, at some point, have to interact with people they don't like. You may have to work for, with, or alongside people that are complete jerks and extremely rude. Its a fact of life.
In Germany, mandatory school attendance dates back to 1717, when it was introduced in Prussia, and the policy has traditionally been viewed as a social good. "This law protects children," says Josef Kraus, president of the German Teachers' Association. The European Court of Human Rights agrees with him. In 2006, the court threw out a homeschooling family's case when it deemed Germany's compulsory-schooling law as compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, an international treaty drafted in 1950. Given this backdrop, it's little wonder the Romeikes came up against a wall of opposition when they tried to talk to their school principal about the merits of homeschooling.