You're right, that is an over generalization.Luke wrote: I think, and this is an over generalization, that children are home schooled for one, out of very few reasons:
1) The child is truly gifted, and no gifted schools are available in the immediate area.
2) The parents think their child is gifted, but isn't. The parents think they can give their child a better education than the school system, but they aren't trained to teach = fail.
3) The parents want to include religion in their child's education, but no private schools are available in the immediate area.
4) The parent's are sheltering wackos.
Here are some more reasons:
5) The child has ADD or ADHD and the parents don't wish to medicate him into sitting still for seven hours every day.
6) The family chooses, for whatever reason, to live in a bad school district and homeschools rather than moving to a better one.
7) The parents are Libertarians or align with some other small-government political ideology and are not crazy about government-run education.
9) The family, for whatever reason, has to move around a lot and wants to provide their children with a consistent education rather than hopping in and out of school districts.
10) The child has a particular strong interest of some sort, be it writing, dance, electronics, acting, or whatever, and the parents want to encourage that interest and allow the child to pursue it.
11) The family experiences social pressure from other homeschoolers in their social circle.
12) Private schools in the area are too expensive.
13) The parents had a lot of negative experiences during their school years and are attempting to spare that for their children.
14) The parents just really enjoy spending time with their children and don't like the idea of shipping them off every day.
15) Parents are wary of political messages their children will receive in school.
16) Parents like the idea of a more personalized educational experience, rather than the one-size fits all approach of most public schools.
I could go on, but I really doubt anyone is going to read the preceeding wall of text.
But Luke, you're really pretty wrong on your point #2. Specifically this part:
For one thing, this is a misrepresentation of how homeschooling generally works. It's not just a one-child classroom with the parent acting as an active teaching standing in front of a chalk board. Parents purchase or borrow professionally-prepared curricula for their children, and generally serve primarily as managers, graders, and tutors for problem areas.The parents think they can give their child a better education than the school system, but they aren't trained to teach = fail.
Teachers aren't just trained to teach. They're trained to manage and teach large groups of people simultaneously. A lot of those skills simply aren't necessary in a homeschool environment. While the parents generally don't have the level of teaching education and experience that professional educators have, the task itself is a lot easier.
Luke, you do catering part-time, right? I'm sure you're a great cook, and you probably have a lot of great experience and maybe some training. But I don't need to hire you to cook dinner for my family tonight. I don't have training or a lot of experience, but it's a much easier task.