US Homeschooling Hits Record Numbers - Last academic year, DIY education grew at nearly three times the average rate it did during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to new research.

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Further context: https://kiwifarms.st/threads/us-politics-general-2-hope-edition.210076/post-23047493

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Whether called homeschooling or DIY education, family-directed learning has been growing in popularity for years in the U.S. alongside disappointment in the rigidity, politicization, and flat-out poor results of traditional public schools. That growth was supercharged during the COVID-19 pandemic when extended closures and bumbled remote learning drove many families to experiment with teaching their own kids. The big question was whether the end of public health controls would also curtail interest in homeschooling. We know now that it didn't. Americans' taste for DIY education is on the rise.

Homeschooling Grows at Triple the Pre-Pandemic Rate​

"In the 2024-2025 school year, homeschooling continued to grow across the United States, increasing at an average rate of 5.4%," Angela Watson of the Johns Hopkins University School of Education's Homeschool Hub wrote earlier this month. "This is nearly three times the pre-pandemic homeschooling growth rate of around 2%." She added that more than a third of the states from which data is available report their highest homeschooling numbers ever, even exceeding the peaks reached when many public and private schools were closed during the pandemic.

After COVID-19 public health measures were suspended, there was a brief drop in homeschooling as parents and families returned to old habits. That didn't last long. Homeschooling began surging again in the 2023-2024 school year, with that growth continuing last year. Based on numbers from 22 states (not all states have released data, and many don't track homeschoolers), four report declines in the ranks of homeschooled children—Delaware, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, and Tennessee—while the others report growth from around 1 percent (Florida and Louisiana) to as high as 21.5 percent (South Carolina).

The latest figures likely underestimate growth in homeschooling since not all DIY families abide by registration requirements where they exist, and because families who use the portable funding available through increasingly popular Education Savings Accounts to pay for homeschooling costs are not counted as homeschoolers in several states, Florida included. As a result, adds Watson, "we consider these counts as the minimum number of homeschooled students in each state."

Recent estimates put the total homeschooling population at about 6 percent of students across the United States, compared to about 3 percent pre-pandemic. Continued growth necessarily means the share of DIY-educated students is increasing. That's quite a change for an education approach that was decidedly not mainstream just a generation ago.

"This isn't a pandemic hangover; it's a fundamental shift in how American families are thinking about education," comments Watson.

Students Flee Traditional Public Schools for Alternatives​

Homeschooling is a major beneficiary of changing education preferences among American families, but it's not the only one.

"Five years after the pandemic's onset, there has been a substantial shift away from public schools and toward non-public options," Boston University's Joshua Goodman and Abigail Francis wrote last summer for Education Next. Looking at Massachusetts—not the friendliest regulatory environment for alternatives to traditional public schooling—they found that as the state's school-age population shrank by 2.6 percent since 2019, there has been a 4.2 percent decline in local public-school enrollment, a 0.7 decline in private-school enrollment, and a 56 percent increase in homeschooling. "Charter school enrollment is flat, due in part to regulatory limitations in Massachusetts," they added.

In research published in August, Dylan Council, Sofoklis Goulas, and Faidra Monachou of the Brookings Institution found similar results at the national level. "The COVID-19 pandemic forced millions of families to rethink where and how their children learn, and the effects continue to reshape American K-12 education," they observed. If "parents keep choosing alternatives at the pace observed since 2020, traditional public schools could lose as many as 8.5 million students, shrinking from 43.06 million in 2023-24 to as few as 34.57 million by mid-century."

It's not difficult to figure out what pushes parents to seek out alternatives and to flock to the various forms of DIY education grouped under the homeschooling heading.

Disappointment in Public Schools Drives the Shift​

"The fraction of parents saying K-12 education is heading in the wrong direction was fairly stable from 2019 to 2022 but rose in 2023 and then again in 2024 to its highest level in a decade, suggesting continuing or even growing frustration with schools," commented Goodman and Francis.

Specifically, EdChoice's Schooling in America survey puts the percentage of school parents saying that K-12 education is headed in the right direction at 41 percent—down from 48 percent in 2022 (the highest score recorded). Fifty-nine percent say K-12 education is on the wrong track—up from 52 percent in 2021 (the lowest score recorded).

When asked if they are satisfied with their children's education, public school parents consistently rank last after parents who choose private schools, homeschooling, and charter schools. Importantly, among all parents of school-age children, homeschooling enjoys a 70 percent favorability rating.

The reasons for the move away from public schools certainly vary from family to family, but there have been notable developments in recent years. During the pandemic, many parents discovered that their preferences regarding school closures and health policies were anything but a priority for educators.

Closures also gave parents a chance to experience public schools' competence with remote learning, and many were unimpressed. They have also been unhappy with the poor quality and often politicized lessons taught to their children that infuriatingly blend declining learning outcomes with indoctrination. That doesn't mean parents all want the same things, but the one-size-fits-some nature of public schooling make curriculum battles inevitable—and push many towards the exits in favor of alternatives including, especially, homeschooling. The shift appears to be here to stay.

"What's particularly striking is the resilience of this trend," concludes Watson of Johns Hopkins University's Homeschool Hub. "States that saw declines have bounced back with double-digit growth, and we're seeing record enrollment numbers across the country."

Once an alternative way to educate children, homeschooling is now an increasingly popular and mainstream option.
 
When it comes to the problem of abuse, I believe people are only looking at one kind. The kind of person to lock away a kid to abuse them is what we might think of, but it is very different than the narcissist who uses their kid as a prop for themselves.

The narcissist most likely won't homeschool their kid because that defeats the point. If the kid isn't being shown off, they aren't a good prop. instead, the narcissist would be sending their kid to public school but ensuring that their kid is some kind of special kid. Trooning out at a young age, then making a big song and dance about, for example.
 
When it comes to the problem of abuse, I believe people are only looking at one kind. The kind of person to lock away a kid to abuse them is what we might think of, but it is very different than the narcissist who uses their kid as a prop for themselves.

The narcissist most likely won't homeschool their kid because that defeats the point. If the kid isn't being shown off, they aren't a good prop. instead, the narcissist would be sending their kid to public school but ensuring that their kid is some kind of special kid. Trooning out at a young age, then making a big song and dance about, for example.
Depends, but if they are enmeshed in the right community, this may gain them a lot of asspats just to say their kid is homeschooled. Kid doesn't matter. Think about weird extensions of this like Unschooling where they just let their kids do whatever all day and figure their child will just magically learn everything on their own. They don't do it for the well being of the kids. It is just a combination of being fucking lazy and getting asspats from the fringes they associate with.
 
Oh no, how are kids gonna have drag queen story hour and learn black history now?
Drag queen story have nothing of value so....but however, some will shout "that's racist" if they don't learn black history or if they dare to learn the correct black history and not the one pushed by public schools.
 
We found out OP was an indian, how much MAGA discourse is just indians tricking miggers into taking the worst options every time?

this is how old school kiwifarms felt about "homeschooling" https://kiwifarms.st/threads/unschooling.25550/
Lmao this nigger actually thinks letting his kids get harassed by niglets and groomed and raped by tranny loving commie teacher unions is better than actually being a proper parent and ensuring your kids have a good education and aren't turned into illiterate future corporate drone serfs. Enjoy your future tranny children retard, but hey at least they weren't home-schooled!
or you could just not live around niggers. like somehow South African whites managed to have great public schools. the place Nick Rekieta lives has great public schools, and you act like its 8 hours of indoctrination, way more ideologically controlled parents than teachers.
 
That's great, and all, but given the lack of check-ups performed during homeschooling in most places, I wonder how many abuse cases will be made evident after a few years. "Oh, we never knew. They just withdrew the kids from school, and we didn't see them outside playing, ever. How could we have possibly known?!"
Parents are much less likely to be pedos than teachers.
 
As someone who was homeschooled, this is both good and bad.

Good as in you can actually get work done and not have to basically be in a defacto spic/nig adult daycare.

Bad because you don't get to socialize. At all. Even years after highschool I still feel the repercussions of not being around my peers.

I will say the public school system fucking blows. 1000%.
 
Homeschooling might have been socially isolating if I had tried it, but I sure wish I could have at least had a choice in where I went to school. I could have escaped some pretty shitty bullies (some of whom were mentally ill and violent,) and started over somewhere with a better reputation, rather than having the embarrassing things I did as a socially awkward first grader hanging over my head until high school.
 
Parents are much less likely to be pedos than teachers.
I disagree. I think it was until the 1940s that parents could force the kids to leave school after the 8th grade, force them to work, and pocket the money. There will always be crap parents who neglect, exploit, or abuse their children and these things are as bad as "pedos". Just this week, a second-grade teacher was arrested for battering her son. She would have gotten away with it except another child filmed it. Parents are just less likely to be caught.
I can see home-schooling young children with an adult actually fascinating the lessons. Too many cases of older children being handed some kind of virtual course, told to complete the work, but also used as free domestic labor/sibling care. There was a Nanny 911 episode where the older kids called the nanny for help. My local school district has a problem (especially among immigrants) where the older kid is chronically absent from being kept home to care for preschoolers.
Parents don't have an absolute right to raise kids however they see fit and older kids should get a voice in how/where/what they want to learn as they will deal with the consequences of those choices.
 
I and many of my good adult friends were homeschooled at some point in our childhoods, so I can provide some light on this in addition to the excellent commentary others have provided.

Homeschooling is fantastic and, in my view, it is the next best thing to sending your kid to some heavily curated/controlled private STEM or religious high school. With homeschooling, and when done properly, kids can efficiently crank through large volumes of real schoolwork while also focusing their efforts on things they care about (pet projects, sports, you name it). I spent years running a small one-kid landscaping business, a life experience which pays dividends to this day. Back of the envelope calculations suggest that, if you can't afford the ~$50k/yr. expected by high-end high schools and/or if you don't have the cache to let your kids hobnob at Sidwell Friends with the Obama daughters, it's pretty much the best option (in terms of financial investment and resulting outcome) for their future, especially compared to how modern high schools are designed to penalize high-performers by forcing them in contact with "diversity" (read: future criminals).

The problem with homeschooling is that it is hard to compare against "traditional" modern schooling. A few points to consider:

Fundamentalist Shadow. Organizations like Abeka and the Homeschool Legal Defense Association cast a massive shadow over the entire industry, and those organizations are not without fault. The loudest members of the homeschooling community are also tied to movements like Quiverfull, fundamentalist churches, etc., and that comes with a lot of baggage (e.g., being shitty towards young girls and making them wear jean dresses, weird relationships with pop culture, an odd "us versus the world" mindset). Case in point, I could write an entire post about how much I hate Patrick Henry College - love the idea of a Christian college, hate everything about how they do it. This means that it can be very hard to compare/contrast modern schools with homeschooling without someone acting as if you're basically some equivalent to the FLDS. Also, there are plenty of examples of homeschooled kids that were, by virtue of fundamentalism, unprepared for the real world and ended up slipping into a drug/alcohol/porn addition.

The STEM problem. Homeschooling has an infamously bad reputation for producing good liberal arts students but terrible STEM students. Abeka's science books, for instance, are painfully mediocre and might as well be designed to let leftists write expose articles about how Christians refuse to teach biology. This also tends to be a self-fulfilling prophecy: a lot of homeschooled kids' parents are more liberal arts-focused, so they're not particularly adept at teaching STEM subjects, meaning that their kids will grow up to be more liberal arts-focused, and so on. I know multiple formerly-homeschooled doctors who had a lot of hurdles to overcome in undergrad as a result. Bigger picture, there's unfortunately a trend where homeschooled kids can easily underperform their counterparts when faced with STEM-based evaluation methods.

Lack of Consistency. Perhaps obviously, everyone homeschools for different reasons. In my day, the homeschooled set was about ~80% Evangelical types and ~20% "other" (kids too smart for their local schools, problem children, hyper-controlling parents, etc.). One of my good high school friends was homeschooled because his parents were hyper-intelligent first-generation (legitimate) American immigrants poached by a major defense contractor who thought American schools were too lenient... but also because he got kicked out of high school for showing friends his new gun in the school parking lot (idiotic, but innocent). The territory is also shared with "unschooling" types, who are knuckle-dragging idiots. This actual diversity means that it can be very easy to cherry pick good or bad examples and that it can be hard to sum up aggregate performance and compare it to public/private programs. It'd be like comparing home cooking to restaurants: it can be better, worse, be justified by a picky diet, etc., but a 1:1 comparison can still be hard.

I'm hoping that the above will be fixed in the future. I suspect that, as more people homeschool, many of these issues will come out in the proverbial wash.
 
Let us not forget the ever present threat of school shooters and niggers beating your kids to death or raping them to death are very real concerns when sending your kid to public school. Or teachers raping your kids mentally and/or physically
School shooters are a meme. But bullying, especially in the more psychological way kids do it, isn't. I would guess for American schools your kid is statistically WAY more likely to be psyopped into thinking that they were born the wrong sex than be killed by a school shooter.

this is how old school kiwifarms felt about "homeschooling" https://kiwifarms.st/threads/unschooling.25550/
The OP of that post literally describes that it's nothing like homeschooling. Are you trying to deliberately muddy the waters or are you just an illiterate retard?

Homeschooling is fantastic and, in my view, it is the next best thing to sending your kid to some heavily curated/controlled private STEM or religious high school. With homeschooling, and when done properly, kids can efficiently crank through large volumes of real schoolwork while also focusing their efforts on things they care about (pet projects, sports, you name it). I spent years running a small one-kid landscaping business, a life experience which pays dividends to this day. Back of the envelope calculations suggest that, if you can't afford the ~$50k/yr. expected by high-end high schools and/or if you don't have the cache to let your kids hobnob at Sidwell Friends with the Obama daughters, it's pretty much the best option (in terms of financial investment and resulting outcome) for their future, especially compared to how modern high schools are designed to penalize high-performers by forcing them in contact with "diversity" (read: future criminals).
That's definitely a good point, because you might be blessed to live in an area to either go to (by zoning or school vouchers) a decent school that has the resources and acumen to deal with Tyrone, but some people don't have that option.
 
As someone who was homeschooled, this is both good and bad.

Good as in you can actually get work done and not have to basically be in a defacto spic/nig adult daycare.

Bad because you don't get to socialize. At all. Even years after highschool I still feel the repercussions of not being around my peers.

I will say the public school system fucking blows. 1000%.
I was in the same boat for the longest time. Being homeschooled with only my siblings was nice, as I was able to develop a great relationship with them. In fact, I regard them as my best friends. However, it felt very socially isolating sometimes. Thankfully, my parents forced me to attend community events and church; so, I wasn’t a complete hermit. However, I had problems communicating with my peers for a long time. With adults, conversation was pretty easy, since I seemed to connect with them more.

Once I got into college, I quickly learned how to communicate with people my age. I just had to adopt their mannerism, lingo, and behavioral norms. Because I was raised to act very formally in public, it was hard loosening up, but I managed to do it.

Really, socialization is not a huge issue in homeschooling. The biggest problems are time management or preventing hyper-obsession over schoolwork. With school taking up most of your life, it can become an obsession sometimes (I’m a living testament to that).

Interestingly, some of the most antisocial or behaviorally spatic people I’ve ever met have always been those educated in the public school system. They hate talking to not only strangers, but also family members, especially siblings. Familial alienation from public education is a real thing, and I’ve seen it happen overtime.

Also, most of the homeschool kids I’ve met are based gun collectors, hunters, fishermen, engineers, Vril posters, and Hitler enthusiasts. Either separation from the gay education system or their augmented autism makes them more likely to be Chvds.
 
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if homeschooling was such an amazing option don't you think it would be reflected in say SAT or ACT scores? also why is it so hard for homeschooling types to interact with anyone that isn't white?
Interestingly, some of the most antisocial or behaviorally spatic people I’ve ever met have always been those educated in the public school system. They hate talking to not only strangers, but also family members, especially siblings. Familial alienation from public education is a real thing, and I’ve seen it happen overtime.

Also, most of the homeschool kids I’ve met are based gun collectors, hunters, fishermen, engineers, Vril posters, and Hitler enthusiasts
it really is migger central here.
 
if homeschooling was such an amazing option don't you think it would be reflected in say SAT or ACT scores?
ACT and SAT scores do not equate to general intelligence. I’ve met multiple people of higher intellect who performed poorly in those tests, and I have heard low IQ mouth breathers bragging about their phenomenal scores, which were only achievable through nearly a year of preparations.

Besides, these tests are scams for the College Board to make huge stacks of cash annually off of students. With how much these tests are propped up as the literal determinants of your future success, high schoolers often take them multiple times, raking in even more money for the College Board. The ACT and SAT have no academic value and are a series of trick questions to suck your teenage wallet dry.

also why is it so hard for homeschooling types to interact with anyone that isn't white?
Because most non-Whites are violent, retarded animals. With such a question posed by one of your intellectual stature, I’m assuming that you’re a brownoid.

it really is migger central here.
Migger? Where did that come from? You are a subhuman piece of shit. Kys
 
I saw that article on City-Journal who mentioned then once upon a time progressives supported school choice which also included homeschooling.

When Progressives Supported School Choice​

Joseph Viteritti’s book profiles some left-wingers who endorsed educational pluralism.

Radical Dreamers: Race, Choice, and the Failure of American Education, by Joseph Viteritti (Oxford University Press, 288 pp., $29.95)

Publicly funded school-choice programs are growing rapidly across the country. More than 1.3 million students are participating in 75 state-funded school-choice programs across 35 states, 300,000 more than just a year ago. This growth has been championed by conservative elected officials, who have pushed Education Savings Account and Scholarship Tax Credit initiatives, and largely opposed by progressives, who eliminated a choice program in Illinois and opposed charter school growth in New York.

The movement for educational pluralism has not always been so polarized. As my former colleague and Hunter College political scientist Joseph Viteritti reminds us in his new book, Radical Dreamers, school choice’s early supporters included philanthropists and business leaders from the Right and black public officials and intellectuals from the far Left. This odd coalition, which seems impossible to reconstruct today, was built on compromise in pursuit of a common goal.

The progressive school-choice proponents featured in the book include Derrick Bell, considered the father of critical race theory, and Howard Fuller, founder of the short-lived Malcom X Liberation University. Fuller was an effective school reformer and practitioner in North Carolina and Wisconsin, where he found common ground with Polly Williams, a Democratic state legislator who fought successfully for the establishment of a voucher program in Milwaukee.
 
if homeschooling was such an amazing option don't you think it would be reflected in say SAT or ACT scores?
it does
hs_act.png

private schools are best, as expected
for mortals who can't afford to casually throw around six figure sums on their kids education, homeschooling is the next best thing
public school is niggerlicious
 
if homeschooling was such an amazing option don't you think it would be reflected in say SAT or ACT scores? also why is it so hard for homeschooling types to interact with anyone that isn't white?

it really is migger central here.
I can see why you hate home schooling, you want White kids to be indoctrinated to hate themselves as you hate White people. I bet you're a nigger.
 
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