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.
 
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.
This can be an issue for kids that attend school if they are bookish or intellectually driven. Not trying to diminish your experience but point out that it occurs in both groups.
 
You can argue all day about how there are good and bad teachers, but does anyone here personally know any new public school teachers, just out of school? The people currently entering the workforce, intending this to be their lifelong career? Personally, I’m seeing my peers become educators and holy shit guys. ALL of these people are coming fresh out of their masters programs in shit like social justice education to teach YOUR KIDS about how they should feel guilty for being born white, how being a Christian is regressive, and how joyful it is to be an out, proud lesbian married to a transgender woman (aka biological male). One that I know posts instagram thirst traps with captions about how her teacher outfits give sexy butch lesbian and how the elementary aged kids she teaches think she slays! She (white) is trying to hiring a volunteer DJ to teach lessons with rap music. Every new teacher I know is doing shit like this. No one actually cares whether your kids learn how to understand a novel as long as the novel is about how racist white people are.

This is the new generation of educators. I used to think I couldn’t be a homeschooling parent, but now I’m really seeing there’s no other choice. If you must send your kids to public school, for the love of god, be active in their lives.

I even had an extremely brief experience of being homeschooled myself, and it really changed my perspective on the efficacy of public school.
I was a relatively “smart” child. The entire structure of public school made me extraordinarily miserable, so my grades and attendance were shit. When the middle school guidance counselor told my mother that I was just plain dumb, my mother angrily pulled me out of school to homeschool me for the rest of the school year. Unfortunately for me, my mother is a neglectful narcissist, so she didn’t actually teach me a single fucking thing. And you know what? I still aced the state-sanctioned exams and went back to public school the next year having missed absolutely nothing but time with my friends.
 
I'm just gonna say it. My friends that were homeschooled (not well I might add, a couple from religious cults the other just white trash neglect) are doing better on average than than public school raised ones right now. At least the ones in their 20s and 30s. First, they got married young. Marriage just creates an excellent foundation. Convincing the youth getting married young was reckless was a huge mistake. If you meet someone you love, take the plunge. The shit works because you stop thinking about yourself as solo and plan for a unit so you get better at financial planning and shit.

But the two main factors are that they weren't politically indoctrinated (shit is stressful as hell, like imagine if you actually believed that crap, your life would be spiraling, i can tell all my lib friends are dejected on the daily) and didn't go to college (saved them from the debt, they went into the career world young and got ahead in more avantgarde fields- tech, art, hair dressing.) Many of my public school friends are just throwing years/dollars down the graduate school tube to get a job in social work or ecology. Like enjoy your 300k in debt and 45k a year salary dear fucking god.

Like say what ever you want about values. Liberalism and college are fucking EXPENSIVE. Like nice home in Colorado expensive. That shit is crippling. It's not the 90s anymore. Public school teaches kids to complicate adult life till its retarded.
 
This can be an issue for kids that attend school if they are bookish or intellectually driven. Not trying to diminish your experience but point out that it occurs in both groups.
PLing, but this is correct. I moved around a lot during my childhood, so even though I did go to public school, I was still pretty withdrawn and introverted, and I didn't socialize that much. I ended up reading a lot during that time.
 
I think the big lesson here is that it all depends on location/the family trying to homeschool the kid. Honestly whatever you choose for your own kid, make sure they have some sort of after-school club to go to that can allow them to network with others for a career, and if you do choose homeschooling, don't become a statistic.
I WOULD suggest just moving to a spot where there was good public education, the issue is that it can just change in the blink of an eye. Actually had it happen to a friend of a friend once. He was going through Criminal Justice, only for his junior/senior year to suddenly swap teachers and have it just being taught nonstop that "dude racism bad lmao" the whole time. Not to mention how there were zero windows, dusty vents, etc. That shit just drained him and he instantly went from a bright star to just entirely fading out.
 
don't you think it would be reflected in say SAT or ACT scores?
To add more information to the person who already replied with ACT averages, homeschooled students average 130 points above publicly schooled children on the SAT.

In fact, if you were to bother to look any of this up, homeschooled students perform better in every single measurable category. Your anti-homeschool bias is literally your being propagandized.

To go on a tangent, I think that the reason "unschooling" gets a bad rap is because many of those cases are the anecdotes used for anti-homeschool propaganda, because the actual data does not support public school being better in any category.

It's ok, let the veil slip from your eyes. You have been propagandized, but now you know better. Be happy about that.
 
Having grown as a quai-farm kid, a good deal of my cousins (14 of the 23 of us) were homeschooled. They all turned out great with quite literally none of the issues that plague the rest of us who were chewed out by the public school system, even when in a district in the top 1% nationally. Were I to have children of my own you would bet your ass I would opt for a homeschool (probably microschool) environment, a sentiment I’ve seen shared by a lot of my (blue collar) coworkers with school-age children.
 
I would never let my children go to public school, you might as well toss them in a fucking jail cell.
I did far better in college, where I could choose my schedule, teachers, and what subjects I studied, than I did in high school, where I had very little freedom and was subject to abusive people.
 
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