DiscoverThe Stay-at-Homeschooling Mom PodcastDebunking Seven Myths and Misconceptions About Homeschooling
Debunking Seven Myths and Misconceptions About Homeschooling

Debunking Seven Myths and Misconceptions About Homeschooling

Update: 2024-06-13
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Venerable Fulton Sheen said. "There are not one hundred people in the United States who hate The Catholic Church, but there are millions who hate what they wrongly perceive the Catholic Church to be." 


These words could easily be applied to homeschooling. Too many people react negatively when they hear of a family homeschooling, but these impressions could not be further from the truth. Today, Mary Ellen and Ginny take on the naysayers' challenge with Debunking Seven Myths and Misconceptions About Homeschooling, arming you with the real story.


 


#1 Parents are not qualified to teach their children. 


This is ridiculous, considering a child learns more in the first five years of life than in the remainder of their lives, and that's entirely due to the parents. You can find all kinds of resources to help you teach.


#2. Homeschooled children don't get to socialize. 


This is the most pervasive myth about homeschooling. People always bring it up, and it is just not true. Numerous studies prove that homeschooled kids excel in socialization. 


Bottom Line - School socialization is virtually useless:


This generation is the unhappiest we have witnessed in modern history. Kids—the vast majority of whom are in school—are miserable, so socialization is not what it is cracked up to be.


3. It's harder for homeschooled students to get into college. 


This may have been true at some point, but now colleges are actively recruiting homeschooled students. 


4. Only parents with advanced degrees can homeschool. 


That is not true. Any parent can homeschool. If you are unfamiliar with the material, there are teacher's editions, videos (YouTube, Khan Academy), and some home study schools have counselors. Online classes are also an option. As long as you are directing your child's education, you are homeschooling. You don't have to be the one teaching every class. Also, it is fun to learn alongside your kids.


Public school teachers all have degrees, many advanced, and that system is a disaster. Parents would almost have to try to do worse.


5. Homeschoolers need to experience diversity. 


This is a funny criticism since public school classrooms are strictly geographical in their composition. You are sitting in a room with people who make up your neighborhood. How diverse is that? However, homeschooled students get out into the world, travel, feed their curiosity, volunteer, and have the opportunity to explore the world as they learn about it.


6. You can't work outside of the home and homeschool. 


Again, not true. You can homeschool at any time of day or any schedule that works for you. You have to be organized and sometimes let something go (your floor may be sticky for a while), but it can be done and done well.


7. Homeschoolers can't participate in extracurricular activities. 


Homeschool kids play on soccer teams, go to dance classes, and participate in the same club leagues and other organizations that other kids do. Because their time is better managed, they also have an opportunity to follow up on their interests. They have time to read for pleasure, craft, tinker with Legos, or build forts in the yard.  




There will always be naysayers when you choose a path different from the norm. When you prayerfully decide that homeschooling is right for your family, do not let the Debbie Downers of the world rob you of the peace that comes with knowing that your child is growing and learning in a loving, safe environment from parents who want the best from them.


 


Resources:


Homeschooling and the Question of Socialization Revisited, Richard G. Medlin, Stetson Univ.


Richard G. Medlin, Stetson University (A wealth of information here, See: Publications)


 


Homeschooling Information:


Seton Home Study School


Seton Testing Services

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Debunking Seven Myths and Misconceptions About Homeschooling

Debunking Seven Myths and Misconceptions About Homeschooling

Seton Home Study School