» Players » Charter Schools » Indiana-”The Home-School Effect”
» Players » Charter Schools » Indiana-”The Home-School Effect”
Home |
Getting Started |
FAQ |
Resources |
News and Commentary |
Editorial |
Closer Look |
Links |
Support Groups |
Site Map
Home Education Magazine |
HEM Archives |
About |
Subscribe |
Contact HEM |
HEM Store |
Privacy |
Classifieds |
Advertise |
Webmaster
Indiana-”The Home-School Effect”
A new pilot charter school has been approved in Indiana. “The home-school effect” came up in the Journal Gazette, just as it often does in much of this educational trend’s media coverage, potential vendors’ marketing points, along with many legislators’ concerns.
Charter schools set for online trial run The Journal Gazette
One legitimate defense is that homeschoolers do save the state money with our education/funding accountability. That might not be significant to those who want the control, but fiscal conservatives like the notion.
Former elementary school principal and current Sen. Connie Sipes finds the charter school curriculum satisfactory for homeschoolers.
It might be a good curriculum for some homeschoolers, but certainly not all. We can be flexible in fitting the learning around our kids and their particular best education practice styles.
Lynette Quinn presides over the Indiana Families for Public Virtual Schools, and independent homeschoolers can appreciate the “Public” noted in the name. There leaves no doubt who is accountable for the education, financing and accountability.
But it appears that Senator Sipes has a more significant concern (to her); school socialization.
History lessons would surely show that socializing was fairly successful in the years before modern public education was conceived. Learning to interact with others, tolerate differences and learn how to get along with each other could be a more likely possibility when you’re not in a classroom surrounded by classmates of the same age and within the bounds of the community.
That is a “home-school effect” that has more possibilities in promoting free-range living and learning.
Tags: Indiana, Indiana Families for Public Virtual Schools, Indiana homeschooling, Indiana virtual school, Indiana virtual schooling, Lynette Quinn