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FUN 2000-2001 Resolutions RU-40 Public Schooling
The Family Unschoolers Network believes that public
schooling programs cannot provide the student with a comprehensive
education experience.1 When public
schooling occurs, students enrolled must meet all parental
requirements.2 Public
schooling should be limited to the children of the immediate family who
choose to attend public school. As long as the expenses of public
schooling are borne by the taxpayers, those funds must also be made
available to parents/guardians for use in the educational program of their
choice whether that be public schools, charter schools, private schools,
or homeschools. Instruction should be by persons who are approved by the
appropriate parent or guardian, and a curriculum approved by the parent or
guardian should be used.
The Network also believes that public-schooled students
should not participate in any extracurricular activities that are not open
to all students. Extracurricular programs paid for by the taxpayers must
be open to all residents.
The Network further believes that local homeschool parents
should have the authority to determine grade placement and/or credits
earned toward graduation for students entering or re-entering a homeschool
setting from a public school setting.3 (1988,
2000)
================ 1) Public school
programs artificially segregate children by age and require seating at
desks set in rows. This does not permit a normal social interaction with
other children or adults such as may occur in everyday life outside of a
school setting. The low number of adults encountered in the public school
setting provides little opportunity for children to see the modeling of
appropriate social behaviors and they are thus more likely to see only the
behaviors of other children their own age without an appropriate social
context.
In addition, public schools cannot provide the customized,
extensive and flexible curriculum available to the homeschool. The public
school setting artificially schedules learning and segregates it into
separate subjects with a limited amount of allocated time per day. This
limits activities to what can fit the allocated time slot and to what can
easily be classified as related to a particular subject. The predetermined
schedule also means that many children will either not have enough time to
master the material before moving on, or will have to waste time on
material they have already mastered before moving on.
2) Parents have
a compelling interest in the education of their children and should
therefore be able to determine the requirements that must be met when
their children are educated in public school.
3) Test scores
and evaluations from public schools may not be accurate indicators of
knowledge or proficiency and are often of little value in determining
grade placement or credits for a homeschool setting. The scores often
reflect only the ability to memorize material long enough to complete a
test, and the skill set being evaluated is often limited. Therefore, the
Network recommends that the initial months of homeschooling a former
public school student be used primarily to explore the interests and
abilities of the student while allowing the family to adapt to the
challenges of the independence and integration of the flexible and
multi-disciplinary environment of homeschooling which can provide
hands-on, "real world" activities not available in public school
settings.
Copyright © 2000, The Family Unschoolers Network www.unschooling.org
The above may be reprinted freely as long as it is used in
its entirety and includes this note. |