Home Schooling

Date: 
Thursday, October 25, 2018 - 23:15
Article link: 

 

Daniel Hayes said...

I understand that it is a crime to home school in Germany. The fact that some Synod participants think in this vein is very unfortunate and symbolic of their general outlook. In the United States the homeschoolers are a well-organized force who are unflinching and vociferous in defending their rights to educate their children. So far they have been successful in staving off education establishment attempts to scuttle homeschooling.

William Murphy said...

As Daniel Hayes has noted, it is a crime to home school in Germany. Or rather, it is a crime not to send your children to a school. This is the result of a 1938 law passed under the reign of the late Adolf H. But it has never been repealed and attempts to remove it have been rejected up to European level. Thus German homeschoolers have sought refuge in the UK and USA.

Of course, even German politicians cannot prevent parents teaching their children outside school. This was driven home forcefully to me in 2013 when I was on a train heading for Freiburg. A few rows behind me, a mother was teaching her little girl to count. In English. Never too early to give your children a head start before the teachers get their hands on them.

Christopher Boegel said...

The attack on parents who homeschool their children is a mark of the sinister mind.

Banshee said...

In the US, homeschool alumni are usually distinguished by being unafraid of public speaking, reasoned in discourse, knowledgeable in ways broad and detailed, and polite without shyness. They also tend to have projects and hobbies which lead to completed things and goals. They are also self-starters.

It is kinda scary how well homeschooling works, and it is sad to the rest of us who had years of wasted life, constant bullying, annoyance, and depression. (And that was in a good school with teachers who liked me.) They actually get to study and learn, not sit around waiting all day for help, or waiting years for the class to catch up.

I read two or three novels or non-fiction books in school every day, which was where I picked up most of my learning. Nowadays, a lot of kids surreptitiously write novels on their phones or tablets, instead of in their class notebooks as they did in my day.

Oliver Nicholson said...

The German ban on Fox Hunting also dates from Hitler. It was intended to enhance German marksmanship.

 

 

 

Own comment: 

It is not surprising that Bergoglio's sodomites would use the ongoing synod 'on the youth' to attack homsechooling.

Like any totalitarian regime, the Bergoglians want to destroy anything that is a threat to their dystopian agendas, and homeschooling is indeed a big threat to them, seeing as it might actually help keep some children Catholic.