CHRISTIANS IN HOME SCHOOLING
The
Atlantic Monthly - November 2001
Books & Critics: Books The New Counterculture
The rapid growth of the home-schooling movement owes much to the energy and
organizational skills of its Christian advocates
by Margaret Talbot
Kingdom
of Children: Culture and Controversy in the Home Schooling Movement
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0691058180/theatlanticmonthA/>
by Mitchell L. Stevens - Princeton, 241 pages, $24.95
In
the 1980s, when newspapers and magazines first started reporting on parents who
had rejected school in favor of teaching their children at home, it seemed that
the movement would never last—or if it lasted, would never grow. More and more
mothers were working outside the home. More and more parents, especially in the
upper middle class, were fretting about their children's pursuit of academic
excellence and healthy socialization, while simultaneously outsourcing the
management of both to recognized experts and paid caregivers. It did not seem an
auspicious time for a movement that demanded the intensive labor of mothers
willing to forgo careers and income; that set little store by certification,
licensing, degrees, and other signifiers of professional expertise; that took
pride in a kind of rustic do-it-yourselfism; and that, even in its large,
conservative Christian wing, held fast to the progressive-educational notion of
not rushing kids into academics too early. Like so many other self-conscious
reversions to the way of our forebears, the home-schooling movement seemed
destined to sputter out.
Instead
it has developed over the past decade or so into a surprisingly vigorous
counterculture. In 1985 about 50,000 children nationwide were learning at home.
Current estimates range from 1.5 to 1.9 million. (The former is probably the
more reliable number, though precision is hard to come by because neither the
census nor any other national survey distinguishes between home-schooled
children and others.) By comparison, charter schools—the most celebrated
alternative in public schooling—enroll only about 350,000 students. Patricia
Lines, a former Department of Education researcher who has studied home
schooling since the mid-1980s, points to evidence, such as Florida's annual
survey of home schoolers, suggesting that the population of kids learning at
home is growing by 15 to 20 percent a year. Moreover, home schoolers as a group
are extraordinarily committed—not only to educating their children as they see
fit but also to building and sustaining organizations. They have founded
thousands of local support groups across the country, along with an influential
lobbying and legal-defense organization, dozens of publishers and curriculum
suppliers, and six nationally circulated magazines. By now it seems reasonable
to agree with Lines that "the rise of homeschooling is one of the most
significant social trends of the past half century."
To
understand why this should be so, it helps first of all to give up on the idea
of home schooling as a throwback. It's true that mandatory school attendance is
a relatively new phenomenon in the broad sweep of history, and that during the
eighteenth and much of the nineteenth centuries most American children acquired
what learning they got—precious little if they came from laboring or farming
families—at home. The first common schools in the United States were
established in the 1840s, but it was not until the early twentieth century, in
the first flush of Progressivism, that most states legislated compulsory
education, and even then many of the laws covered only a few months of the year.
It is true, as the Web site of the Home School Legal Defense Association reminds
us, that "American history is full of men and women who were taught at
home, from colonial patriot Patrick Henry to President John Quincy Adams to
inventor Thomas Edison"—although many of them were taught not by parents
but by tutors, which is rather a different thing.
Yet
for all the claims that it is resurrecting a hallowed American tradition, for
all its old-timey affections (the home-schooling activist Michael Farris once
felt compelled to warn home schoolers against un-Christian bragging about baking
their own bread), home schooling is a distinctly modern, even forward-looking
movement. It is modern in some superficial ways, such as in its use of the
Internet to pass along curricula and teaching tips and to create instant support
networks. And it is modern in some deeper ways—for example, in its capacity to
fulfill needs that could have arisen only in our present social circumstances.
Those include the need many parents feel to shield their families from a
commercial culture they regard as soulless, acquisitive, overly sexualized, and
corrosive of family ties. And, as Mitchell Stevens shows in Kingdom of Children,
his readable sociological survey of the movement, they include the needs of many
American women, mostly conservative Christians, whose beliefs do not permit them
to work outside the home but whose aspirations have nonetheless been shaped by
feminism and its discontents.
------
Elsewhere on the Web Links to related material on other Web sites.
"A
School's Life Without Rules" (Christian Science Monitor, May 8, 2001
<http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2001/05/08/fp17s1-csm.shtml>) Behind the
scenes at Britain's Summerhill. By Marjorie Coeyman
"John
Holt: Teach Your Own Children ... At Home" (The Mother Earth News,
July/August 1980 <http://www.bloomington.in.us/~learn/Holt.htm>) The
transcript of an interview with John Holt. ------
But
that's to get ahead of the story. Though they tend to dominate it now,
conservative Christians were not home schooling's pioneers. Its first
inspiration came from 1960s leftists such as Ivan Illich, Paul Goodman, and A.
S. Neill, the founder of the British free school at Summerhill. Many of these
innovators started out as critics of subpar schools for the urban poor and
became critics of formal education itself—tests, grades, curricula, the very
idea that a specific body of knowledge ought to be transmitted from adults to
children. Among them was a childless patrician writer named John Holt, who
became the first home-schooling activist. Holt was born in New York City in
1923, and, although he later refused to say what schools he had attended, on the
grounds that they had taught him nothing, his obituaries revealed that he had
enrolled at Phillips Exeter Academy and graduated from Yale with a degree in
industrial engineering. After a stint teaching fifth-graders at two private
schools in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Holt emerged as an impassioned, slightly
moony school reformer, the author of the best-selling diary-style books How
Children Fail <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0201484021/theatlanticmonthA/>
(1964) and How Children Learn <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0201484048/theatlanticmonthA/>
(1967). "What is essential is to realize that children learn independently,
not in bunches," he wrote, "that they learn out of interest and
curiosity, not to please or appease the adults in power, and that they ought to
be in control of their own learning; deciding for themselves what they want to
learn and how they want to learn it." Holt had a Salingeresque softness for
kids, whom he regarded as superior in every way to adults. Children "are
better at [learning] than we are," he said; left to their own devices, they
would learn their little hearts out.
By
the late 1970s Holt had abandoned any hope that schools themselves would allow
children to learn what they wanted to at their own pace and in their own
admirably childish spirit, and had begun urging parents to "unschool"
at home. His timing was just right, because many former sixties radicals were by
then turning to hearth and home. As the founder of a magazine called Growing
Without Schooling <http://www.holtgws.com/>, Holt went on to guide a loose
congregation of hippie parents across the country as they took their children's
education into their own experimental, studiously nonauthoritarian hands. These
first home educators were suspicious of institutions, Rousseauvian in their
pedagogy, and big on learning by doing, whether it was milking goats or weaving
a wall hanging or digging a well. They were the kinds of people who thought of
themselves as "alternative," who met one another at the food co-op or
at La Leche League meetings or at folk-dance fundraisers for Guatemalan
refugees. Their world, as Stevens puts it, was "a small world now, short on
cash, physical plants, and new blood, but still a hotly idealistic and quietly
optimistic place," and Holt's child-centered, liberationist teachings
resonated there.
At
the same time, two other critics of conventional schooling, Raymond and Dorothy
Moore, were launching a campaign against sending children to school in the early
grades. The Moores were educational researchers and Seventh-Day Adventists. As
young parents living in Tokyo in the 1940s, they had kept their children out of
school and had never regretted the decision. Schools, they argued, were
factory-like places, from which the "instinctual" knowledge and casual
intimacy of family was coldly, and disastrously, excluded. "The tendency
for most schools and similar institutions is to make the child's program
rigid," they wrote. "This is a necessary feature of mass production.
The youngster's activity for much of the day is focused in a few square feet
area around his desk, and timed out to the minute." The Moores believed
that children were developmentally unable to conform to such routines or to
benefit from formal academic instruction until they had reached the
"integrated maturity level," which differed from child to child but
might be as late as age ten or twelve. If children were hustled into school
nonetheless, and then overlooked by busy teachers, the likely results were
learning disabilities, nearsightedness, and behavior problems such as
hyperactivity. In this the Moores sounded like Holt and other critics who
regarded schools as engines of conformity, too big and impersonal to meet the
needs of the individual child.
But
the Moores were also harbingers of home schooling's quite different future.
Unlike Holt and his followers, they were religious conservatives who worried
that schools undercut the authority of parents and forced children to face peer
pressure before they were able to withstand it. The Moores first gained a
national reputation with a 1972 article in Harper's magazine. But their great
breakthrough occurred in the early 1980s, when James Dobson started inviting the
Moores to speak on his nationally syndicated radio program, Focus on the Family.
With Dobson's immense reach, the Moores' message found an eager audience among
the evangelicals and fundamentalists of the new Christian right. For these
converts home schooling offered the possibility of editing out evolutionary
theory, secular humanism, and other knowledge they abhorred, while reviving or
reinventing a model of learning that encouraged children to cleave to their
families and keep the blandishments of consumerism at arm's length. Conservative
Christians understood that it was easier to strengthen the influence of families
against that of pop culture if families had something explicit and comprehensive
to do, and education was the obvious function.
Christian
home schoolers brought new energy and much-improved organizational skills to the
movement. It was thanks to them, and particularly to the Home School Legal
Defense Association, that home schooling earned the legal status it enjoys
today. The Constitution offers broad guarantees of parents' right to direct
their children's education, and the Supreme Court has repeatedly upheld those
guarantees in cases involving, for example, the rights of the Old Order Amish
and other religious minorities to keep their children out of public school.
Still, in 1983 only four states had laws explicitly permitting home education.
In the early days many of the Holtian "unschoolers" fashioned
themselves as a kind of underground. (Holt himself, in one of his more
distasteful analogies, championed the notion of a "new Underground Railroad
to help children escape from schools.") Some unschoolers courted
prosecution under truancy laws. Christian home schoolers, however, tended to
want legal recognition for their interpretation of parents' rights, and they got
it. By 1993 home education was legal in all fifty states, subject to varying
degrees of regulation.
For
a while the two wings of the movement cooperated, bound together by their mutual
skepticism toward mainstream education. But by the early 1990s the unschoolers
were complaining in their publications that conservative white Christians had
become the face of the movement. This was true—for the simple reason that
white Christians had become the overwhelming majority among home schoolers. In a
1995 study of home educators the sociologist Maralee Mayberry found that 84
percent believed the Bible was literally true, 78 percent said they went to
church at least once a week, and 98 percent were white. Later studies have
confirmed, as Stevens puts it, that home schooling is "statistically
associated with white, religious, two-parent households." Home-schooling
parents are not, as a rule, any wealthier than the American norm, but they do
tend to have more years of education. (A sizable minority have teaching
degrees.) And their families are larger than average: the majority have three or
more children. Conservative Christians have become the new counterculture, far
more vital than what remains of the 1960s version, and home schooling is their
most successful alternative institution.
Despite
its precipitate growth, however, comparatively little has been written about
home schooling, and what there is tends to focus on more or less measurable
outcomes for the kids. Do they make friends? Go to college? Feel like weirdoes?
Learn what they're supposed to learn? Score well on standardized tests? On this
last point, as it happens, the evidence is fairly strong, and coverage of it has
helped to win a grudging social acceptance for teaching outside of school. The
news that home-schooled kids had been dominating national spelling and geography
bees, and that several surveys showed them scoring higher than the national
average on standardized tests, including the SAT, got plenty of press.
In
contrast, almost nothing has been written about home schooling as a social
movement with its own utility for adults. Stevens, a professor of sociology at
Hamilton College, spent ten years interviewing home-schooling families, watching
them teach, pitching tents at their summer camps, hanging out at their
conferences, and reading their publications. He has written a careful,
intelligent book that fills that gap, seeking to explain "what
homeschooling means to the people who do it." The book suffers,
unfortunately, from the constraints of Stevens's discipline, at least as he
interprets them. To protect the privacy of his subjects, he says, he resorts to
pseudonyms and alters biographical details. At any rate, vivid descriptions of
people and places don't seem to be his forte.
But
his analysis is often fascinating, especially when it comes to what women who
home school get out of it. Most of the women Stevens interviewed never seriously
considered working outside the home after they had children. Full-time
motherhood had in some cases been their goal and ideal since childhood, and was
often inseparable from their conservative Protestant religious beliefs. To be a
godly woman meant to put child-rearing above ambition and acquisition, and sound
child-rearing required the devotion of steady, unfragmented attention.
"Love is spelled T-I-M-E," as one home-schooling family's Web site
puts it. "We give ourselves to our children while they are young and need
our instruction ... By the time they complete the high school years they are
firmly anchored in GOD'S WORD, and have learned to stand against the
world."
Deeply
immersed in these values as they were, however, the women Stevens interviewed
were hardly immune to the more mainstream ideals of womanhood shaped in part by
liberal feminism. Like their contemporaries who had chosen to combine outside
careers with the raising of children, they felt the attractions of using their
minds and education in systematic, diligent ways; of possessing a sense of
purpose independent from their husbands'; and of avoiding the tedium of
housecleaning. The daily life of, say, the stereotypical 1950s housewife,
trussed up in an apron and a short strand of pearls, seemed pallid and
irrelevant to them, too. They wanted, as several women told Stevens, to be
recognized as more than "just moms." Home schooling was in some ways
the perfect solution—a souped-up domesticity with higher stakes and more
respect. Though it did not afford economic autonomy, it did offer an
intellectual outlet. And it provided social, political, and even entrepreneurial
opportunities—through the home-schooling movement's local associations; its
frequent conferences, retreats, and multi-family field trips; and its expanding
market for new teaching materials, guidebooks, and the like, many of which
home-schooling mothers write.
It's
true that the work is formidable—the basic care and feeding of young children
is labor-intensive enough even when one is not solely responsible for educating
them. And mother-teachers do seem to get more respect within the home-schooling
world than teachers and child-care workers get in the larger world. This is
particularly true in the Christian wing of the movement, where women's teaching
role is seen as sanctified by God. "Women are admonished to be committed
full-time to their children," Stevens observes, "but their submission
to God's plan is also explicitly recognized and celebrated from pulpits and on
the pages of [the movement's own] glossy magazines." Moreover, fathers are
actively encouraged to help their wives in whatever way the wives find useful,
since the job of training young minds is regarded as both singularly important
and singularly demanding. Christian home schoolers are "refreshingly
explicit about the human costs of raising children," Stevens found.
"They devote considerable energy to explaining why children 'need'
full-time mothers, and they also are careful to celebrate the doing of that
work." (The unschoolers, in contrast, tended to celebrate the creativity of
the child over the labors of the mother.)
In
the end, Kingdom of Children suggests that the benefits of home schooling may be
greater for women than for children or for society in general. To be fair,
Stevens doesn't even pose the comparison. But it is surely worth some tentative
evaluation—especially if the movement continues to grow. Home-schooled kids, I
think it's fair to say, are all right. They do well on tests, and they go on to
fancy colleges when they want to; admissions officers and professors like them
because they are self-motivated and have good study habits. Home-schooled kids
watch less television than their peers and—though this has not been
measured—are, I suspect, less likely to be medicated with Ritalin and other
drugs whose function has at least something to do with classroom management.
I
don't think we need worry much about their socialization in the narrow sense,
either. With the exception of a few wackos in the Idaho panhandle,
home-schooling parents are not bent on isolating their children, and most
home-schooled kids make friends through the Scouts or church groups or
volunteering. Indeed, in a study conducted a few years ago the sociologists
Christian Smith and David Sikkink found that home-schooling families are
actually more enmeshed in their communities than public school families. They
are more likely, for example, to have voted in the previous five years,
participated in an ongoing community-service activity, or gone to the public
library. And the few psychological studies that have looked at categories such
as "self-concept" and sociability have detected no problems and some
advantages for home-schooled kids. It would be ill-advised to set much store by
such studies, given the difficulty of measuring something like self-concept, but
at least they don't raise any alarms.
More
difficult, I think, is the question of whether home schooling poses any sort of
a problem for society—a threat to social cohesion, for example, or a brain
drain from the public schools. Smith and Sikkink's study suggests that there is
little reason to worry that home schooling diverts people from civic life. What
may be more worrisome is the prospect that home schooling will attract new
recruits motivated mainly by disenchantment with the quality of their public
schools. There is some evidence that recent converts to home schooling fit this
profile. In a Florida state survey conducted from 1995 to 1996, for example,
"dissatisfaction with public school" edged out "religious"
motivations for the first time as the leading reason for home schooling.
For
ideologically or religiously motivated home schoolers, keeping their kids out of
school is not a consumer's whim; it's the exercise of a constitutionally
sanctioned right to guide their children's education in accordance with their
most deeply held beliefs. And in a democratic society only considerations as
profound as those are significant enough to outweigh the potential harm of
sectarianism. The decision to home school also represents a complicated but
reasonable compromise with the rest of us. Rather than agitate to get Darwinism
out of the public schools, for example, conservative Christian home schoolers
may opt to withdraw from them while continuing (for the most part) to pay taxes
that support those schools and to participate in civic and political life.
Moreover, as Stevens shows, home schooling offers some conservative Christian
women, whose values prevent them from working outside the home, a measure of
fulfillment and autonomy that they might not otherwise enjoy—a social good in
itself. If the rest of us (people nursing vague beefs with the public schools,
people without a powerful religious or ideological justification) started
pulling our kids out of the schools, I doubt it would serve any social good at
all.
Secular
liberals may not much care for the particular forms of social capital that
evangelicals and fundamentalists build, but build them they do. And if one
shares the worry that the American citizenry is growing more selfish and
monadic, the home schoolers' brand of civic participation is no small thing. Of
course, one might argue that the home schoolers' activism is too narrow and
self-interested to count as social capital. But that may be too narrow a way of
thinking. As Smith and Sikkink argue, "American democracy thrives on the
widespread participation of its citizens in a host of different kinds of
associations that mediate between the individual and the state, often even when
those associations are not manifestly political or liberal ... [T]he experience
of association and participation itself tends to socialize, empower, and
incorporate citizens in ways that stimulate democratic self-government, even if
they involve some particularity and conflict in the process."
Besides,
Christian home schoolers embody a coherent, living critique of mainstream
education and child-rearing that can be bracing, a model of carefully
negotiated, mildly irritating separateness, of being in but not of modern
consumer society. For the rest of us, the tensions that creates may be the most
useful thing about them.