YOU ARE HERE: HOME > THOUGHTS & OPINIONS > PUBLIC "HOMESCHOOL" PROGRAMS

A to Z Home's Cool Home Page


Click on the banner for recommended books and supplies for homeschooling

A to Z Home's Cool Homeschooling
 

Thoughts & Hard Facts

I am Ann Zeise, your guide to the best and most interesting and useful sites and articles about home education on the web.

 
A to Z Home's Cool Web

Home ~ Recent Articles ~ A2Z Yahoo Groups ~ Chat ~ Contact Ann Zeise ~ Curriculum Shopping
Site Index: A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z

Public Homeschool Programs

Cyberschools
Dual Enrollment
Government Plans
Independent HS'ing
Public School Programs
Sports & Activities

Related Topics

Distance Learning Programs
Resource Centers & Cottage Schools
Umbrella Schools

Thoughts & Opinions

Accreditation

Controversy
Demographics
Dispelling the Stereotype
Education Reform
HeartMath
Homeschooling Is Best
HSLDA Consumer Info
John Taylor Gatto
News About Homeschooling
Public Homeschool Programs
Numbers of Homeschoolers
Ravage of Home Education
Research
Resources
School Issues
Socialization: The "S" Word
Taking Charge
Testing Homeschoolers

A to Z Home's Cool

Home
Articles
Beginning to Homeschool
Chat Room
Community Networking
Concerns
Curriculum Shopping
Distance Learning Programs
DVD Rentals
Early Years
Events
Explorations 4 Kids
Field Trips
Gifted Kids
Holiday Directory
Homeschooling Jokes
Laws & Legalities
Lessons & Ideas
Methods, Styles
Regional Information
Religion & Cultural
Special Needs
Support Group Resources
Teens & College-Bound
Thoughts & Hard Facts
Unschooling

Search Now:

Search New and Used - Amazon.com

More homeschooling books here

Public "Homeschool" Programs

The homeschooling community constantly debates on whether or not it is wise to participate in public school-sponsored programs, such as an ISP or charter school designed for homeschoolers. Should we insist on our rights as tax-payers to force the schools to let our kids participate in sports, drama and music? Does participation harm the rights of those who wish to remain independent? What about government funded programs mascarading as homeschool programs? Can we have our cake and eat it, too?

Cyberschools

Fact Sheet: How Virtual Charter Schools Threaten Public Schools
Virtual charter schools undermine the funding of conventional public schools, take the public out of public education, increase the privatization of education at the expense of public schools, and turn state tax dollars earmarked for public education into profits for out-of-state corporations. Wisconsin Parents Association.

Homeschools, Private Schools, and Systems Education
Many homeschool parents are buying into Bennett's K12® Virtual Academy program under the assumption that it is free from government control. That is an assumption they should not make. The K12® Virtual Academy program receives from the state coffers full-time equivalent (FTE) money. By Lynn Stuter.

How William Bennett's Public E-Schools Affect Homeschooling
In his role as a key promoter of public e-schools, Bennett is acting in ways that disregard our interests as homeschoolers and undermine our homeschooling freedoms. By Larry and Susan Kaseman, HEM N/D 2002.

Problems With Putting Public E-Schools in Homes
Public e-schools (also called cyber charter schools or virtual charter schools) are public schools in which teachers communicate with students and their parents via computer. Larry and Susan Kaseman, HEM M/J 02.

Risks Public Virtual Schools Pose to Homeschools NEW
It makes a difference how the state regulates public virtual school students in their homes. It sets a precedent of government monitoring and overseeing private citizens in their own homes. Larry and Susan Kaseman, HEM M/A 08.

Dual Enrollment

Are "Dual Enrollment" and "Running Start" Really Homeschool Options?
Barbara Shelton argues the point that if you send your homeschooling teen to a community college then you are no longer homeschooling.

What You Need to Know About Your Part-Time Enrollment Rights
How can you take advantage of these alt. ed. programs without giving up your home-based or homeschooling status under the Washington state law?

Government Plans for Charter Schools

Before Enrolling: Questions to Ask a Charter School
What kind of paperwork does the school require? Can you see samples of paperwork? How often is the paperwork due? And more. From HSC's Chaos to Confidence handbook.

Center for Education Reform - Charter Connection
Resource megasite about Charter Schools.

Homeschoolers, Is Our Good Name For Sale?
Public schools and business people are increasingly trying to convince homeschoolers to enroll in their programs and use their services. At first glance, the offers may seem attractive. By Larry and Susan Kaseman.

Making Positive Connections with Homeschoolers
This online booklet, produced by the Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory, takes a look at what has been learned so far about school-homeschool cooperation and offers tips and suggestions for building successful partnerships with homeschooling families.

A New Charter for Homeschooling?
The appeal of home-based charter schools represents a threat to the independence of home schooling, Young said. "The most insidious of these offerings, in my opinion, are those specifically meant to be Trojan horse programs, aimed at 'recapturing' - a term used by their promoters - students 'lost' to homeschooling." By Dr. Karen Palasek.

Psst, Homeschooler, Have I Got A Carrot For You! Part Two
The lines between the long held philosophies of homeschool and government school have grown hazy with the introduction of what some are calling the "hybrid homeschooler." By Linda Dobson. HEM.

Seduction of Homeschool Families
Essay about the more subtle and dangerous tactic some states use to recapture homeschooling families ­ the inauguration of government homeschooling programs. By Chris Cardiff.

So What About That Free Lunch?
How can we trust the state? asks Peggy Daly-Masternak. I take tremendous exception to the "great chance" proffered in any discussion of sharing school services or using alternative public school programs.

Third Great Lie
Chris Cardiff explains why government "homeschool" programs hurt the homeschool movement in California and elsewhere.

US Charter Schools
Official government site promoting charter schools and what the plans are. Don't take it all from us homeschoolers! Find out how charters are linked to No Child Left Behind. Find out about lucrative grants available. Follow the money!

Where Will That Leave Us?
What do policies written and developed for public schools have to do with homeschooling - a private effort which (wonderful field trips notwithstanding) takes place in the home amongst one's own family? By Helen Hegener, HEM N/D 03.

Independent Homeschooling

Distinctiveness
In order to hang on to what makes homeschooling distinctive, we need to act in ways that will maintain these differences and prevent homeschooling from being reduced to schooling by becoming a small, insignificant part of conventional schooling.

Preserving Homeschooling Rights
As more families leave schools, and as homeschooling becomes more visible, there is increasing pressure to bring homeschooling under greater government control, and homeschoolers can be expected to respond to that threat. By Amy Grant, NHEN.

Why I Will Not Sign the "We Stand for Homeschooling Statement and Resolution"
So why not sign this "We Stand for Homeschooling" statement? If I see government- or corporate-sponsored programs as close to worthless, what's the problem? by Mary Griffith

Why Independence Is Essential To Homeschooling
This column will examine the strengths of homeschooling, emphasizing those that exist because homeschools are independent of public schools, and discuss contributions homeschooling makes to our society. Larry and Susan Kaseman, HEM S/O 02.

The Wild and Free Pigs of Okefenokee Swamp
A southern parable about the dangers of getting used to free handouts.

Your Homeschooling Decisions Affect My Homeschooling Freedoms
Why we need to be free from unnecessary state regulation, why it is difficult to do this, and what we can do to reclaim and maintain homeschooling freedoms, including situations when this means giving up something our family wants. By Larry and Susan Kaseman. HEM M/A 01.

Public School Programs

Government-Subsidized Home Schooling Programs
Will family educators dodge this bullet? By accepting funds from the government, home schoolers provide a strong rationale for government control of home schoolers. By Rodger Williams.

Home Education in Ohio: New Arm of Public Education?
This information was prepared by Ohio Home Education Coalition an open and inclusive coalition of interested homeschoolers who come together to raise awareness of issues facing homeschoolers in Ohio.

Home is where the school is
But should the public pay for it? And how much is too much? Three central questions emerged in the debate: How the Virtual School spends its $6,000-plus per student; how many of its students come from homeschool or private school backgrounds; and just who's behind the Virtual School's program anyway. By Jennifer Barnett Reed.

Homeschooling In Public Schools: A Dangerous Oxymoron
In some parts of the country, especially Alaska and California, programs have been established, coordinated, and funded by public schools for families who want their children to learn at home at least part of the time.

Homeschooling vs. Public Alternative Education Programs
Alt. Ed., Cyberschools, "Homeschool" Centers, etc. What you need to know. From the Washington Homeschool Organization.

I Want My Money Back
One popular reason given by parents who want the government to pay for their children's education is that, after all, it's our money. Since our children aren't in the public school, it's only fair that our tax dollars follow our children and fund whatever education we choose. By Mary Schofield

Labeling Publicly Funded Programs for Homeschoolers
What about Public School "homeschool" programs? It's more than a matter of semantics. By Christine Webb, HEM.

Public School Programs and Our Community
The question before us now is this: how should the homeschool community respond to these government controlled "homeschooling" programs? Janie Levine Hellyer, HEM.

Sports & Activities

Why Can't Homeschoolers Play on School Sports Teams
Years ago there were major problems with ringers, or players who weren't qualified, playing on teams in league sports.

Inside Charter Schools: The Paradox of Radical Decentralization
Inside Charter Schools: The Paradox of Radical Decentralization
by Bruce Fuller
Provides shrewd and illuminating studies of the struggles and achievements of these new schools, and offers practical lessons for educators, scholars, policymakers, and parents.
 
Kingdom of Children: Culture and Controversy in the Homeschooling Movement
Kingdom of Children: Culture and Controversy in the Homeschooling Movement
by Mitchell L. Stevens
Moving from why parents opt for home-schooling to the long-term effects on their children, he draws on interviews with a mix of parents from fundamentalist Christians to pagans and educational radicals and persuasively contextualizes the movement within the "organizational strategies of the progressive left and the religious right" in their attempt to preserve their core set of values: "the sanctity of childhood and the primacy of family in the face of an increasingly competitive and bureaucratized society." 15 pages of excerpts available.


The Schools Our Children Deserve
Moving Beyond Traditional Classrooms and "Tougher Standards"
by Kohn, Alfie
Teacher-turned-writer Alfie Kohn takes on traditional-education giants like E.D. Hirsch, along with practically every state government "raising the bar" and toughening standards, in this attack on the back-to-basics movement. 1999 Hardcover


Left Back : A Century of Failed School Reforms
by Ravitch, Diane Ravitch
"Whenever the academic curriculum was diluted or minimized, large numbers of children were pushed through the school system without benefit of a genuine education," she writes. 2001 Paperback

Welcome
Home

Thoughts
& Hard Facts

Curriculum Shopping

Contact
Ann Zeise
© 1997 - Ann Zeise. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use & Privacy Policy

Advertise