Spare the Rod and Abuse the Child - How Home Schooling Fails

03/07/08

Permalink 11:23:25 am, by u235 Email , 380 words, 59 views   English (US)
Categories: The ol' double standard

Spare the Rod and Abuse the Child - How Home Schooling Fails

"Parents do not have a constitutional right to home school their children..."

That's what the law says. Simply put, just because you decide to reproduce does not entitle you to raise that child in any way you see fit. American public schools are designed to provide an accepted level of education to children to ensure that kids can become functional adults who can contribute to their society. Just because a public school don't expound or enforce religious beliefs does not mean that a school is unfit to train students in the necessary skills to survive. Schools teach children to read, write, and count - the bible does not. And if it means so much to a parent, then there are religious institutions available at a premium cost.

While parents are responsible for how their children are raised they are also not entitled, as parents, to freely abuse or mistreat them. In the case of Phillip Long, a home-schooling parent from CA, his eldest child claimed "mental and physical abuse" as part of being home-schooled. This lead to a lawsuit wherein one of the Judges issued the statement at the top: Parents do not have a *right* to home school.

I'm tired of all the religious zealots in the US forgetting the fact our country was founded on the basis of religious *freedom*. The basis of this is that we allow people to practice what they want, so long as it does not interfere with the rights of others. Beating your child as part of your "religious beliefs" *is* interfering with the rights of another, and it's not allowed. Further, in order to teach your child, you must be at least as educated as you want them to be, if not significantly more. If teachers need a degree to teach, then parents have to submit to a level of certification as well.

While some of that has been mitigated by the fact that home schooled students still need to pass standardized tests, it doesn't mean that the child learned in a nurturing or encouraging environment. Learning should not be hell, and if parents are abusive in how they teach then a reporting mechanism is required. Chances are if they're at least college educated they won't be... but that's just my opinion.

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: Roulette [Member] Email
Slightly off topic, but there are times when I agree with Alexander Hamilton. Maybe we shouldn't have had a Bill of Rights. There is something to be said for the idea that just because something isn't enumerated, doesn't mean the basic right does not exist.

Home schooling isn't a right, according to our judge. Of course, I would say it the other way: the constitution also has no restriction on the ability of parents to home school children. Sure, there are no doubt cases of parents who are unfit to be teachers. And there should be some way for children to seek relief. But that doesn't mean parents don't have the right to home school.
PermalinkPermalink 03/07/08 @ 13:34
Comment from: u235 [Member] Email
I believe it was a state judge, not federal. States may have laws on how children may be educated, but I don't know precisely what they are.
PermalinkPermalink 03/07/08 @ 14:55
Comment from: odessa [Member] Email
Many Islamic schools only teach the Koran - to hell with mathematics (which Arabs frequently try to take full credit for).

States do bear most of the responsibility of determining education. I had reason to do some research on school requirements and I was astounded at the lack of requirements in my State. Of course, any degrees given by schools that don't get certification isn't worth squat. However, I found out my state really doesn't require any sort of certification. Scary, huh?
PermalinkPermalink 03/08/08 @ 12:11

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u235

You want descriptions? Get a dictionary. Better go waste time reading the news or play some games on Yahoo or MSN or some shit like that.

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