Home
Schooling Information
Home education, also called home schooling or home school,
is the process by which children are educated at home rather
than at an institution such as a public or private school.
Prior to the introduction of compulsory school attendance in
the 19th century, most education worldwide occurred within the
family and community, with only a small proportion of the
population attending schools or employing tutors.
The terms "home schooling" or "home education" may refer to
instruction in the home under the supervision of correspondence
schools called "umbrella schools" [example: Christian Liberty
Academy]. A curriculum-free philosophy of home schooling may be
called unschooling, a term coined in 1977 by American educator
John Holt in his magazine Growing Without Schooling.
In the United States, home schooling can be an option for
parents who wish to provide their children with a quality of
education they believe is unattainable in schools. At present,
however, most children are institutionally schooled.
History of Home
Schooling
The foundations of modern home education may originate with
the rise of government operated schools in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries.The usual situation in rural areas before
1860 was that most children were taught farm chores and
rudimentary arithmetic and spelling. Occasionally some families
would pool and hire a traveling tutor, usually a young Yankee
like Stephen Douglas. In exchange for room and board he would
provide a few months schooling for the children in the group.In
this fashion Abraham Lincoln acquired about 18 months of
schooling.
A few famous figures such as Abraham Lincoln, Theodore
Roosevelt, Thomas Edison, and Woodrow Wilson might be
considered to have been home-educated, as they underwent little
formal education. Home schoolers often attend college
--Roosevelt went to Harvard and Wilson to Princeton-- as
colleges and universities do accept home school applicants.
Patrick Henry College in Virginia is particularly welcoming to
home schooled youth with strongly conservative political and
religious beliefs.
In the United States, the "curriculum in a box", or
All-in-one curriculum form of home education appeared in 1906,
when the Calvert Day School of Baltimore, Maryland
made such materials
available through a downtown Baltimore bookstore and a
National Geographic advertisement. Within five years,
nearly 300 children were making use of materials from
Calvert's Home Instruction Department.In less than a
century the materials became the basis for lessons for
more than 350,000 children annually in more than 90
countries.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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