Amen, quite honestly, arguing with Zealots who only really care about one post on the forum is kind of silly. The truth is, if you google the facts, the bulk of homeschooled people in the United States are not from families seeking to create well rounded individuals. Regionally, things become even clearer that large pockets of them are adherents to rather particular beliefs, and homeschool as a way of repressing certain ideas, rather than others. Geez, you can like the system all you want, but you defending its every breath is kind of silly. Quite simply, homeschooling depends on the parent, and if the parents are no good, chances are the children turn out no good too, almost certainly if the child is homeschooled, as correction has a lesser chance of seeping in.
All the data on homeschooling is ultimately skewed - the vast majority of people homeschooled, for instance, are from two-parent families, who are, clearly, well off enough that one parent can take the time to go out and teach the kid. What that essentially means, is that the demographic of homeschooled kids teaches one nothing about the success, as it factors into other grounds. A fair study, of which I cannot find at the moment, would compare the income brackets of the families to ones of similar income, and check the success rate amongst those people relative to the ones attending school - I am sure, ultimately, the most successful will still be the prep-schooled rich white old blood that has had generations at Harvard anyway. Demographics are everything, homeschool advocates are just as good at fabricating facts as everyone else.
The truth is, all those stats are essentially meaningless. On the whole, the greatest preforms in the most objective subjects, notably mathematics, have come from countries where homeschooling does not exist, or is illegal. Hong Kong, for instance, has homeschooling illegal, and homeschooling in Japan is illegal. They by far score better on average than Americans in Mathematics - the only possible indicator - so there must be something to real education.
Lets be honest, mediocre parents make for mediocre students - at least in a school there is some standard control, and the kids are exposed to new teachers - at home, mediocrity gets full reign, and closed mindedness (over 30% of homeschooling parents in the States cited religion reasons for homeschooling, and over 12% cited that they don't want their children learning what is being taught in school) flourishes. Besides which, lets be honest, homeschooling is the most class-obsessed form of education. It essentially says, that in order to get what you deem a "better" education, a parent must be educated, and must have the time to teach their children on their own, and not have to work to support them. That's simple rubbish, and as an institution, the fact that that can get any support is a little disturbing.
Of course, I am not a big fan of the American education system as a whole (especially the university system, which actually dumped quite a few students, most from New England, in my university to get "lower" fees, which happen to be about twice as much as I pay, without the subsidies that I get either) but to fix that problem by introducing, or giving credit to a class-obsessed, rather idiotic alternative is beyond me. So far I have been nice, and tried to give both sides a fair case, but ultimately, your reluctance to a)discuss anything outside of this topic, and b) admit flaws in the system seem to me that for one preaching the open mindedness of a system, one seems to be absorbed quite into it.
But then again, homeschooling seems a very typical sort of American approach - rather than demand better from a government that fails, and an education system that has problems, as should be, alternatives and blame games are played - quite simply, homeschooling is the Ron Paul answer to the problem - rather than demand what is deserved, simply stop the system all together, and let everyone fend for themselves. There is a reason why people turn to homeschooling, and it isn't that parents are better, but that the system is flawed, and it is easier to fix the system for oneself assuming you are able to afford it by homeschooling than to go for any real significant change, and hey, on the way, you may even be able to cut a few % points off the education fund for some other unlucky, albeit poorer sucker's child.
I mean no direct personal attacks Dave, but quite simply, your die hard faith makes arguing at all tedious, as you are quick to defend, yet seem unable to humor anyone else's perspectives for very long. In order to understand, one must ultimately entertain the perspective of the other side, as a means of finding meaning, and with such a one directional exchange, I perhaps may have come off a bit too aggressive, at which, I meant nothing against you personally.







