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Topic: Weeklong blitz against homeschooling (Read 4559 times)
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NuclearDruid
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Akron Beacon-Journal has two reporters running a weeklong series against homeschooling. (Requires registration to view. I use joecool@bugmenot.com PWD: noinfo4u) Here are two articles from today. Some fringe groups use home-schoolinghttp://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/news/local/10195272.htmLike the general population, home schooling has its fringe groups.
The following are groups that have been in the news for beliefs that are out of the mainstream and in which home-schooling is a preferred form of education:
National groups
Aryan Nations: A white supremacist movement with a major enclave in northern Idaho, western Washington and western Montana, plus competing leadership in Potter County, Pa.; Dayton, Ohio; and Louisiana, according to news stories.
Buford Oneal Furrow Jr. spent time in the Washington home of Aryan Nations leaders Debbie and the late Bob Matthews before heading to Southern California in 1999, where he shot women and children at a Southern California Jewish community center. The Matthewses home-schooled their adopted son, who they insisted must have blond hair and blue eyes. Confederate flags fly at their Washington ranch.
Christian Identity: A white supremacist movement with adherents across the country. Gordon Winrod, a Christian Identity pastor, was convicted in 2002 of abducting six of his eight grandchildren and keeping them at his 400-acre ranch in Missouri for several years, where his home schooling of them included anti-Jewish beliefs.
Twelve Tribes: A fundamentalist group with settlements in at least five states and several foreign countries. It is a separatist church awaiting the Second Coming of Jesus and God's vengeance on non-followers. Its goal is to keep children pure for the arrival of Christ. Members often operate businesses to support themselves. In Plymouth, Mass., they have a health-food and furniture store. Corporal punishment and child-labor practices have resulted in investigations and sometimes charges.
World Church of the Creator: A white supremacist organization based in East Peoria, Ill., with Western leadership in the Seattle and Portland, Ore., areas. A branch organization provides home-school support to white families. In 1999, Matt and Tyler Williams, home-schooled World Church brothers, killed two homosexual men in Redding, Calif., and set fire to synagogues in the Sacramento area. In the same year, Ben Smith, another adherent, went on a shooting spree of Jews, blacks and Asians across the Midwest, killing two.
Localized groups
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: This is a century-old polygamous splinter group of the Mormon Church with an estimated 10,000 to 12,000 members. Until recently, most members were in Colorado City, Ariz., and neighboring Hildale, Utah. As Arizona and Utah authorities attempt to regulate polygamous arrangements, the church has taken over a 1,691-acre ranch in desolate west Texas. All children are home-schooled. Church elders arrange young girls' marriages, which sometimes push the limits of statutory rape laws.
House of Prayer Church: A fundamentalist church in a poor area of Atlanta that practices severe punishment of children. The pastor, Arthur Allen Jr., is serving time for child abuse after his congregation used belts and whips on children in church services. In 2001, public school teachers recognized and reported abuse of children from the church. Protective services workers raided the church and took 49 children into custody, after which the church members withdrew their children from public schools to be home-schooled.
I can't believe they left out the FSP. Racists can use home schools to train youthshttp://www.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/10195226.htmWhite extremists see way to withdraw from society to avoid exposing students to other races, religions
By Doug Oplinger and Dennis J. Willard
Beacon Journal staff writers
For all she knows, it may be an isolated incident, but a guide at an Ohio state park is still troubled by an interaction with a home-schooling family.
One day, as an African-American child entered a park classroom, a home-schooled child said, `` `I don't want no n------ sitting next to me,' '' the guide recounted. ``That was the worst,'' she said.
She is cautious and doesn't want her name used because home schoolers frequently visit the park.
``There are some very bright individuals. You can see that their parents are able to teach them more on an individual basis. It always falls back on what the parents know,'' the guide said. ``If the parents are well-educated, it's great.''
Home schooling has a strain of racism running through it that may reflect similar ideas held by others in the broader society. There are no studies or numbers to put racism and home schooling in perspective, but home-schooling laws that ensure that parents have the freedom to make socialization choices for their children also allow some families to completely withdraw from society.
In Texas, a librarian told the Beacon Journal that some home-schooling parents objected to the book selection on the shelves. They lobbied the library to bring back older editions -- books that depicted the United States in the 1950s, prior to the landmark 1964 civil rights legislation.
That idea is espoused on a number of racist Internet sites, where people who have a common hatred of minorities -- especially of African-Americans and Jews -- converse.
Stormfront, a white supremacist organization, has a Web site on ``education and home schooling.'' The overriding theme is to home-school to avoid exposure to other cultures.
Among the discussions is one in which a member suggests stealing and destroying books from the public library -- a popular resource for home schoolers -- to eliminate material that portrays the United States as anything other than a white, Protestant culture.
Another discussion suggests that parents find vintage ``Dick and Jane'' elementary reading books from the 1950s because they have only white characters.
Black home schooler
Paula Penn-Nabrit, who wrote Morning by Morning: How We Home-Schooled OurAfrican-American Sons to the Ivy League, said racism among white home schoolers is the principle reason that black home-schooling groups have organized.
She and her family have attended home-schooling conventions and felt out of place because of the paucity of blacks, she said.
``There are people who are calling themselves fundamentalist Christians -- and maybe they think they are -- but they are really what I would call `white Christians,' and being white is a much bigger deal than being a Christian,'' Penn-Nabrit said. ``They use this religious banner as a cloak for a lot of racist ideologies.''
Penn-Nabrit studied the various factions among home schoolers and wrote her first book on the subject, As For Me and My House.
She called survivalists -- people who remove themselves from society and reject any government intervention or oversight -- the ``scariest sector.''
Penn-Nabrit is the rare home-schooling parent who believes that government should be more involved in monitoring families.
``A lot of this behavior and a lot of this ideology being espoused has nothing to do with Jesus Christ. These people never have anyone tell them, `You are grieving the Holy Spirit because everything you are doing and articulating is antithetical to the message of Christ.' They already know that because they are really just using this as a ruse to something else,'' Penn-Nabrit said.
Presence acknowledged
Scott Somerville, an attorney for the Home School Legal Defense Association, acknowledged that there are racists in the home-schooling community.
``They are not welcome here, and they know it,'' he said. ``We're trying to build a strong, unified, intelligent and effective home-school movement so that the crazies feel very much marginalized.''
He acknowledged that fringe elements of society -- such as unreconstructed Confederates and militia members -- home-school, but he said they are a small percentage of the overall movement.
``That's the challenge of trying to advance a vision of liberty where parents have the freedom to do what's good for their children,'' Somerville said.
Racist and extremist home schoolers are almost invisible until an event thrusts them into the public's consciousness.
The infamous Kehoe brothers, Chevie and Cheyne, were home-schooled white separatists who fled their native Washington state to lead police on a nationwide manhunt that ended after five murders, two robberies, a kidnapping, two police shootouts and the bombing of the Spokane City Hall.
The Kehoes' mission was to destabilize government and form an all-white army. They were caught on videotape when a State Highway Patrol officer in Ohio approached a van they were driving and became involved in an exchange of gunfire.
In 1994, Gordon Winrod, an avowed anti-Semite and racist, kidnapped his eight grandchildren from their home in North Dakota and took them to a remote area in Missouri for six years and home-schooled them, sometimes hiding them in caves. When the children were found in 2000 -- two had escaped and helped authorities locate Winrod -- they were hiding in a bunker in a basement.
In focus groups the Beacon Journal conducted, home-schooling parents said extremists are an insignificant part of their group, no larger than the share found in the rest of society.
Focus group members who don't home-school were wary of parents removing themselves from society because of extremist or racist views.
A public educator said many home schoolers are reclusive and want to control their children's ideas. ``I think those are the ones that fall under the radar,'' the educator said.
ND
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"Responsibility is a unique concept. It can only reside and inhere in a single individual. You may share it with others, but your portion is not diminished. You may delegate it, but it is still with you. You may disclaim it, but you cannot divest yourself of it." - Admiral Hyman Rickover
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jeanius
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Every year this happens. Every year there crops up the anti-homeschooling articles. They appear like clockwork. Last year I think it was child abuse. Child abuse occurs and can't be found out because the kids are at home. So, of course, "homeschooling needs to be more closely monitored, we need to add home visits, yadda, yadda, yadda."
Same flaw this time with the racist issue. There are racist families in schools too. One homeschooling family does not the homeschooling community make. Geez, one abusive school teacher must mean all school teachers are bad. Amazing amount of one way logic in these reports.
Jean
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NuclearDruid
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Jeanius, I think that what's different this year is that it is a week-long series instead of a one time article. Here's todays column: Home schoolers may be no safer in their homes than other childrenhttp://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/2004/11/17/news/local/10204361.htmToday their focusing on how some homeschoolers are murdering criminal deviants. Many school officials and social workers believe that a growing number of parents are operating under the guise of home schooling although they have no interest in educating their children, may have psychological problems, or, worse, are a threat to their children.[/ Arthur Blumstein, a crime specialist at Carnegie Mellon University, said that home schoolers are a small group, thus making statistical examination difficult.
He said that, if numbers indeed show that home-schooled children may be at greater risk in their homes, then greater surveillance could be warranted once a family is under suspicion of abuse or neglect.
``I think a strong argument can be made that child-protection services people ought to give it more attention because there are not other means of surveilling what's going on with those kids. Other kids get surveilled in school and other external activities.''
Blumstein, who reviewed the Beacon Journal's data, also suggested that some parents may have character issues that make them a threat to their children. He said it sounded asif the movement may include a ``set of weird families who choose to do home schooling who do pose higher risks.'' ``Unfortunately, some of my worst cases were home-schooled children,'' said an Akron-area protective services worker in a focus group. There are ``significant sex abuse issues going on, too. That makes it dark for me.''
Social workers hear it from both sides. They're blamed for missing warning signs, but they often are accused of being too aggressive in pursuing allegations of abuse.
This has created an adversarial relationship with home-schooling parents and tests America's delicate balance between parents' constitutional rights and the idea that society has a role in protecting all children.
Home schoolers have proved in court that social workers sometimes violate Fourth Amendment rights against illegal searches. The Home School Legal Defense Association calls it the ``battle for the front door.'' ND
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"Responsibility is a unique concept. It can only reside and inhere in a single individual. You may share it with others, but your portion is not diminished. You may delegate it, but it is still with you. You may disclaim it, but you cannot divest yourself of it." - Admiral Hyman Rickover
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Pat McCotter
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If you look at their home page there are links to the entire series as well as a forum on the subject. It is about halfway down. http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/
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Visualize Whirled Peas
Give Pizza Chance
I think it's wrong that only one company makes the game Monopoly. - Steven Wright
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kuhllax24
Guest
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I'm not trying to flame here, but how is it not surprising that an Ohio newspaper is reporting a weeklong news series against homeschooling? Especially when they're using straw men like "homeschooled kids are being taught racism" and "homeschooled children could be murderers at home". I recall comments from a number of people on this website who bemoan the state of Ohio and its attack against liberty, reason and the economy; this thread only bolsters their view in my mind.
On another note, I received a tri-fold the other day for a Homeschooling Conference in Washington D.C. John T. Gatto and others were the speakers there. It looked great, but unfortunately I can't go. Any Porcs here thinking of attending the conference? I believe it's happening in early December, but my memory has failed me many times before.
Take care,
Dan
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jeanius
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SepCon is happening this weekend in D.C. and Gatto is one speaker. Separation of School and State is a great venue for us and we are attending. Though I'm homeschooling and education liaison I couldn't attend this year but two of our local folk are attending and one is hosting a roundtable. I faxed a letter to Gatto along with our homeschooling/education trifold last week. I hope Gatto drops by!  I *really* wish I could be there!  Jean
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jeanius
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I'll go ahead and review the whole series online. I'm curious if there is any homeschooling legislation or enforcement changes on the horizon. I'll also look for a reply option. Letters to the editor (LTEs) and responses can't hurt and if makes a case for more liberty through FSP all the better! If anyone else feels so inclined chime in as well.  Jean
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Simon Jester
First 1000
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Peas: Don't hate them because they're round
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I can't wait until they do their weeklong series on public-schooling and how it teaches kids to be evil and reclusive. You know, that way they can still claim to be "unbiased." 
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It matters not how strait the gate, How charged with punishments the scroll, I am the master of my fate: I am the captain of my soul.
William Ernest Henley
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sotetf
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interesting articles. I know about the House of Prayer situation as I am in the Atlanta area. The government had no business interfering in those peoples lives.  I lived in Ohio, too when I was in graduate school. To me, Ohio seems as socialist as Georgia. =) I want to homeschool my daughter, shes a toddler. I hope I can accomplish this. I am concerned about the general decline in public schools.
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