IDEAS - Interactive Database for Economic Analysis & Synthesis

May 6, 2009

Internationally Competitive U.S. Education — at Home

Any comparison of U.S. education with school systems in other countries is incomplete if it leaves out American parents’ freedom to homeschool. This family fled Germany, where their homeschooled children had been forcibly removed from their home and taken to a state school. They now live in Tennessee, and are seeking political asylum.

Tennessee has fairly flexible homeschooling laws. Homeschooling families have to report on curriculum and attendance every year to their local superintendent. Missouri’s law is even better — it requires some record keeping, but those records aren’t looked at unless there’s a problem. This leaves parents free to focus on teaching rather than notifying the public schools about their “attendance,” a term that’s meaningless for homeschoolers anyway. (How could homeschoolers be absent? If they walk outside?)

I hope the Romeike family is enjoying the freedom to homeschool in Tennessee. If they ever find Tennessee’s regulations too burdensome, they should consider Missouri.

 

The views expressed by each contributor to this blog are those of that contributor alone, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Show-Me Institute.

Welcome to the official blog of the Show-Me Institute. Here you'll find daily commentary by Show-Me Institute staff and scholars.

Become a fan of the Show-Me Institute on Facebook!

Subscribe to this blog's feed:
RSS 0.92
RSS 1.0 (RDF)
RSS 2.0 (XML)
Atom

Blogroll

Powered by Wordpress