Description

Book Synopsis
In this volume, the author offers an exploratory analysis of the history of homeschooling in the United States, current curricular practices, religious and political rationales for homeschooling, a critique of the claims by homeschooling advocates that the practice leads to greater efficiency and effectiveness, and what homeschooling and individualistic-oriented approaches mean for society. Teaching the next generation at home is, with little doubt, the oldest form of educating children. Yet, this simplistic understanding of “homeschooling” does not adequately capture the growth of homeschooling as a practice in the 21st century nor is it a widely accessible form of “school choice” for most families. While many parents keep their children out of formal schooling – public and private – for myriad reasons, what is clear is that homeschooling is the epitome of a conceiving of education as an individualistic good – a commodity – that can, or should, be done outside of a conception of the common good, a reasonable understanding of teaching as a profession, and the elevation of ideological echo chambers of information which can have deleterious impacts on the students who are homeschooled and society, broadly.

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations 1 Introduction 2 An Overview of the Homeschooling Landscape 3 Religious Rationales for Homeschooling 4 Political Rationales for Homeschooling 5 Claims of Effectiveness 6 Claims of Efficiency 7 Other Rationales & Conclusions Index

Homeschooling: A Guidebook of Practices, Claims,

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    A Hardback by T. Jameson Brewer

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      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 28/01/2021
      ISBN13: 9789004395954, 978-9004395954
      ISBN10: 9004395954

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In this volume, the author offers an exploratory analysis of the history of homeschooling in the United States, current curricular practices, religious and political rationales for homeschooling, a critique of the claims by homeschooling advocates that the practice leads to greater efficiency and effectiveness, and what homeschooling and individualistic-oriented approaches mean for society. Teaching the next generation at home is, with little doubt, the oldest form of educating children. Yet, this simplistic understanding of “homeschooling” does not adequately capture the growth of homeschooling as a practice in the 21st century nor is it a widely accessible form of “school choice” for most families. While many parents keep their children out of formal schooling – public and private – for myriad reasons, what is clear is that homeschooling is the epitome of a conceiving of education as an individualistic good – a commodity – that can, or should, be done outside of a conception of the common good, a reasonable understanding of teaching as a profession, and the elevation of ideological echo chambers of information which can have deleterious impacts on the students who are homeschooled and society, broadly.

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations 1 Introduction 2 An Overview of the Homeschooling Landscape 3 Religious Rationales for Homeschooling 4 Political Rationales for Homeschooling 5 Claims of Effectiveness 6 Claims of Efficiency 7 Other Rationales & Conclusions Index

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