The CBS Web site
promoted the story this way:
Home schooling is becoming an
educational option for more and more families across the
country, but is it also keeping abused and neglected
children away from the eyes of authorities? Our Vince
Gonzales will take a look in tonight's Eye on America,
and he'll bring us the story of a household in North
Carolina where kids hidden from public sight met a tragic
end.
Leading up to, and during the course of,
the CBS Evening News, CBS touted their story this way: “The
Trouble with Homeschooling,” “Child Abuse Undetected,” and “Eye
on America investigates a dark side of homeschooling.”
Dan Rather
Dan Rather opened the October 13, CBS
Evening News report on homeschooling with these remarks:
An estimated 2 percent of children in
this country get their schooling at home. You’ve heard the
success stories and there are many. This homeschooled child
won a big spelling bee; that child, a geography bee; and
most parents involved in homeschooling have their children’s
best interests at heart. But in an Eye on America
investigation, CBS’s Vince Gonzales uncovered a dark side to
this largely unregulated system of education.
The Dark Side of
Homeschooling?
Just what is this “dark side” that CBS
uncovered? Hal Young, president of North Carolinians for Home
Education (NCHE), was interviewed by a CBS correspondent about
two weeks ago and said this:
Originally, they (CBS) planned to use
a sensational North Carolina case from 2001 to illustrate
their thesis: families with abusive or criminal tendencies
may go undetected if they are homeschooling; i.e., not under
the daily scrutiny of the public school system. However,
the producer told me on Friday that the report had been
expanded to include cases from other states.
In the North Carolina case, about two
years ago a teenager killed his brother and sister, then
himself; the news media immediately reported this as a
homeschooling family. As the case developed, it was reported
that the family had relocated from Arizona, where they had a
conviction on child abuse charges in the early 1990s. In the
several years before the tragedy, they had been
homeschooling for a time, but dropped out of compliance with
the law and were presumed truant from that point.
Social services had contacted them on
numerous occasions due to complaints from neighbors
(unsanitary living conditions) and had threatened to remove
the three children from the family. There were no parents in
the home at the time of the deaths; all three victims were
teenagers.
After the deaths, the parents were
tried on various charges, but the only conviction was a
misdemeanor for improper storage of firearms; charges of
neglect or abuse were dismissed.
What a tragic story! In
a tragedy like this, everyone looks to assign blame – and
there is plenty of blame to go around. But were these tragic
deaths caused by homeschooling as Gonzales implies in
his coverage?
During the course of the
report, Gonzales referred to this family, the Warrens, as a
homeschooling family, even though the family had not been in
compliance with the homeschool law for years. Gonzales had
obviously made up his mind that this tragedy was indeed caused
by homeschooling.
At one point during the CBS story, Vince
Gonzales asks Marcia Herman-Giddens, a member of the state
task force that reviewed the Warren case, this question: “The
laws in North Carolina, do they protect children who are being
homeschooled?”
Ms. Herman-Giddens replied, “I don’t
think they protect children because there is virtually no
oversight.”
The task force (on which Herman-Giddens
served) concluded this: homeschool laws "allow persons who
maltreat children to maintain social isolation in order for
the abuse and neglect to remain undetected."
Bad Logic
1. The Warren family had discontinued
compliance with the North Carolina homeschool law and were
presumed truant from that point. They were law-breakers, not
homeschoolers. To blame this tragedy on homeschooling would be
like blaming the public schools for every crime committed by
students who had ever attended a public school. The premise is
absurd. Besides, we have laws on the books to deal with
truancy – whether children are truant from public schools,
private schools, or homeschools.
2. The CBS Web site teaser promises that
Vince Gonzales will “bring us the story of a household in
North Carolina where kids hidden from public sight met a
tragic end. “ Yet the Warren children were obviously not kept
out of public sight. The problems in the Warren home had been
noticed repeatedly by neighbors who had turned them in to
social services. The problems had been very public. Social
services, according to Hal Young of NCHE, had even threatened
to remove the Warren children from their home.
Bad Conclusions
Bad logic leads to bad
conclusions. According to Dan Rather, the goal of the story is
to increase the regulations governing homeschooling. Remember
his lead-in for the story? “CBS’s Vince Gonzales uncovered a
dark side to this largely unregulated system of education.”
But would increased homeschool
regulations have prevented the Warren family tragedy?
No. We have already established that
Nissa and Kent Warren were criminals. They had broken the law
in Arizona and in North Carolina. They were not currently
homeschooling, so tightening up homeschooling laws would have
had no bearing on them whatsoever.
The Supreme Court Has Spoken
The CBS story’s basic premise is that
all homeschool families must be more heavily regulated because
two (non-homeschooling) parents engaged in egregious activity.
Certainly, no sane, caring person could ever condone child
abuse. This story is a tragedy and must be viewed as such.
But the United States Supreme Court, in
Parham v. J.R. (442 U.S. 584) has already spoken on
such issues, and the High Court did not decide in favor of
Rather’s logic.
The law’s concept of the family rests
on a presumption that parents possess what a child lacks in
maturity, experience, and capacity for judgment required for
making life’s difficult decisions. More importantly,
historically it has been recognized that natural bonds of
affection lead parents to act in the best interests of their
children.
As with so many other legal
presumptions, experience and reality may rebut what the law
accepts as a starting point; the incidence of child neglect
and abuse cases attests to this. That some parents “may at
times be acting against the interests of their
children”…creates a basis for caution, but is hardly a
reason to discard wholesale those pages of human experience
that teach that parents generally do act in the child’s best
interest…
The statist notion that governmental
power should supersede parental authority in all cases
because some parents abuse and neglect children is repugnant
to American tradition.
The Gruesome Sequel
On October 14, we can expect more bad
logic and bad conclusions from the CBS evening news. At the
end of the October 13 Eye on America segment, Vince
Gonzales promises more of the same: “Tomorrow, how children
nationwide have been put in danger, even killed, while
homeschooling.”
Our Response
We need to register our complaints and
dissatisfaction with the appropriate personnel at CBS News.
Please visit www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/feedback/fb_news_form.shtml.
When selecting the proper program, choose "CBS Evening News."
You can also call the CBS comment line
at (212) 975-3247, or write to CBS at:
CBS Evening News with Dan Rather
524 West 57th St.
New York, NY 10019
Zan Tyler is the
Home School Resource and Media Consultant for Broadman and
Holman Publishers and Homeschool Editor for lifeway.com. She
and her husband Joe have three children and have been home
schooling since 1984. |