When you read about the state of California's latest assaults
against its homeschoolers, don't just dismiss it as another
left-coast phenomenon that doesn't affect you. This is bigger than
California and involves more than education.
The California Department of Education is on the warpath against
those parents who have had the audacity to escape its clutches. How
dare they presume that they know what is best for their children (or
care more about them) than the omniscient educators?
In a July 16 memo, Deputy Superintendent Joanne Mendoza decreed
that homeschooling is "not an authorized exemption from
mandatory public school attendance." Without the proper
credentials, according to the missive, parents will no longer be
allowed to homeschool their children and will be considered truant
by local school districts.
The proper credentials? Think about this. They want parents, who
are already doing a fantastic job educating their children, to
descend to their level of incompetence by acquiring
"professional teaching credentials." (No insult is
intended here, and there are many exceptions to this, but recent
studies have shown an alarming degree of ignorance among public
teachers in many of the subjects they are assigned to teach.)
Nicole Winger, a state education department spokeswoman, insists
that Mendoza's memo represents no change in policy. "All
parents," she says, "are welcome to supplement their
children's education with home instruction, but not substitute the
education with uncredentialed home instruction."
That's big of you, Ms. Winger. Thank you for permitting parents
to help their children with their homework and perhaps even teach
them things independent of the school's vaunted curriculum.
This episode is a chilling reminder of the arrogance of certain
elitists who apparently believe they should be able, with the full
power of the state, to impose their will on families with respect to
education.
Why can't the bureaucrats just leave these parents alone? Is it
their dedication to the children's best interests? Please! If that
were the case, wouldn't they be elated about the remarkable academic
achievement record of homeschoolers? No, we should probably look
elsewhere for our answers.
One major thing obviously driving the educrats is money.
Homeschool advocates say the state's education department has a $23
billion deficit. According to CPI News, these school districts
receive funds based on the number of students attending public
school – roughly $4,500 per student a year. It's pretty simple
math, even for the New-New Math public educrats: the more
homeschoolers, the less money for them.
But I'm convinced this is about more than money. We should also
recognize that the struggle between homeschoolers and their statist
opponents is grounded as much on philosophical differences as the
issue of educational quality.
The establishment wants to retain control over what goes into
children's heads. In far too many cases, it teaches whole-language
reading instead of phonics, multiculturalism – which often means
the evils of Western Civilization, political correctness,
"diversity" and "tolerance," weird math and a
distorted, anti-American view of American history. Its byword should
be "getting away from the basics." The
"enlightened" educators of California, for example, have
no problem offering courses in the wonders of Islam, while
strenuously blocking any utterance about Christianity.
But this struggle against homeschooling isn't unique to
California – it is happening to greater or lesser degrees
throughout the United States and will increase in direct proportion
to the inevitable success of homeschooling. And while it may not
seem directly to affect those who don't have school-age children or
grandchildren, it should concern every American. I'm not just
talking about the broad-based detriment to our society that will
result from inferior education. It's more than that.
The nature and quality of our education will have a great bearing
on whether we remain free and prosperous.
How can America remain free when its public education
establishment is largely committed to teaching students that the
very values and systems that have led to this country's unparalleled
tradition of freedom and prosperity are evil, exploitive and
oppressive?
No matter how much money we throw at public education, it will
not improve significantly until educators get away from psychobabble
and indoctrination, and return to the basics. But that will not
happen so long as the establishment is allowed to retain its
unaccountable monopoly.
The establishment knows this, which is why it is desperately
seeking to limit competition on all fronts, including school choice
and homeschooling. In the meantime, it will continue to spread
disinformation about the alternatives and do everything it can to
obstruct their development.