Following is an email I received from Christian Education Awareness Network (CEANet), regarding K12 virtual public schools and an online curriculum available to homeschoolers. From what I can figure out, this appears to be similar to BJU's HomeSat or Abeka's dvd program, where full time online enrollment is an option, like a private school, or homeschoolers may enroll in certain classes only, such as Latin, math, or Spanish, etc.
This second option is my reason for sharing this, in case this is helpful to some homeschool families, and can be a resource to accomplish certain high school goals. I am aware that there are many online courses or enrollment options being marketed to homeschoolers, but I had not heard of this particular one before, so thought I would introduce it. For those pursuing a classical approach to homeschooling, there may be some courses offered that can be a resource to you.
I do not know all the details, but thought it was interesting enough to mention, in case you want to research further. This post is not intended as an endorsement or recommendation, but merely FYI ( for your information).
Any comments from what you discover in your own research are welcome.
You may watch a trailer here .
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School
at Home or Homeschooling?
by Dave
Bohon
From The New
American, August 7, 2012
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Over the past several
years an educational phenomenon has been exploding across America. Fed up with
the homogenized, secular indoctrination; embrace of dysfunctional and sexualized
behavior; and tolerance for rebellious and unruly children that largely define
public education in the United States, an increasing number of parents are
pulling their kids out of the local schools and opting instead for a home
education plan.
According to Dr. Brian
Ray of the National Home Education Research
Institute (NHERI), as of 2010 there were, by best estimates, over two
million homeschooled students ages five to 18 in the United States, with the
population of home educated students growing by up to six percent every year.
While the reasons parents choose to teach their kids at home may vary, what is
clear is that homeschooled kids outshine their public-schooled counterparts on
just about every level.
Home-educated students
typically score 15 to 30 points above public-school students on standardized
achievement tests — and they do so regardless of their parents’ level of formal
education. These taught-at-home students also typically score above the average
on the SAT and ACT tests colleges use for admission — which means that most
universities love having them, and in many cases actively recruit them. And
while opponents warn that homeschooled students miss out on crucial
opportunities for socialization provided in a public-school setting, the truth
is that children educated at home typically score above average in tests of
social, emotional, and psychological development.
Dr. Ray told The New
American that increasingly parents throughout the United States are turning
toward home-based education because “they want solid academics for their
children, values and worldview that they choose rather than what the state
chooses, stronger family relationships, and individualized education rather than
a one-size-fits-all system.” He added that many concerned parents are fed up
with the lax behavioral standards prevalent in most public schools.
Over the past 30
years, the traditional homeschool model has earned a reputation for providing
the foundation many parents want for their children. With the help of private,
free-market homeschool curriculums like A Beka, Bob Jones, A.C.E., and Alpha
Omega — all with Christian foundations — tens of thousands of families raised a
generation of Americans with solid academics, along with crucial scriptural
training and the principles of Americanism that are essential to the nation’s
future.
As homeschooling
gained widespread popularity throughout the 1990s, the public-education
establishment found it increasingly difficult to stop the exodus of families
seeking something better for their children. But with the introduction of online
learning in the late 1990s, a core of education “entrepreneurs” suggested that,
using the charter-school concept, public schools might just offer their own
version of homeschooling that would allow students to fulfill all the
requirements set by a district — but instead of going to a classroom they could
use an online curriculum.
One of those
entrepreneurs was former U.S. Education Secretary William Bennett, who in 1999
helped found a company called K12, which has gone on to be a leading player in
what has become known as the “Virtual Academy.” Companies like K12 contract with
school districts to provide curriculum and education consultants, in return
reaping part of the local, state, and federal tax money that the district gets
for each student. The families that sign on to these public-school virtual
academies get “free homeschooling” for their kids — which typically includes
“free” computers and other perks — while the school district retains the
per-student monies it would have lost had those families gone with another
homeschool option. It all sounds like a win-win scenario,
right?
Wrong! Companies like
K12 and Connections Academy have exerted great effort to convince the public
that they are providing a quality homeschool option through public schools.
But homeschool experts
point out that these public-school virtual academies have little in common with
traditional homeschooling. Dr. Ray noted that while traditional homeschooling
has always been privately funded and privately pursued, public-school virtual
academies are tax-funded, state-run, and state-controlled. Ray emphasized that
in the virtual academy model, “the state chooses and controls the curriculum —
that which is used to teach, train, and indoctrinate the
student.”
By contrast, he said,
“in home-based education and private schools, parents and private organizations
get to decide what is used to teach, train, and indoctrinate children. The
center of power and control with a virtual academy is the state; in private
education, it is parents, family, and freely-chosen private
associations.”
While K12 boasts that
online public school offers “powerful choices for parents,” and other virtual
academies insist that their curricula give parents and students flexibility, a
majority of those “choices” and flexibility are lost when it comes to one
important element that has always been essential to a majority of homeschool
parents: Christian instruction. Israel Wayne, a noted education expert, author,
and publisher of the Home School Digest, explained that when parents contract
with a state-run virtual academy to teach their kids, they are essentially
surrendering their right to teach biblical concepts to their children in their
homes (or elsewhere) during the scheduled school day.
And why is that?
Students enrolled in a virtual academy are part of a charter school, and “any
school that receives government funds is prohibited by law from allowing what is
considered to be sectarian religious teaching,” Wayne
said.
In addition, since
online students are enrolled in a local school district, and are under the
direction of teachers assigned through the school (parents are merely “learning
coaches”), they are susceptible to whatever social indoctrination the school
deems important for students to embrace — from the prevailing attitudes on
homosexuality, contraception, and abortion, to the science curriculum’s take on
evolution.
Virtually all experts
and leaders in the traditional homeschool community have condemned K12-style
public-school virtual academies as an unworkable option for parents who want a
homeschool experience for their children that they control and
guide.
The Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA),
the leading organization defending the rights of homeschool families, has
strongly cautioned parents against enrolling their children in virtual charter
schools. “Many homeschoolers are seduced by attractive marketing and forget that
virtual charter schools are actually controlled by the public school system,”
said a recent HSLDA article on online charter schools. The organization added
that it “does not represent students enrolled in full-time charter school
programs.”
While
K12/Connections-style virtual academies may be a bad fit for homeschoolers,
there are, nonetheless, some online homeschool curricula that not only provide
solid academics, but which also reinforce the Christian and Americanist values a
majority of homeschool parents say they want for their
kids.
One of the most recent
is FreedomProject Education (FPE), a K-12
online curriculum that combines basic academic subjects with disciplines that
hearken back to the classical tradition of past generations. In fact, the motto
for FPE is “A Classical Education in the Tradition of America’s Founders,” and
its stated mission is to empower students “to understand, enjoy, and preserve
the freedom and moral responsibility embodied in America’s founding
principles.”
FPE founder Alan
Scholl noted that the program offers the basic courses parents would expect in
any quality homeschool curriculum. “But we also offer solid college prep classes
like logic, American Studies, Latin and other foreign languages, and even
Biblical Studies,” he said. “FreedomProject is classical education for the
modern age, the kind of education George Washington and our Founding Fathers
received. And it’s all delivered with a state-of-the-art online learning
system.”
Scholl said that with
many parents in search of a solid curriculum that will prepare their kids for
the future, they need look no further that FPE. “We have taken great care to
design a curriculum that teaches solid academics, along with the fundamentals of
liberty, citizenship, and Americanist-minded independence,” he said. “The
flexible, affordable, and high- quality alternative to government education is
here, for anyone who is seeking a better way to educate their children, or
supplement their own efforts through homeschooling.”
For more information
about FreedomProject Education, visit FPEUSA.org
.
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