• blackstampede@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Not conservative, but I was homeschooled until I went to university. A few scattered thoughts on the topic that I can elaborate on if anyone is interested:

    • I was very badly socialized and very isolated growing up, so much so that I failed my first semester entirely and had to come back years later to get a degree. This isn’t representative, from what I understand.
    • I did score highly on many subjects (reading and algebra, mainly) but on others I was entirely ignorant (history, evolution or anything that contradicted the bible)
    • I was able to catch up on the topics that I was ignorant of in relatively short order. I attribute this partially to my homeschooling, because the self-directed nature of my education fit very well with how you are expected to learn in university. Partially, I think it’s because public schools act as extended daycare to some degree and teach the same subjects over and over.
    • I generally support homeschooling. It can be done well and seems to lead to a solid education with much less time investment than public schooling.
    • My only reservation is that (in my experience) many families use it as a way to avoid teaching their children important things about the world that conflict with their ideology.
    • I imagine that if I had gone into another profession, my ignorance of biology or history would have been a larger problem.
      • blackstampede@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Lol I guess I should have clarified. Most homeschoolers can still function at a university- not well, but they can. I stopped talking to everyone, locked myself in my dorm, and only came out in the middle of the night. Didn’t do tests or assignments, and finally called my family to come get me just before finals. The whole semester was a zero.

    • PizzaMan@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      My only reservation is that (in my experience) many families use it as a way to avoid teaching their children important things about the world that conflict with their ideology.

      Given that we are at risk of extinction from climate change, and teaching the existence of climate change is ideologically opposed by many conservatives, it should be a bit more than just a reservation. Children need to know that the Earth is fucked right now and we need to take steps to unfuck it.

      • blackstampede@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I agree that kids should know about climate change, but I’m wary of enforced education. I live in an area where, if a particular viewpoint were going to be enforced, it would almost certainly be religious, conservative, and historically revisionist. I’m not sure where that balance should be struck.

        • PizzaMan@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I’m not stating that a view point should be enforced. I’m stating that the facts need to be taught. And the fact is, climate change is a giant fucking risk to the existence of humanity.

          Maybe you could say the “and we ought to fix it” part is a view point. But by that low of a bar “people ought to eat food” is a viewpoint.