Orthodox
Heritage
Vol. 10,
Issue 07-08
ON
HOMESCHOOLING
By Archpriest
Chad Williams, Rector, St. Alexander Nevsky Orthodox Church, Richmond, ME.
People are
generally called intelligent through a wrong use of this word. The intelligent
are not those who have studied the sayings and writings of the wise men of old,
but those whose sold is intelligent, who can judge what is good and what is
evil; they avoid what is evil and harms the soul and intelligently care for and
practice what is good and profits the soul, greatly thanking God. It is these
alone who should properly be called intelligent. [St. Anthony the Great] t
From the
beginning of our marriage and during courtship, my wife and I discussed our
concerns about the breakdown in marriage and family life. We scrutinized our
own childhood experiences with our parents and brothers and sisters, their
subsequent marriages and our own fears, values and commitments. We were most
concerned that our family be God-centered. We saw as specific threats to our
family a value system that requires maximizing material successes. We also saw
the public schools as a potential threat to our home life—the long hours, the
bus rides, the values clarification, the atheism and the peer groups. We
thought we would like to educate the children at home. This meant, of course,
more time at home for both of us and some material and financial sacrifices. We
have been homeschooling now for nearly thirteen years, since the birth of our
first child.
Now
homeschooling has gained tremendous support nationwide and presents a
substantial threat to the public schools in some areas, causing them to upgrade
their activities and programs and to lend a newly listening ear to parents who
insist on improvements. In our own state, homeschoolers have increased in
number nearly ten-fold in the last ten years. In the Russian Church Abroad,
some of our own hierarchs have stepped out boldly to endorse homeschooling as
not only an alternative to public schools, but as a MUST in order to maintain
an Orthodox perspective on life.
When we had
first come to our parish, many of the older parishioners expressed real concerns
about our children not being in public schools. Now, however, the prevailing
comment is totally in support of homeschooling, and of our keeping the children
out of the public school. We have heard many concerns about homeschooling, and
questioned ourselves thoroughly on these concerns, and discussed some of them
at length. The most frequently repeated concern is about socialization for the
children. The other concern is about our ability to teach advanced subjects to
our children.
At first
glance the concern about socialization seems valid. However, in most homes this
is not a problem.
First of all, we have an active family life and communicate
freely with one another. Secondly, we are in Church and there our children's
friends vary widely in age, experience, and culture, but have a common Orthodox
Christian foundation. Thirdly, the children are in town and in the stores and
libraries and circulate successfully, without the aid of the
"socialization" of a public school. The image of the children in the
Laura Ingalls Wilder series rises to mind frequently, as well as all the
pioneer and missionary children in the world. They tend to do well, even though
they may only see other children who share their own values and culture
infrequently.
The concern
about our ability to educate our children is also valid, but the history of
homeschooling shows the home to often be a healthier learning environment than
the classroom.
Every parent is a natural teacher. However, parents cannot teach
all things. We, personally, certainly cannot do all of it. For reading, we
didn't need to teach our children to read; we only supported their efforts and
they are fine readers. For math it has been the same. For history, biography,
literature and science, the children are avid readers and gobble it up whether
it is "assigned" or is for their own free reading pleasure. Of the
more involved academic skills, we cannot really say from personal experience
since our oldest child just turned twelve this year, but homeschool literature
shows that homeschoolers in general achieve their academic goals using a
variety of resources other than the public school classroom that are available
to the average family. There are the books available in nearly every subject.
We have friends and neighbors in just about every major field of study who can
often lend a hand to eager young learners. Statistics consistently show that
homeschooled children, as a whole, score very highly on SAT exams.
But these
questions and concerns do not address our primary concerns as Orthodox
Christian parents in the education of our children. Our primary concern for our
children is that they learn to love God, to know God, and learn to love their
neighbor as their own selves. This is the foundation of our home, and
everything that is taught in our home despite our many shortcomings and failures.
But something else altogether lies at the foundation of the public education
system. It is not the spirit of God that breathes through the curriculum, but
the spirit of Antichrist. The public school has become the channel for much
subtle (and at times, very overt) and skillful persecution of the Christian
faith. The public school has also become the government tool for social and
moral reform, most of which is distinctly new-age, relativistic and humanistic
in spirit. This is of Antichrist. This spirit is a direct threat to our society
and to our children.
Of course, it
is not only indigenous to the public school; it permeates every corner of
public life. Our children are very vulnerable and impressionable and we have
chosen to not submit them to forty or more hours of exposure at these tender
ages to this anti-christian environment that threatens the very foundation of
the Christian faith, and constantly pits its authority and the opinion of the
"peer group" against our authority and that of the Church.
It would be
very convenient to use the public schools to provide our children with a basic
education. But they seem dedicated to destroying our primary educational goals,
ren¬dering this morally indefensible for us. If, in the process of
homeschooling, our children do not have access to the latest lab equipment,
advanced training in team sports, and op¬portunities to play in orchestras, or
perform on stage, then so be it! These small deprivations are the least of our
worries. If homeschooling means added stress, financial sacrifice and a very,
very full schedule, so be it!
I
n the former
Soviet Union, to even be known as a Chris¬tian was to severely limit the
educational, economic and job opportunities of the individual, and could, at
times, lead to imprisonment, even death. We are exceedingly grateful to God and
our neighbor that we are able to homeschool in a manner that is obedient to
conscience without perse¬cution! We feel called upon to make these small
sacrifices now by recoiling from a system that is so dedicated to its
anti-christian work.
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