School vs Homeschool: Which Student Does Better? - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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What to do?
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You don’t have the cash to send your child to private school, where most kids seem to
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do very well in terms of academic performance, and benefit from the sometimes-lucrative relationships
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made there.
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Then again, the local public school in your neighborhood doesn't feel up to snuff; the
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class sizes are too big, and it doesn’t have a great reputation.
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So, who’s to say your child won’t benefit from your own knowledge, that you secretly
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consider to be superior to the average teacher’s.
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But you worry: not giving your child the opportunity to socialize with other kids might take away
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an important part of growing up?
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Is homeschool worth it?
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That’s what we’ll find out, in this episode of the Infographics Show, Traditional School
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vs Homeschool.
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First of all, let’s take a look at some statistics.
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According to the National Home Education Research Institute, and indeed any source you look
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at on the subject, homeschooling – at least in the USA – is becoming more and more popular.
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In the USA alone, there were 2.3 million home-educated students in 2015, which was up from 2 million
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in 2010.
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NHERI tells us the increase over the last several years has been anywhere from 2 to
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8 percent per year.
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This increase isn’t just happening in the U.S., but also in the UK, Australia, Canada,
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France, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Russia, and Kenya.
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Indeed, we checked out a Kenyan newspaper article on the benefits of homeschooling.
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It was very positive about taking this educational route.
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One professor in Kenya was quoted as saying, “Home-schooling focuses on learning and
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mastering concepts, not scoring good grades.”
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One mother who was homeschooling her kid said that the system, “limits ability and potential
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because it is geared towards passing exams.”
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Many homeschool advocates will insist that traditional schooling doesn’t always roundly
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educate, but rather teaches students only to do well on tests.
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Are we teaching kids to become cogs in machines?
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To be good workers, but lacking in curiosity and critical acumen?
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This is a far cry from how famed American philosopher John Dewey saw the best kind of
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education, which he believed was not just remembering things, but reflecting on them.
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He once said, “Give the pupils something to do, not something to learn; and the doing
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is of such a nature as to demand thinking; learning naturally results.”
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In the UK, it’s well-known that there is a teacher hiring crisis.
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Teachers are leaving in droves, and according to The Guardian in 2017, around half of teachers
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are thinking about leaving.
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This is mostly due to an intense workload based on constant tracking of students, never-ending
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tests, and all the extra work that is not really about what happens in the classroom,
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but centered around passing exams.
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Teachers themselves are said to be suffering from fatigue and mental illness, while it
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was widely reported in 2018 that UK students were suffering from anxiety and depression
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due to recent exams.
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So, with all that workload and anxiety, are traditionally schooled students any more educated
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than homeschooled students?
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We looked at SAT results for kids in 2014.
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Take a look at the following numbers:
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Critical Reading Score Traditional School: 492 Homeschool: 535
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Mathematics Score Traditional School: 501 Homeschool: 580
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Writing Score Traditional School: 478 Homeschool: 542
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Home schooled students scored better in all 3 categories.
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NHERI tells us, “The home-educated typically score 15 to 30 percentile points above public-school
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students on standardized academic achievement tests.”
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It added, “A 2015 study found Black homeschool students to be scoring 23 to 42 percentile
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points above Black public-school students.”
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Often, homeschooled students are in the 80th percentile, while public school kids are in
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the 50th percentile.
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Just about any resource you read will cite statistics telling you homeschooled kids do
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very well.
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You’ll hear things like: “Stanford University accepted 26% of the 35 homeschoolers who applied--nearly
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double its overall acceptance rate.”
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Such quotes of course aren't representative; with such a small testing group, there is
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a high standard deviation which means it isn't reliable, but it is, however, interesting.
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Why are they doing so well?
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The main reason is, all the attention is on one child, or at most, a few children.
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But the parent can focus on that child’s weaknesses.
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If the parent knows what he/she is doing, the kid will more easily get through difficulties
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they face.
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Education becomes made to order.
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There are no class clowns and exterior attractions getting in the way of study.
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The child can spend every day totally focused on the subjects at hand.
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Parents can also inculcate, and ensure the importance of self-study, reading books, and
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being curious.
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It’s not as if the child has many escape routes or can proffer those ‘dog ate my
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homework’ excuses.
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Another thing other than creating your own course based on your child’s needs is knowing
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how best your child learns.
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There are lots of pedagogical approaches and we all respond differently to them.
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A teacher in high school has one approach for the entire class, which of course is not
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his or her fault.
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But that approach might not work for your kid.
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There are other benefits, too.
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Taxpayers in the U.S. pay around $12,000 per year for every pupil that goes through public
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school (though the cost differs dramatically per state).
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You save the people money by home-schooling.
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The average cost of homeschooling is said to be somewhere between $500-$2000 for books
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and materials.
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And if you were thinking about private school – the costs can be oppressive – think
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of all the money you could save!
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What else do the people say that promote homeschooling?
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They tell us the parent-child bond will grow stronger.
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On top of that, some schools are not full of little angels,as we know.
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At home, it’s unlikely your child will be skipping classes to smoke weed behind the
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basketball courts.
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It’s unlikely they’ll face bullying or get into fights, within the confines of their
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own home.
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They won’t experience racism or prejudice; they won’t have to undergo the stresses
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of being popular, all those childish hierarchies that can be a minefield for young folks.
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They likely won’t get a bullet in the back delivered from a quiet kid whose hobby was
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cutting the wings off trapped birds.
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They won’t spend a year depressed because they got dumped by a girl in chemistry class,
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and they certainly won’t be sneaking to the bathroom to see if their pregnancy test
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is positive.
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Well, they could still get pregnant of course, but perhaps it’s less likely if they are
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not surrounded by the opposite sex day after day in school.
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The questions is: Is keeping your child away from these apparent dangers in itself a possible
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danger to the development of said child?
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After all, the workplace, the rat race, the dating game, they can all be minefields, too.
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Does a child need school in order to learn how to navigate tricky social and workplace
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situations?
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It is the loss of social interaction where most people say homeschool finds its negative.
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Not to mention, your child might resent the hell out of you for taking him or her away
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from their friends, from pulling them from the football team, the after school photography
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group, high school prom, and perhaps even a first kiss?
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Will the parent-child bond grow and flourish, or will being next to each other all day foment
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some feelings of animosity?
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Have you ever tried being with someone non-stop?
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Arguments often happen, only because of the lack of space.
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We might also ask if the parent is cut out to be a teacher.
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One not only requires knowledge, but also patience.
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If there is a lack of patience, unlike at school, where the teacher is gone when the
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bell rings, the child is stuck with the target of their ire.
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Then again, if you’re a super cool parent and you’re fit for the job, you might realize
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when things are getting tough and just say ‘school is over for the day; go out and
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enjoy yourself!’
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Not something that happens in a traditional school setting.
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Home schooling offers flexibility.
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There is of course the negative of homeschooling costing money in other ways.
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You must have a fair bit of cash to do it, as it means one parent can no longer work
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outside the home.
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You’ll need some relative comfort to take this on.
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If you have that, then you also have to be the kind of parent who fully understands subjects
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such as physics, chemistry, calculus, the industrial revolution, and at the same time
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be able to decipher some great works of literature or know how to write a compelling short story.
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Not all math gurus are creatives, and vice versa.
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Can you even teach your kid to swing a baseball bat?
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Do you even have time to visit a field and help your child work out?
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Do you understand the rules of football and tennis?
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can you teach chess strategies, or do you know how search engine optimization works?
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Your kids might not study some of these things, but during the socialization process in school,
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much can learned from other kids.
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Basically, you must be damn talented if you want to homeschool kids, especially when they
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get older.
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But the statistics don’t lie, and homeschooled kids do tend to do better than traditionally
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schooled kids.
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So, what do you think?
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Is homeschool a better way to educate children?
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Or are homeschooled kids destined to be socially awkward freaks?
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Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
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Also, be sure to check out our other video called Private School vs Public School - which
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is better?!
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Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe.
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See you next time!