
What can public schools learn from the homeschool movement? According to research, homeschoolers “typically score 15 to 30 percentile points above public school students on standardized academic achievement tests“(Ray, 2015). At first glance, class size is the obvious
difference between these two groups. No doubt it is far easier to respond to
student needs when the teacher student ratios are 1 to 3 versus 1 to 30.
Other
advantages of a homeschool include, personalized curriculum, modified school
start and finish times, and enrichment activities designed for the unique needs
of student/children.
A
homeschool is a personal rather than an institutional environment. Schools are
challenged to create a setting that is responsive, caring, and differentiated
to meet student educational, social, and emotional needs. Today,
the challenge for policy makers, investors, and educators is to redesign the public
school setting to better meet these essential skills. Twenty- first century students need more flexibility and control over their learning path,
the structure of their day, and the way in which they choose to learn.
The
school itself will need to support these attributes, with an emphasis on
comfort, curricular options, and opportunities to play. Schools need to invite students to the table,
like customers or employees at high-end, technology-infused hubs, like Google and
Amazon. Only then, will schools begin to
match the dynamic nature of the 21st century workplace, where
information, technology, and collaboration are necessary tools to solve
authentic problems and create innovative solutions in a changing economy.
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