Again, you are being overly sensitive. You admit there is a small group doing their children a disservice. I did not say all.
Did someone say that only 28 states have any requirements for home schooling? I know my state wasn't on the list.
I also did not say it should not be allowed. I am asking, for my own education, what provisions, if any, are made for home schooled children to ensure they receive the appropriate education and to protect them from their well meaning parents, who think that teaching a girl to sew is more important than math. That's all.
Like I said, some are certainly very sensitive about this subject.
I'm sorry if my dissecting your argument gave you the impression that I am in some way emotionally attached to this subject. I am not. You seem to be biased against homeschooling. When one of your arguments is refuted, you jump to another.
Jenny said that 28 states have "testing" requirements. That doesn't mean that the remaining states do not have curriculum or portfolio requirements.
If you would like a state by state run-down, you can view one on the HSLDA website, and here's an interesting article about ACT scores from that website:
Once Again Homeschoolers Score High on the ACT Exam
Recently released statistics show the 2006 average ACT composite score for homeschooled students was 22.4, compared to the national average composite of 21.1!
Now homeschoolers have an unbroken record for the last 10 yearssince 1996, when testing officials started tracking themof scoring higher on the ACT than the national average.
For example, the 2005 average ACT composite score for homeschooled students was 22.5, compared to the national average of 20.9.
The 8,075 homeschool graduates who took the ACT in 2005 comprised about 1 percent of all those who took the college entrance exam.
The 1996 ACT results showed that in English, homeschoolers scored 22.5, compared to the national average of 20.3. In math, homeschoolers scored 19.2, compared to the national average of 20.2. In reading, homeschoolers outshone their public school counterparts 24.1 to 21.3. In science, homeschoolers scored 21.9, compared to 21.1.
According to the 1998 ACT High School Profile Report, 2,610 graduating homeschoolers took the ACT and scored an average of 22.8 out of a possible 36 points. This score is slightly higher than the 1997 report released on the results of 1,926 homeschool graduates, which found that homeschoolers maintained an average of 22.5. This is higher than the national average, which was 21.0 in both 1997 and 1998.
In 2003, Iowa State Universitys admissions department data showed that homeschoolers had a 26.1 mean ACT composite score, as compared to a 24.6 mean score for all entering freshmen beginning in the fall of that year. The University of Iowa and the University of Northern Iowa (UNI) have also seen higher ACT and SAT averages from homeschoolers in comparison to the total school population. The cumulative admissions data from UNI reveals that the average ACT score for homeschoolers was nearly 2 points higher than that of regular freshmen: 25 versus 23.5.
In 2004, the 7,858 homeschool students taking the ACT scored an average of 22.6, compared to the national average of 20.9.
Since 1985, research consistently shows that homeschoolers on average do better than the national average on standardized achievement tests for the elementary and secondary grade levels.
This academic success continues through college.
The bottom line is: Homeschooling works!