Homeschool: Another Learning Environment for Special Children
 How home education can help the adopted child

February 01,2004 / Cyndie Odya Weis via www.Rainbowkids.com 
 
    When John and Holiday Hays decided to home school their eight adopted
    children, the decision was based in part on practicality. "Six of the eight
    have special needs, and the bus ride to their school would have been more than
    an hour," says John of rural Bearville, Minnesota. Add to that the countless
    meetings they would have needed to attend to deal with educational and
    behavioral issues, and they decided it would make more sense to instruct their
    children at home. They would be able to pack instruction into every one of the
    limited "high attention" moments special needs kids have, they reasoned. For
    the Hays family, and many other families, home schooling is a viable and
    positive alternative to public or private schools.

     The Hayses are not alone in their decision to home school. According to a
    comprehensive 1998 study commissioned by the Home School Legal Defense
    Association (HSLDA), an estimated 1.23 million U.S. students are educated at
    home--87.7 percent of them by stay-at-home moms. The study, conducted by the
    director of the ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation, used 11,930
    family questionnaires and standardized tests of 20,760 students to evaluate
    home schooling.

    Why do parents decide to instruct their children at home? While 78 to 83
    percent of home schooling parents in the HSLDA study cite religious and moral
    reasons for their decision, Vicki Brady--Host of Home School U.S.A., a
    nationwide radio show broadcast from Colorado by the Home Education
    Network--says that the home schooling movement is clearly attracting people
    from all walks of life. 

    Judy Grove, the Adoption Council of Canada's (ACC) executive director,
    reports that home schooling is a growing trend in Canada as well: "We’re seeing
    it more and more, especially in Alberta and B.C." ACC hears from parents who
    believe schools in their provinces aren’t responding to children’s needs. Says
    Grove, "Schools sometimes have [negative] assumptions about adopted children or
    about children of color." Because of this, some adoptive parents feel they can
    do better than schools at bolstering both their children’s academic achievement
    and self-esteem. Above all, adoptive parents, like most parents beginning home
    schooling, want to provide their children with a quality education, and they
    don’t trust that schools can educate their children as well as Mom and Dad can.
    Indeed, Brady and the Home Education Network claim that the largest growing
    population of home schoolers are those seeking superior academic training and
    those who, in the wake of school violence, want increased safety for their
    children. 

     What about Socialization?
    Opponents of home schooling worry about socialization. Compulsory public
    education is designed to "normalize" children, help them to learn academics,
    and teach them societal norms so they can fit in with peers. Learning at
    home--with only parents and siblings--isolates children and makes them social
    misfits, claim skeptics. 

    Research contradicts these claims, however, as 87 percent of home schoolers
    report that their kids regularly play with children outside of the family. On
    average, claims the HSLDA study, home schooled children participate in 5.2
    activities outside the home, and 98 percent of them participate in two or more
    activities. "Because the students can choose the activities and therefore the
    social contacts, they are not pressured by their peers into things they don’t
    really want to do," says Brady. She also explains that home schooled students,
    without social pressures pulling them in undesired directions, can put more
    focused energy into chosen activities, developing leadership skills as they go. 
     
      An Individualized or Combination Approach May Work Best
    While high social and academic success are the norm among home schooled
    children, there are times when a little public school can go a long way--even
    for the student schooled at home. Many schools allow kids to come to school for
    a subject or two or even three. Attending school for band or orchestra or for a
    math class can add the right mix for some. Some families find their children
    benefit from small doses of school, like academic subjects, music, or sports. 
     
    Emma, 13, "got the best of both worlds," says her mom Lori. During seventh
    and eighth grade, Emma participated in band, volleyball, and soccer at a middle
    school, while completing other academics at home. "The peer pressure of
    seventh-grade girls, the gossip, and the cliques intimidated Emma," says Lori.
    "With two years at home, I think she has a stronger sense of who she is." Emma
    will return to public school this fall. Emma’s brother, Dylan, will also go to
    public school this fall after completing an accelerated first-grade program at
    home. Though Lori will be glad to have her children back in public school, she
    is quick to add that there were many benefits to home schooling her children.
    "Emma is interested in sewing, cooking, gardening...she’s broadened her
    interests. Dylan got what he needed to stimulate his mind."

     Adoptive families may have additional reasons for trying home schooling.
    Laura Jasen home schools her three adopted children because their needs are so
    diverse--and so particular. Six-year-old Zach is cognitively delayed while
    younger sister Lexie is exceptionally bright. Halie, a four-year-old adopted
    from a Romanian orphanage at 22 months, has attachment issues. Zach flourishes
    in the limited playing field of home school, and his sisters support and
    encourage him. "Seeing the smile on his face is more important than an A," says
    Jasen. Halie, Jasen explains, "needs guidance, consequences, and limit setting.
    She is easily influenced by others and has trouble with social judgment." When
    asked if she decided to home school because her children are adopted, Jasen
    says, "No, it’s more the mix of kids we have. If I had children by birth and
    they had similar diverse needs, I’d home school them too." She’s happy to be
    living in Wisconsin where home schooling regulations are fairly relaxed.

     The Hayses agree that home schooling is practical for their children’s
    diverse needs, but, as John explains, "the single greatest reward is bonding.
    The one-to-one attention we give the kids promotes a bond we wouldn’t have
    otherwise." And parent-child relationships are especially important to John and
    Holiday since some of their children are diagnosed with reactive attachment
    disorder (RAD). "A lot of adopted kids have RAD," says John, "and [children]
    with RAD really need someone to be the authority and they need to know it’s a
    safe place. At home, they’re not exposed to instructors who don’t understand
    them. It’s the same with the fetal alcohol syndrome kids--their brains are
    different, and we help them overcome the confusion they feel."

      Rules and Laws
    In the U.S., individual states regulate home schooling with laws ranging from
    how to properly notify school systems about the parents’ intent to educate a
    child at home, to the ages of "compulsory education" in each state (most
    require that children aged 6 to 18 attend school or have an alternate plan for
    home schooling). Depending on the state, home schooling parents may:

      California requires home instruction to be in English, consistent with state
    laws recently passed for public schools. Some states, including Georgia,
    Minnesota, South Dakota, and Tennessee, require regular standardized testing,
    while states like Arkansas, Colorado, and Virginia require just an approved
    evaluation and documentation. A number of states--Utah and Texas among
    them--have no testing requirement at all. Visit the Home School Legal Defense
    Association web site (www.hslda.com) to
    view requirements by state. In Canada, where each province establishes its own
    regulations for home schooling, rules also vary. 

    States and provinces may also govern the education of foster children. In
    jurisdictions where a child placed for adoption is considered a foster child
    until the adoption is finalized, there may be a period of time when families
    can home school their birth and previously adopted children, but not the newly
    placed child. Additional rules and laws may apply. In Wisconsin, for example, a
    foster child may be home schooled only if he is expelled from one public school
    and cannot attend another, OR if the child receives more frequent social worker
    visits, is taught from an established curriculum, receives regular evaluations,
    participates in extracurricular activities, and is likely to remain in the same
    foster home for at least six months. (Source: Conversation with Mark Mitchell,
    Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services)

     Despite published guidelines and organizations like the Home School Legal
    Defense Association that help parents in the home schooling process, parents
    still report problems getting school systems to support their efforts. In Clark
    County, Nevada one family sued the public school system after it refused to
    offer speech therapy services to their home schooled 12-year-old. U.S. federal
    law--the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)--requires that
    equal opportunities and necessary accommodations be offered to students with
    disabilities, so the 12-year-old's parents requested similar services for their
    son. If the parents win this landmark case, all home schoolers would be
    entitled to exceptional educational services. At present, only parents who
    establish private schools in their homes (as required in California and 11
    other states) qualify for special services.

     Home schooling has many merits. Interest in the practice is high and systems
    are in place to support families who choose to educate children at home. When
    making the decision to home school, parents must consider their children’s
    needs and the family’s ability to teach children at home. If the situation will
    not support a home school, parents must take advantage of other opportunities.
    But if everything falls into place, home schooling may be just the safe and
    structured educational experience your child needs to do his best. 

    If you are thinking about schooling at home, take these steps:
     

    1. Reflect on your reasons for home schooling. Ask all family members to
      compile lists of their reasons. 
       
    2. Write a home school mission statement to affirm your decision. 
       
    3. Check rules for home schooling in your state or province. Follow them. 
       
    4. Try home schooling for a long weekend, or a week during the summer to get a
      feel for what it’s like. 
       
    5. Plan for parental stress-relief breaks, and extracurricular activities for
      the children. 
       
    6. Determine which study techniques work best for each child. 
       
    7. Shop for curriculum guides as well as online and media resources. 
       
    8. Conduct a pre-test--either standardized or some other evaluative measure.
      Plan to compare the results with a post-test. 
       
    9. Plan the first few weeks of school days. Intersperse active and quiet
      activities.

    Plan for ongoing evaluation--not only of academics but also of relationships
    and social development.