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Word in Black is a collaboration of 10 of the nationโ€™s leading Black publishers that frames the narrative and fosters solutions for racial inequities in America.

Long before the current boom โ€” back in October 1990 when Black folks thought it was โ€œjust a White Flight thingโ€ โ€” Joyce Burges started homeschooling her son. At 14 years old, he was pushed out of school only two months into the semester.

โ€œThey pretty much kicked us out,โ€ says Burges, the CEO and founder of National Black Home Educators. While enrolled in a gifted school, her sonโ€™s GPA dropped from the schoolโ€™s minimum requirement of 3.0 down to 2.8. 

Fortunately for Burges, a family in her church was homeschooling, and they showed her the ropes: the legal aspects, curriculum options, and support groups. By the next school year, she had transferred her other child out of traditional school and was homeschooling both of them. Then she began helping out other parents, ultimately homeschooling seven children. 

โ€œOur vision is to share homeschooling and to put everything about homeschooling in the best possible light so that other families โ€” specifically Black families โ€” would see that is applicable for them,โ€ Burges says.

โ€˜Trying to Act Like White Peopleโ€™

While it might be changing now, there was a lot of stigma surrounding homeschooling in the 1990s and 2000s, especially for Black families.

When Burges started homeschooling, her parents didnโ€™t understand what she was doing and were concerned her grandchildren wouldnโ€™t get an education. She says they told her it wasnโ€™t legal and she wasnโ€™t qualified to teach.

โ€œWe didnโ€™t see any other Black families at that timeโ€ homeschooling, Burges says. She was told, โ€œweโ€™re just trying to act like white people. It was like, no, weโ€™re just trying to give our child the best education we can.โ€

Eventually, following the success her family experienced, several of Burgesโ€™ family members started homeschooling their own children.

Jania Otey โ€” who had been working as an attorney when she started homeschooling her two children โ€” faced different criticisms. She got comments about paying for school and giving up rewarding work to โ€œstay home.โ€ She also got questions about whether she was sure she could do it and how her kids were going to socialize.

โ€œI took them with a grain of salt. I answered peopleโ€™s questions,โ€ Otey says. โ€œAnd Iโ€™m telling you, I would not trade that for anything in the world. Itโ€™s the best experience.โ€

The stigma isnโ€™t as prominent today, Burges says, because homeschooling is โ€œacceptable and sophisticated.โ€ Plus, there is some research that shows homeschooled students tend to perform better in terms of GPA and national assessments, though itโ€™s important to note the studies have a limited sample size. And homeschooling allows reprieve from bullying, socialization issues, or other non-academic struggles that distract from the learning process.

โ€œNow, everybody knows somebody thatโ€™s homeschooling or who has homeschooled,โ€ Burges says. โ€œI would venture to say that theyโ€™re not going to receive the same attitudes and dispositions that we received.โ€

Most People Have Wrong Notions About Homeschooling

Movies often portray homeschoolers as anti-social, highly religious kids who sit at home in their pajamas all day. And that bothers real homeschoolers. Here are the myths homeschoolers and experts want to set the record straight on. 

Religious Extremism: When she first started researching Black homeschooling families, Dr. Cheryl Fields-Smith knew of the stereotype that homeschooling was so parents with extreme religious backgrounds could let their beliefs drive learning. โ€œThat does exist, but itโ€™s not as prevalent as you would think,โ€ Fields-Smith says. What she found was that Black parents wanted to infuse something else. โ€œItโ€™s really most of their voices. The voices of Black home educators really give us an opportunity to hear the lived experiences behind the statistics.โ€

Staying at Home: โ€œHomeschoolโ€ shouldnโ€™t be taken so literally. Otey would conduct classes outside on a blanket or do a lesson in the grocery store. Erica Reynolds, 19, was homeschooled her entire K-12 education and recalls many museum trips full of hands-on activities. When she tells people she was homeschooled, โ€œthe reaction is, โ€˜Oh, wow, youโ€™re so lucky. You got to stay at home all day,โ€™โ€ Reynolds says. โ€œI wish I could do that, but itโ€™s not really like that.โ€

Parents Are the Only Teachers: Parents generally arenโ€™t the sole teacher. Whether itโ€™s through programs, tutors, or groups, homeschooled kids often learn from many people. โ€œYou can be your childโ€™s primary teacher for every single subject โ€” if you choose,โ€ Otey says, โ€œor you can outsource instruction for certain subjects that you may not feel as comfortable with.โ€

The Kids Are Anti-Social: Most homeschoolers carry on โ€œdeep, intellectual conversations because theyโ€™ve been exposed to things other than just textbooks,โ€ Otey says. When they go to playgrounds or other outings, children run up and interact. โ€œChildren are magnets for each other.โ€

Itโ€™s Expensive: Homeschooling curriculums vary in cost, so you can spend as much or as little as you want. Looking at the same time period across all three years of the pandemic โ€” May in 2020, 2021, and 2022 โ€” the majority of homeschooling families had an annual household income under $75,000, according to Census Bureau data. โ€œThere are lots of free resources out there. You might have to put a little more work into them in terms of printing things out and creating some things yourself,โ€ Otey says. โ€œIt really depends on what you want to budget, how you want to spend your money. So I donโ€™t think that should be a barrier.โ€

The Good and Bad of Homeschooling

The first thing Caleb Otey, 16, and Reynolds want you to know is that they have social lives. They both had classes or partook in programs with other groups of kids, and Caleb played basketball for a couple of years. Reynolds was โ€œreally involvedโ€ in the Boys and Girls Club, and she did internships at different museums in Washington, D.C., helping to plan programs, take photos and video, and create commercials.

Being able to create her own schedule allowed Reynolds to fit in more extracurriculars โ€” and it also prepared her for college.

โ€œIt felt seamless,โ€ Reynolds, a junior at North Carolina A&T State University, says. โ€œIt was an easy transitionโ€ from homeschooling because โ€œyouโ€™re not really taking classes at home โ€” itโ€™s usually in another establishment โ€” and you pick your own schedule.โ€

For Caleb, the college prep aspect was being able to set habits he now uses at Faulkner University. He remembers getting up when it was still dark so he could finish school early enough in the day to have more free time.

โ€œThat really helped me with my school now because I have a lot more work to do now,โ€ Caleb says. โ€œ[My mom] helped me form the habit of getting up early and getting things done.โ€

But the downsides do exist. For one, there are โ€œconcerns that removing students from traditional schooling models will continue to segregate students along racial and economic lines,โ€ Dr. Javaid Siddiqi, president and CEO of The Hunt Institute, wrote in a statement to Word In Black.

Siddiqi says homeschooling isnโ€™t effective for all children, and it can keep students from being exposed to a diverse group of peers. Plus, homeschooling can lead to inconsistencies in educational outcomes based on a variety of factors. 

โ€œParents with little to no background in education or childcare may struggle with putting together a well-rounded curriculum for their child,โ€ Siddiqi says.

The Effects of Homeschooling on the Education Landscape

The pandemic dramatically impacted how students, families, and educators approach schooling. So what kind of long-term effect will homeschooling have on traditional schools? 

The 2020-2021 school year โ€” the first full pandemic school year โ€” saw a 63% increase in homeschooling, according to an analysis by The Associated Press of data from 18 states. It dropped only 17% in the following school year, 2021-2022, when many schools were holding in-person classes. Prior to the pandemic, only 3% of students were homeschooled nationwide, according to the Census Bureau

This highlights that โ€œmany families have decided not to return to the classrooms,โ€ opting instead for flexible scheduling and other ways of โ€œreimagining student learning,โ€ Siddiqi says. At least for the short term. 

โ€œThe growth of these alternative models is likely to continue to challenge existing norms about educational systems,โ€ Siddiqi says.

Fields-Smith has spent 17 years studying Black homeschoolers โ€” and has even testified before a State Board of Education when it needed to update its homeschool policies. She says when a community sees that homeschooling is increasing, meaning that the number of children going to public school would decrease, districts and states have to look at their policies.

โ€œMy hope is that public schools and private schools alike would listen to Black parents and see whatโ€™s working for their children and try to adapt it, if possible,โ€ Fields-Smith says.

And, Siddiqi adds, that โ€œgrowing parental dissatisfactionโ€ with the current system will force district and state leaders to โ€œwork together to support evidence-driven policies that will rebuild public trust in our schools.โ€

But what does that mean for the short term? Not much.

โ€œI donโ€™t know how itโ€™s changing right now,โ€ Fields-Smith says. โ€œI donโ€™t know that it is changing very much here in America. Schools seem to be still doing what they do.โ€

This story was originally published on WordinBlack.com.

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