Homeschooling Grows as an Escape from Failing Schools and Curriculum Fights
Turned off by fumbling public schools and curriculum wars, families teach their own kids.

North Carolina is one of the few states to keep detailed statistics on homeschoolers—who are famously resistant to scrutiny, and for good reason—and officials in the state recorded an interesting development this year. After dipping from a pandemic-era high when public schools were closed or generally making a poor job of remote learning, the ranks of homeschoolers have again begun to rise. With census figures showing similar growth elsewhere, we have further evidence that DIY education is here to stay.
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Homeschooling Surges Again
In the Statistical Summary for Homeschools 2023–2024, compiled by the state's Department of Administration, the number of registered K–12 homeschools in North Carolina stands at 96,529. Each school can serve more than one student, and the estimated number of homeschooled K–12 students is 157,642. That's down from the peak of 112,614 registered homeschools serving an estimated 179,900 students during the chaos of 2020–2021, but up from 94,154 registered homeschools and 152,717 students last year. Before the pandemic, in 2019–2020, 94,863 homeschools served 149,173 students.
For K–12 private schools, enrollment is up from 126,678 in 2022–2023 to 131,230 in 2023–2024. In 2019–2020, before the pandemic, North Carolina private schools had 103,959 students enrolled.
By contrast, traditional public school enrollment is declining.
"Traditional public schools have 1,358,003 students in 2023-24, losing 0.4% of students from last year to this year and down 3.6% overall from before COVID-19," according to Chantal Brown of EducationNC, which covers education issues in the state. "Charter schools have 139,985 students in 209 schools in 2023-24, gaining 4.9% over last year."
North Carolina isn't alone. In May, Carly Flandro of Idaho Education News found, based on Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey data, "about 6% of Idaho students were home-schooled, on average, during the past two school years. And the state data that is available shows increases since the height of the pandemic. At the same time, public school enrollment dipped this year for the first time since the 2020-21 school year."
Newsweek's Suzanne Blake added that Texas also saw a rise in homeschooling in a continuation of a trend that began "even before the pandemic."
A National Taste for DIY Education
In fact, the Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey, which takes a continuing series of snapshots of data over the course of each year, shows a national increase among the ranks of homeschooled students from roughly 3.6 million in 2022–2023 to about 4 million this past year (there's variation depending on the snapshot you examine, so it's best to look for averages). Meanwhile, public school enrollment declines.
Based on average of survey data from 2022–2023, Johns Hopkins University's Homeschool Hub, which compiles information about DIY education, estimates that 5.82 percent of American K-12 students were homeschooled that year. Of course, that's down from the height of the pandemic when public schools closed or just dropped the ball.
"In the first week (April 23-May 5) of Phase 1 of the Household Pulse Survey, about 5.4% of U.S. households with school-aged children reported homeschooling," the Census Bureau reported of comparing data from the spring of 2020 to the fall of that year. "By fall, 11.1% of households with school-age children reported homeschooling (Sept. 30-Oct. 12)."
But before the pandemic, the folks at the Homeschool Hub remind us, "homeschooled students between the ages of 5 and 17 made up 2.8% of the total student population in the United States in 2019." That means that, while a lot of families that took to homeschooling out of necessity returned to familiar public schools when they could, enough stuck with it to more than double the number of homeschooled kids. With COVID-19 and intrusive public health policies largely a bad memory, homeschooling continues as an increasingly popular practice as a matter of choice.
Fleeing Public Schools…
In a June article about declining public school enrollment in EducationWeek, Mark Lieberman explained that about half of the loss can be attributed to population changes as the number of kids declines, but about 20 percent fled to private alternatives and another 20 percent turned to homeschooling. (Another 10 percent are unaccounted for, though some probably skipped kindergarten and others may be in DIY arrangements such as homeschooling and microschools, but unreported.)
Lieberman delved into the school choice programs that let education funds follow students to the options of their choice rather than being assigned to brick-and-mortar public schools. But he didn't examine what might drive families to abandon the familiar for education alternatives the require greater dedication and commitment.
Disappointment with schools' pandemic responses clearly played a role in driving many families to try educating their own kids—and many liked the experience. But so do endless battles over how kids are taught and, especially, what is incorporated in the lessons presented to them by often deeply politicized schools. To please one faction of parents with spin that they like is to inherently alienate others.
…To Escape Pointless Conflicts
"Schools in many parts of the U.S. have become a battleground and parental involvement is one of the topics at the center," ABC News reported last September. "Fights in school board meetings, including in Chester County, [Pennsylvania] have erupted over how race, sexual orientation, gender and other topics are brought up, or taught, in the classroom."
Families can fight school administrators and other parents in struggles that inevitably leave those on the losing side unhappy with lesson content. It makes sense for those who lose to withdraw their children from the public schools in favor of lesson plans and approaches that meet their standards. For that matter, it's tempting for even those on the winning side to forego the curriculum wars and just pick the education they like for their kids without battling their neighbors. Why argue with your ideological opponents over what should be taught when you can ignore them and teach your kids what you please?
"When parents can choose where and how their children will be educated, they're no longer at the mercy of politicians and bureaucrats," the Cato Institute's Colleen Hroncich wrote in 2022. "That means they don't have to rely on political battles when it comes to education."
That's undoubtedly a big part of the impetus for recent school choice victories that expand options for families, as well as decisions parents and students make to embrace those options. Homeschooling and other education alternatives are on the rise because they're liberating, and they work.
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OMG... Those home-schools might teach their kids that Commie-Indoctrination Camps ('Communism') doesn't work instead of constantly imprinting how great communism is for the environment. Quick; pass a law and ban it! /s
Again, what is the issue in their heads and not what they say.
It is that the actual teachers and the actual lawmakers get to do what they can't do:
TEACHERS
Public school teachers send their own children to private schools at a rate more than twice the national average–22 percent of public educators' children are in private schools compared to the national average of 10 percent.
LAWMAKERS
40 percent of members of the House and 49 percent of members of the Senate send or have sent at least one of their children to a private school.
C'mon, does writer have kids ?????
Welch, ENB, KMW, and Gillespie have kids (though Gillespie's are adults.)
Even the ones with kids are really bad.
"North Carolina is one of the few states to keep detailed statistics on homeschoolers—who are famously resistant to scrutiny, and for good reason"
Care to justify the last four words?
Self evident.
Why argue with your ideological opponents over what should be taught when you can ignore them and teach your kids what you please?
Same could be said for voting.
All I want to know is, are these families still required to pay school taxes?
Question: when is it better to teach your own kids instead of letting the professional educators educate them?
Answer: when the professional educators are worse than you are at teaching children.
I taught math and engineering at a Junior College in a state that is very friendly to home schooling (Idaho). There was a tremendous variation in the preparedness level of students who had graduated from different high schools in the area. Some were fully prepared for Calc 1 and Intro to Engineering, and others (with the same classes on their transcripts) didn't know a sine from a cosine (really!)
There was probably even more variation in the preparedness level of home schooled students. A few home-schooled kids were prepared, but most were pretty incompetent. Worse, most home-schooled kids were not ready for the pace of schooling, and they were almost always late with assignments and missed a lot of class.
My $0.25 about home schooling.
Well I certainly used sine, cosine and Calc everyday, endlessly, while being employed as a Prof Engineer… Oh wait; No I didn’t… The once in 10-years I did need it; it was already forgotten and wolfram-alpha was there at my fingertips.
Maybe 1/2 of public schools problem is teaching what no-body really needs to know and nothing they do need to know in the first place. As-if the 14 F’En years of straight GED (useless repetition) wasn’t a dead give-away. Years and years and years of wasted endless stupidity usually is the net outcome of putting political bureaucrats in charge of standards. Heaven forbid they actually ask a person who does the job.
Funny...I'm a P.E. and I use trig just about every day, and I just walked out of a meeting where we discussed the best way to calculate the tensile stress on the bottom of a reinforced concrete dam footing (statics). Maybe you should have gone into a different field.
How’s it took a meeting to figure out how to calculate tensile stress? Didn’t your public education teach you how to do that job? You just demonstrated the Point & Case.
I be making bets you all use it so often it took a meeting to learn it all over-again if it was ever even taught in the first place.
How many of your public school-educated students did you have that could write their own name without the help of others?
The public school educated students could all write their own names without the help of others. About half had no problem doing basic surveying problems or converting polar to rectangular coordinates. The other half usually had difficulty solving a simple quadratic.
About 10% of the home schoolers were extremely well prepared (at least one got a full-ride scholarship to Stanford). About 15% were sufficiently well prepared for Calc 1. The remainder had difficulty solving simple quadratic equations.
What about the eighty percent of kids who will not (or should not) go to college after high school? What were they prepared for by high school?
A large fraction of my students would have been better off in a vocational program. Ditto for the home schooled kids; however, some of the home schooled kids would probably have needed some remedial instruction to benefit from a vocational program.
curriculum wars
Homeschooling IS a curriculum war.
Reasons why parents should home school their kids:
1. There are plenty of excellent online instructional videos to teach children how to read, write and cipher arithmetic as well as a variety of other subjects.
2. You don't have to worried about your kids being bullied.
3. You don't have to worry about your kids' educational needs being ignored.
4. It's doesn't cost very much.
Yes, you do have to have pens, pencils, paper, etc.,
But at least you know where your money is going unlike all that money you pay out in property taxes.
5. Kids love anything electronic, and it keeps their attention a lot more than some butt ugly "teacher" who just tells them to read Chapter Twelve.
6. You dictate the curriculum, not a bunch of Marxist turds on the needless school board.
7. You will get a sense of accomplishment for seeing your kids actually learning.
I'm watching local school board meetings turn to near UFC matches....I don't want my kid downwind of that.
A thousand words, and no mention of the LGBT pedo creep in public schools, or CRT, or the Marxist oppressor/oppressed ideology. No mention of the Title IX bastardization that lets boys into girls restrooms, facilitates the transgender brainwashing, and keeps parents in the dark about it all. No mention at all that the extremely bigoted and hateful pride flag is always on display, but an American flag is "problematic" (to say nothing of the fact that mere mention of anything even slightly Christian is "literal violence"). Meanwhile, the so-called "graduates" can't read or write or do basic arithmetic.
I guess that was just kind of whitewashed by your catchall "curriculum wars" term, yes?
Homeschool! We do we love it. Our kid is 10 and still a kid, not jaded or bullied. Imagine that! Plus it annoys the libs a ton and we hang out with moderate to conservative people! What a deal!
Oh and watch John Oliver's piece on homeschooling. He links white homeschoolers with no shit Nazis. John Oliver is filth.
The creep is real. My wife teaches in a fairly “rural” conservative part of Maryland. But every year the emphasis on SEL”lessons” gets a little stronger. She fights it by just writing the subject on the board like she is teaching it and then lets the kids have study time instead. But it’s only a matter of time until the county’s administrative “diversity officers” start checking in on this stuff and making sure the lessons are done “right”.
And while the school system doesn’t seem to have an overt policy on the gender/bathroom situation. She brought home a paper from a mandatory diversity meeting last year where students telling students of another sex to get out of their bathroom was used as an example of intolerance.
Our county did elect a few conservatives to the school board, we’ll see if it has any effect.
What is SEL? Social and Emotional Learning? What's that mean? Again- we are homeschooling so we don't deal with that...
Do you have kids? Where do you send them? How much longer will your wife teach in this environment...as in do you have a "red line" she will not cross?
I think we need to get away from the "we have stay and fight" mentality. Some of these locations or schools are lost. Vote with your feet. That changes shit. I've seen that in my time in a volunteer org and one of my jobs and nationally, the police leaving in droves and the military not recruiting is hitting woke leadership. We haven't "broken" woke leadership yet, but we've given them a public "black eye."
Yes, social emotional learning.
She’s deeply concerned about the direction things have been heading. And already changed counties (out of Baltimore county) after the Bmore county system started problematizing white teachers and enacting policies that essentially grant zero accountability to students.
The specific school she’s at now is much better. We’re childless, but I suppose id send my kids to the schools in this town. I don’t know enough about the private alternatives around here to know if they’d be any better and were not in a position to homeschool. But the county, state, and federal administrations ultimately seem intent on foisting this shit but by bit. And I’d definitely be getting more and more nervous every year,
Her current philosophy is that good teachers leaving the system only cedes territory. And the public schools are where the fight is. She thinks there are a lot of good teachers out there, it’s the administrations and NEA, etc that are warping things.
I tend to agree at this point. I’m certainly all for school choice. Even if it puts her out of business. She’s fluent in Spanish and can no doubt find a niche in the private sector if she had to. We’ll get by.
But the reality is public schools aren’t going anywhere. Private schools are actually worse for wokeness and are under the thumb of state regulators anyway. And not everybody has the ability to homeschool. And I imagine it gets harder and harder the more advanced the classes get.
While I agree with the principle, getting gov out of education as the one answer to all this is just a way to kick the can and not fight the fight.
As far as red lines, I’m guessing they could eventually make her so miserable with observations or making her conform to the stuff she’d eventually bail.