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Jos Haynes's avatar

Well, I did write a long comment to your article but something came up on another window and when I went back to your article my comment had disappeared. Memo to self: write comments in Word and copy/paste ‘em.

So, in brief, your support for home schooling is based on the dire state of school education and the manners and language of the pupils with whom your own child might come into contact. And your solution is only available to a minority of parents with the time, ability and circumstances to home school.

Let me speak up for schools – at least the schools of yesteryear. I was the only boy with three sisters in my family, and just down the road were three female cousins. No one to play football or cricket with, I would have been completely frustrated and feminised with home schooling, even assuming my mother had the time after feeding and clothing the four of us and keeping the house clean. No labour saving gadgets in those days.

At primary school, class sizes were 50-55. Discipline was never an issue and in the core subjects of English and Arithmetic, everybody worked at their own pace through the exercise books. If a group needed special explanations, they got them via the blackboard and the more ahead ones just ignored it and continued working through the book. I loved my primary school days, and if I had some problems as a teenager at grammar school it was not due to the school but to home life!

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Gepocock's avatar

An Austrian friend has told me that there is so much disruption in Austrian schools that ordinary parents are crippling themselves financially to get their children into private schools and otherwise they home educate. The cause of this is immigration, with many foreign children refusing to learn German. A German teacher I worked with also told me how things are different in Germany. I was a teacher, although retired. She told me that there is a different mindset in German schools. It is the responsibility of the pupils to listen and learn. It is not the teacher’s responsibility to ensure discipline. This then leads to a set of children wishing to learn at the front. And a load of uninterested pupils at the back causing mayhem. Whereas in Britain, it is the teachers job to maintain discipline and ensure that the children actually make progress. Education is a mess. I retired because frankly it became a minefield.

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