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Latest post 12-11-2008 6:47 AM by crazycajun. 73 replies.
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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Heads Up, Homeschool Parents!
This new bill will require all homeschool parents to register their children with their local public school district. This would be a new requirement, but a small step down a slippery slope.
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Why does the school district and the state need this information?
This is a clear infringement on the rights of homeschoolers that were fought very hard for in the past. There is NO good reason for them to want or need this information.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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MI has great homeschooling laws
The laws are great just the way they are. We don't need a regression in the freedoms allowed by our state. I challenge this bill's sponsor and those in favor of the bill to talk to anyone who homeschooled in the 1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s--in particular, those from families where one or both parents was jailed because they were homeschooling their children. After they hear about how hard we struggled to make homeschooling legal in this state, and what dedicated parents were willing to go through in order to provide the best they could for their children, I challenge them to think long and hard about exactly what they're trying to accomplish with this proposed legislation. There are a whole lot of better things they could focus their time and energies on (the economy, public safety, improving public education!) rather than picking on homeschoolers.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Save the children in public school !
You will find that the VAST majority of Homeschooled students are educated better than those in Public Schools.
IF you are aware of students and children who are in those circumstances.. there are clear legal methods of reporting that ALREADY EXIST.
Why is this "registration" required for that? Government harrassment and infrigement on our rights again.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Not good for parents or school
I agree with the homeschooling parents on this issue, but I bet the schools don't want it either. What responsibility are they going to have for the students on this list? Will they receive another (unfunded) mandate to track, test, etc. these students? Homeschooling works well as it is. My son has homeschooled students in several of his classes. The school accounts for these students as partial students in the May/Sept count. So why is this needed?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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If it Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It
The requirement of parents to register their home schooled children with School Superintendents is shear Big Brother. Government already knows too much about everybody and should not be meddling in this important area of families in Michigan. There are other crucial areas that Michigan Legislators should focus on . . . namely unemployument. The Grandholm Administration has dropped the ball on this because of concentrating on green technologies that are mostly future rather than focusing on making Michigan a state with industrial might in just about every area. Massive union control of the auto industry has caused Michigan to be uncompetitive and therefore the auto industry has moved elsewhere to [places such as Alabama. We must recognize these facts and reckon with the realities rather than the pipe dreams. Lawyers somehow do not get economics! The economic realities are the issue of importance right now.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Why not track the kids who drop out of public school?
Learning why those kids failed might save some of the ones who are struggling now.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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homeschooled kids/homeschooled teachers
One of my homeschool grads is a public school teacher - is that an oxymoron? :-) He credits me with helping him to learn how he learned, which he now uses to reach his students. As a career-tech ed teacher, he teaches juniors and seniors, many of whom have been given up on by the more "paperwork" and visual-linguistic oriented teachers . . . the public schools in general do their students a disservice by having too little emphasis on hands-on learning and trying to college-track (one size fits all) everyone. With stricter graduation requirements in place, career-tech ed has had to spend tax dollars and their own time to prove that their students are getting the ed requirements embedded in the career-tech curriculum. Hey, we need those people who can fix our cars, appliances, and computer, do our hair, rescuscitate us when we have a heart attack, and I could go on and on. Homeschoolers are turning out a very amazing gross national product - - the numbers elude me, but I read some stats somewhere that showed that a higher percentage of homeschoolers are entrepeneurs than those educated otherwise. Homeschooling works, and we don't need more regulations to make it work better.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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I had a nephew who went through the public schools year after year and by 10th grade couldn't read . . . no one wanted to hold him back because he was obviously bright, but no one could figure out how to teach him to read, so sure didn't want to keep him in their class another year. Finally, someone recommended a tutor and they used . . . how amazing . . . phonics and whole body movement to reach him and voila! One of my children had vision problems (not acuity, but tracking and other spatial difficulties) and was a late reader. He was held back, and by 4th grade had been in public school for six years, one in special ed. I started homeschooling him in 5th grade, and got my verbal, articulate little boy back with an "I can't" attitude. It took a while before he got his confidence back, and maybe it never has come back totally, but he is a hard-working capable contributing citizen today; a home-owner, holds down a full-time job and is putting himself through college. He is also head of the Planning Commission in his community. Let the homeschoolers save their kids; let the public school and those parents who choose that course take care of theirs.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Why not track the kids who drop out of public school?
Only a very small percentage of homeschoolers are of the "drop out" category. The majority of homeschooled children have never, ever attended a public school or a private school.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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According to Rep Joan Bauer
I received a response to my email to Rep Joan Bauer. In her email she claims that the requirements in HB5912 are already in place for all homeschooling children and they are just making it official.
I hope this lie was just a mistake and not intentional plan to mislead the public.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Democrats sponsored this?
I thought the Democrats were supposed to honor individual liberties, protect those who are under-represented, and go up against big business. What is a school system but big business? Public schools have a monopoly on education, yet they graduate children who can't read. They protect this "public school" business, in the name of "child advocacy," but look at what happens to the children under their care.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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government NEED to track them?
we NEED to track criminals, not homeschooled students.
the government has no vested interest in the whereabouts of these children, as the government has no 'expenses' put out to them.
they cost the government nothing, so why do they need to be tracked? they don't use school facilities, they don't use up teacher's time. they don't ride public school busses, nothing.
they stay at home and learn on their own. they are taught by their parents, or tutors, or private educators brought in at the parent's expense, not the state's.
even the state equivelency test is paid for by the parents. a test, by the way, that homeschooled students pass by a much higher margin and with much better scores than our publicly educated students.
i encounter dozens of publicly schooled graduates daily who can't read. why?
aren't our public schools the finest educational facilities on the planet?
i also encounter dozens of PRIVATELY EDUCATED graduates daily who are far better prepared for success in todays world than those educated by our public schools.
why should the state discriminate against private education? to make money.
if it weren't for the public schools, one quarter of our state spending would have to be spent on something else.
imagine if those who wished to send their children to private schools COULD. the public schools would be virtually empty.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Sides hurt--gonna pee myself..
"Policemen can't pull you over until AFTER you break the law"
APRIL FOOLS!!!!! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Graduation is more like 25%- 30%
Didn't you see the numbers published this week?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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This is only a first step
Registration is only needed if there's a reason to track the population. The end goal here is regulation, testing, and possibly state-mandated curriculum. In a free country, education must be free. The lack of competition in education has generated the system we have. We have already seen amazing things come from the homeschool community: bestselling authors, entrepreneurs, young people who are rising to the top in whatever position they try. Homeschooling works precisely because of the inherent freedom and the lessons that freedom teaches. Why would we discourage this system when it works--and costs the state absolutely nothing?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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HB5912: They don't get it
It amazes me that the school code attendance act is still the basic law from which we homeschoolers are "granted" our exemption (f) freedom to ensure the best most suitable education for our children. The school code and it's keepers will never get that the truly successful education derives from supporting the parent's role in providing for their kids all the available methods and resources for building stable, disciplined, educated "citizen" people out of our children. As long as the Compulsory Attendance requirement is the base law defining the bounds of our right to teach our children, then the State schools will never get that the priority is to actually educate all Michigan kids versus simply making certain they are in attendance (to get the funding).
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Responsibility without accountability--you've got to be kidding!
The homeschool parent bears sole responsibility and full accountability for that child's education. "Responsibility without accountability" is a great descriptive phrase for pubic education. Who pays when that child begins to hate to learn because of the way eucation is presented in the schools? Who pays when that child is socially maimed by bullying or peer pressure? Who pays if that child graduates and can't read? Who pays for the lost innocence when that child is sexually molested in school? The parents pay. The child pays. The school staff gets an annual raise with summers off.
The illogical nature of this argument is astonishing. If a parent, who gave birth to that child, changed her diapers, taught her to walk and talk, nursed her through the flu, etc., can't be trusted to do what's best for their own flesh-and-blood child, then how can someone completely unrelated to the child, a paid civil servant, be trusted to do what's best for her?
This bill is about power, about being able to control those who have embraced natural law and have determined to take their parental responsibilities seriously. We utterly reject the compliance training and mind control pushed in pubic schools. If we want to be leaders in the world again, we need to "give the horse it's head" and let those who have strengths be allowed to develop them without interference. If we don't believe in the individual, then we can't really say we believe in democracy, can we?
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