9 Reasons Parents Choose to Homeschool Their Children

9 Reasons Parents Choose to Homeschool Their Children
KaliAntye/Shutterstock
Barbara Danza
Updated:

Increasingly, homeschooling is becoming a mainstream option for families of all sorts. The vast access to information and connection the Internet provides has allowed what was once considered a fringe idea to seem like a plausible one for many families.

The reasons parents choose to homeschool are as varied as families themselves, but here are nine common reasons people choose to take the education of their children into their own hands.

Demanding Extracurriculars

If a child has an extraordinary talent or skill (in sports, the arts, and so on) that calls for a significant commitment in time or travel, parents may opt to homeschool to afford them a flexibility in schedule or location.

Special Needs

Parents may find that learning disabilities or other special needs are difficult to adequately address in some traditional school settings. It’s hard to compete with the advantages of a one-to-one student-to-teacher ratio and special needs students may not get the attention they need when participating in a class of varying academic abilities and learning styles.

Prioritizing Religious or Spiritual Teachings

Parents who want to incorporate their spiritual beliefs into their children’s education may find homeschooling to be a better option.

Increased Family Time

Hours in school, along with extracurricular activities, begin to add up quickly for even very young school children. Some parents aim to reduce the separation traditional school inherently imposes on their family life by choosing instead to homeschool. 

Dissatisfaction with Curriculum

The prescribed academic curriculum in the traditional school system leads some parents wishing for something better. It’s easier than ever to find alternative options for students of various learning styles, interests, and abilities. 

Negative Social Environment at School

Parents who find the social or cultural environment they send their children to each day unsatisfactory or not aligned with their values often look to homeschool as a welcome alternative. 

The Child Wishes to be Homeschooled

A simple request from one’s child may lead parents to look into the option of homeschooling and find it to be viable. Motivated, self-directed children may find traditional schools stifling and crave the idea of a more challenging or broadly based option.

Gifted Children Require More

A gifted child may find little to be challenged by in a traditional school and become bored or unmotivated in such an environment. When the light of curiosity seems to be dimming, some parents look to homeschool to reignite that spark within. 

Freedom

For many parents, letting go of the prescribed route and numerous obligations and limitations that come with it provides an invitation to go one’s own way that is difficult to ignore. Allowing children the freedom to pursue their curiosities to full completion; dictating one’s own schedule; traveling whenever one wants and more are the advantages of homeschool that many families dream of.

Barbara Danza
Barbara Danza
writer
Barbara Danza is a contributing editor covering family and lifestyle topics. Her articles focus on homeschooling, family travel, entrepreneurship, and personal development. She contributes children’s book reviews to the weekly booklist and is the editor of “Just For Kids,” the newspaper’s print-only page for children. Her website is BarbaraDanza.com
Related Topics