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by TeMPOraL 1268 days ago
> The contents taught at school are overrated. They can be learned with 1-2 hours a day of homeschooling.

Did you? Why not? Myself I didn't.

It's true that the content could theoretically be learned in 1-2 hours a day of studying systematically - if the student is a highly motivated adult with some amount of uninterrupted focus time during the day, and no executive function issues. Children at school are none of this. They're not adults. They're not motivated - or capable of being motivated - by school. They don't have fully developed executive functions. And their parents don't have 1-2 hours a day to spare to homeschool them.

Public school system isn't optimized to help the few ideally-suited children excel - it's optimized to give a chance to grow to everyone. This includes being a daycare, so the parents can work, so the society doesn't break down. This includes giving reliable baseline education to everyone. This includes working as a safe space for children who, due to no fault of their own, were born into poverty, or in pathological families, and would otherwise not have access to proper nutrition and healthcare (this was a big deal during COVID lockdowns). Public school system is, arguably, the only thing enabling any kind of upward mobility in the society.

2 comments

Official grade level material for math and English in US primary schools is pretty basic. I spent a couple of weeks per grade on the math workbooks and absorbed English primarily by reading books (usually fiction borrowed from the school or public library.) Spelling drills might have helped with spelling. Handwriting exercises did nothing until I discovered (beautiful) cursive italic some years later.

I think you're right that public education is intended to provide a basic useful level of education to everyone. This is a good goal, though I think many students would benefit from asynchronous (vs. lock-step) study and a less rigid grade structure.

Agree. Not going to school is only for some privileged people who can live on only one income and at least one parent can guide (not “teach”). I wish the benefits of homeschooling could be scaled to mass education (self paced, adapted to each kid, no bullying, more time to play, and more)