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by sanderjd
751 days ago
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For kids in school, all of those things are additive. They also do all those same kinds of activities in the hours between school and bedtime and on weekends and during the summer. For kids not in school, the options for social experiences during the school day are limited to the adult(s) with them, and other siblings or kids who are also not in school. During the school day, for most kids living in the US, that's a smaller pool of other kids to spend time with during the day. That's all I'm saying! Of course that doesn't mean they have no other ways to make friends! And I don't mean to imply it's a bad thing. "Having a larger pool of kids to see during school days" is certainly not the only metric worth optimizing for! But I think it just is true that, in most places in the US, kids who are in school spend more time with other kids than those who are not in school, just by dint of being in school being the default and more common thing. |
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Homeschooled kids have different social experiences, of course, but I don't think those are worse or less rich or varied. Without the constraints of school, kids have more time to socialize with other kids and with adults. They can do "real world" things with their parents. I suppose you have to get to know some homeschooling families to see for yourself.
Plenty of kids in school experience severe loneliness and isolation, and spend too much time on social media getting depressed. It's practically an epidemic, leading to mental health problems and suicide. I won't say that school causes those problems, but I think it's fair to say that sending your kids to school will not necessarily give them a rich and healthy social life.