Ok first off this is the first time I have ever made up a topic. GO ME!
Secondly, I was reading another thread about teen development and the Borgs control over adolescents, and that got me to thinking. I dont know what anyone elses experiences were like in their congregations but 85% of the kids in my hall were home schooled their entire lives, or were taking correspondence courses instead of attending high school. This was a really high percentage considering how many kids we had in our congregation (we were quite the baby factory). The reasons were of course, bad association was limited, they got to spend more time in field service, etc. But really it created socially inept people. I recall that the home-schooled witness kids had no idea what was socially acceptable behavior. They were crass, rude, dysfunctional, and embarrassing to be around. Blissfully unaware that they were considered abnormal, or that there might be other religious views in the world.
I am going into public education. I fully understand why some parents choose to home school their children. But it also takes a really good parent and child combination in order to be able to handle that kind of responsibility, lets face it-most JW parents arent up to the task. Sure my friends were taking correspondence courses but they were in multiplication and long division. Few of them were exposed to computers, science, etc. (Though reading the post on an Awake education I am sure they will be fine *sarcasm*) it always stuck with me that what the Witness parents were doing was NOT RIGHT! It took several of my friends extra time to finish high school degrees, rather than finishing early like was expected at the beginning. A few never finished at all. It also takes a great network. Cutting yourself and your child off from any social contact with peers is downright dangerous, and thought of as unhealthy by most child psychologists. And I am inclined to agree.
Meanwhile I was considered bad association. I went to school, heck my parents even let me participate in some outside activities so I got to network with people outside the Borg. My parents knew full well I was responsible enough to know the difference between right and wrong and that some social contact was needed with people out of the Borg. And the final straw was when I signed up for a 4-year degree so I could get my teaching license.
Anyway, all of the posts I had been reading plus the fact that I am very interested in education and child development got me thinking about home schooling and I wondered if other congregations had high numbers of home-schoolers. All thoughts and experiences will be helpfulI also know Minnesota tends to have quite a few home-schoolers(maybe it's just a regional thing)