Why Homeschooling Isn’t Just an Alternative—It’s a Solution
In recent years, many parents have begun questioning long-standing assumptions about traditional education. Concerns about bureaucracy, one-size-fits-all curricula, and institutional failures have eroded confidence in the public school system for many families.
Some parents are also increasingly wary of ideological instruction in public schools, particularly when it comes to gender ideology and sex education.
While debate over education is healthy in our society, a growing number of families believe the system has become less responsive to individual needs and more influenced by political and administrative pressures.
It is little surprise, then, that parents are looking for alternatives. For many families, homeschooling has moved from the margins to the mainstream.
Homeschooling is no longer a fringe educational choice. In the United States, an estimated 3.1 million students—about 6% of school-age children—are educated at home, and that number has grown steadily in recent years.
The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated this trend, forcing many parents to educate their children at home, which demystified homeschooling. Today, families cite flexibility, personalized pacing, and concerns about school culture and learning environments as reasons for choosing to homeschool.
What drives this shift is not just........
