View Full Version : When parents are the teachers
Sean Martin
December 16th, 2004, 02:32 AM
There is no place to eat in Alissa Tschetter-Siedschlaw 's dining room. The family sits down to meals around a coffee table in the living room.
The dining room in this Des Moines home is crammed full of books. Plastic containers on the floor hold blocks, measuring tapes, rulers and paper money. Educational posters cover the walls - everything from diagrams of the human body to a map of the United States and an illustration of the constellations.
http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041212/NEWS02/412120303/1001/NEWS&lead=1
Alex Linder
December 18th, 2004, 07:32 AM
There is no place to eat in Alissa Tschetter-Siedschlaw 's dining room. The family sits down to meals around a coffee table in the living room.
The dining room in this Des Moines home is crammed full of books. Plastic containers on the floor hold blocks, measuring tapes, rulers and paper money. Educational posters cover the walls - everything from diagrams of the human body to a map of the United States and an illustration of the constellations.
http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041212/NEWS02/412120303/1001/NEWS&lead=1
Before the 1980s, home-schooling - with a history that substantially predates the advent of public schools - fell onto the religious fringes of education. About 20 years ago, it began to be embraced by a broader demographic.
In the United States, 1.1 million students were being home-schooled in the spring of 2003, according to the most recent numbers from the National Center for Education Statistics.
Between 1999 and 2003, the percentage of school-age kids being home-schooled rose from 1.7 percent to 2.2 percent. In Iowa, 1.7 percent of school-age children are home-schooled.
Advocacy groups, such as the Home School Legal Defense Association, estimate the number of home-schoolers nationwide to be higher - between 1.7 million and 2.1 million.
People say that folks are brainwashed, and they are, but the rapid growth of home schooling indicates deep dissatisfaction. WN badly need to provide offerings to this growing market.
What WN means at this point, more than anything else, is a commitment to a certain structuring of life - a deliberate witholding from ZOG wherever possible. The only thing we have to feed ZOG are taxes. We can keep our children and the rest of our dollars out of its maw, and must.
Alex Linder
December 18th, 2004, 07:50 AM
Good post, Sean, very interesting article. Couple observations - about the only time I've ever seen a newspaper writer use the term "far left" in a news article.
Note that homeschooling was ILLEGAL in 45 states in 1983. Remarkable - ZOG will regret having legalized such. But I recall what Prof. Fred Lynch, author of a couple books about affirmative action and diversity, told me. People will tolerate a lot of bullshit against themselves, but if you touch their kid, they're up in arms. This means that home schooling while not overtly WN, is a real potential source of people receptive to our Aryan liberation movement. As Jefferson has said, compelling a man to supply monies to propagate opinions he does not share is tyranny. Public schools are tyrannical - see the article linked on main page, where a Massachusetts high school has cops throw white woman out for trying to videotape their Homo Week celebrations.
Note that there are about 50m public schol students, about 5m private school students, and 1m home-school students.
The numbers of homers are underreported for various reasons, yet growing quickly. This is a good sign. The most remarkable generation America ever produced was entirely home-schooled.
You want a practical education? Learn to read, learn to do basica arithmetic.
You want a liberal education? Read the best books, reflect on them.
Putting condoms on bananas has nothing to do with it.
Sean Martin
December 18th, 2004, 06:32 PM
I used to think Christian schooling was the way to go, but now ZOG forces sub humans into these schools creating the same sewer of a public school.
One can purchase home schooling books by the dozen at a used book store, one here has then 5 for $1,00 and another has a better selection for $3.00 a piece. If you use second hand books you can home school children fairly cheap. I know two girls that were home schooled and they were finished at 15. A friend of mine home schools his daughter and she is on a high school junior level and is only 12 YRS old.
Creates a bond between parents and children while the parent can learn as well or at least brush up on their education.
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