Lee Duigon
October 1, 2003
Will homeschooling Christian parents be compelled
to teach their children to embrace “safe
sex,” abortion on demand, and moral relativism?
It sounds absurd, but it could happen tomorrow,
next month, or anytime. The proposal is on
the table, waiting for a judge to pick it up.
Children have a constitutional right to learn
about beliefs and ways of life other than those
of their parents, and the state has a duty
to secure that right for them.
So argued Rob Reich, political science and
education professor at Stanford University,
at the 2001 convention of the American Political
Science Association, reading from a paper entitled, “Testing
the Boundaries of Parental Authority over Education,
the Case of Home Schooling.” He included
the paper as a chapter in his 2002 book, Bridging
Multiculturalism and Liberalism in Education.
As dry and academic as that seems, Reich’s
new children’s “right” has
attracted the notice of America’s education
elite. “Reich’s material is being
read and referenced,” reported Home
Education Magazine News & Commentary recently. “He
has the ear of the media.”
In his writings, Reich proposes that homeschooling
should be monitored by the state to ensure
that parents teach their children beliefs and
lifestyles that they may oppose — that
parents may even believe to be evil.
One lawsuit brought to the right court — the
9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco,
for instance, (famous for declaring the Pledge
of Allegiance unconstitutional) — could
allow a judge to rule that Professor Reich
is right, that children do have a right to
learn beliefs and behaviors opposed to those
of their parents. And if the parents refuse
to teach them such, then the court may order
them to secure their children’s “rights” by
sending them to public school.
“We see that danger,” says Thomas
Washburne, J.D., of the Home School Legal Defense
Fund. “You might see it come up in a
case where homeschooling parents demonstrably
failed to educate a child. Some advocacy group
might file a suit and try to mount a case for
the child. They might claim the child has this
right Reich has identified, and the judge might
agree.”
In a recent Amazon.com reader review of Reich’s
book, the reviewer declared, “The leading
goal of education is to develop autonomy in
children.”
Reich was quoted in Home Education Magazine
News & Commentary* as saying: “The
state has a role of promoting the independent
interest of children, including the right
to live a life other than that their parents
lead.”
These astounding statements — are we
to believe that until today’s hip educators
came along, children were doomed to be carbon
copies of their parents? — show that
Reich’s ideas have fallen upon fertile
ground.
Reich asserts, “Children are owed as
a matter of justice the capacity to lead lives—adopt
values and beliefs, pursue an occupation, endorse
new [sic] traditions—that are different
from those of their parents. Because the child
cannot … ensure the acquisition of such
capacities and the parents may be opposed … the
state must ensure it for them” (emphasis
added).
“It is at this point that we can begin
to see the implications, indeed danger, of
Reich’s ideas for home education,” Washburne
says.
Reich has also written, “Neither parents
nor the state can justly attempt to imprint
indelibly upon a child a set of values and
beliefs.”
Are you listening, Christian parents? Consider
Biblical injunctions, such as:
“And ye shall teach them (God’s
words) [to] your children … (Dt.
11:19), or “Train up a child in
the way he should go …”(Pr.
22:6). To obey these injunctions, in Reich’s
view, would be unjust.
Yet he argues that state interference in home
education may be necessary to secure the children’s religious
freedom: “[T]he state cannot relinquish
its regulatory role in education in cases where parents
invoke their religious beliefs as a bulwark
against secular authority” (emphasis
added). Translation: homeschooling is okay,
as long as you don’t teach your children
to be Christians.
“What Reich is doing,” Washburne
says, “is setting an academic framework
by which an activist judge might rule in favor
of heavy restrictions on home education.”
What is the purpose of Reich’s proposals?
Says Washburne, “The education elite
sees homeschoolers as traditional moralists,
raising their children to be traditional moralists.
They teach their children truth — truth
that the elite doesn’t believe in, doesn’t
recognize. It drives them crazy that they can’t
get at these homeschooled children.”
For many parents, the whole point of homeschooling
is to get their children out of the public
schools and away from corrupt ideas and values.
Now Reich proposes that these corrupt ideas
be brought into the home by the parents themselves — or
else.
“It’s been quiet so far this year,” Washburne
says, “but Reich’s ideas are out
there. We’re waiting to see if anyone
tries to implement them.”
Perhaps Christian parents ought to start planning
what they will do if an activist judge rules
that their children have a “right” to
be taught Practical Paganism 101. From the
view of this writer, it’s only a matter
of time before such an answer will be needed.
For more information, contact the Home School
Legal Defense Fund, (540) 338-5600.
* In an earlier version of
this web article, Chalcedon incorrectly attributed
to Home Education Magazine News and Commentary
its quote of Rob Reich. Their intent was,
like ours, to alert Christians to the danger
of Reich's position. We apologize for the
error.
Lee Duigon is a businessman and free lance
writer from New Jersey.
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