Homeschool graduations make The New York Times
At the Miami Zoo, 26 homeschooled students walked onstage to receive their diploma in the first South Florida homeschool graduation, The New York Times reported.
The ceremony included brief speeches by organizer Grace Rodriguez and a few students, the crucial handshake photo, and the tossing of caps into the air.
Although some of the students shrugged off the graduation, the parents told the Times that it was a big deal to them.
“I imagined [my daughter] walking across the stage just like I did at my graduation, and I didn’t want her to feel like she’d missed out on something,” said Brenda Orr.
Before, graduation ceremonies mainly took place in homes or churches. With the growth of homeschool support groups and co-ops, more students are choosing group graduations, said Sonnie Woodruff, a Cincinnati homeschooling mother.
Homeschooling is becoming more mainstream: About 2 million children—or 3 percent of the school-age population—are homeschooled, up from 850,000 in 1999, the Times reports. This has led to more homeschooling families joining co-ops that provide specialized classes, sports teams, science labs, and field trips.
Other statewide homeschool groups are starting to hold graduations at their annual conventions, the Times reported. Over Memorial Day weekend, the Florida Parent Educator Association’s convention threw a dance, a graduation ceremony where the governor spoke, and a post-graduation luncheon for 259 graduates.
In Richmond, Va., the Home Educators Association of Virginia graduated 206 students. Parents and graduates lined up on opposite sides of the stage with the parents giving their children diplomas and the graduates handing their parents roses.
Jonathan Blackstone, a Miami homeschool graduate, felt the graduation let him share a cultural milestone: “I graduated, just like everybody else.”

















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back to top13 Comments to “Homeschool graduations make The New York Times”
Cool.
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And their GPAs were? SAT or ACT scores?
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And more importantly what curriculum package did they use? We like SonLight
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This is not new news. I was in a homeschool formal graduation at Oglethorpe University (Atlanta) back in 1998. We walks with caps and gowns and were presented with our diplomas by the the Superintendent Kathy Cox of the GA state department of education.
What bucket of sand has your head been in NYT?
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sorry for the grammar mistakes – this is not indicative of my skill, merely my speed and consternation that this is supposedly a “new” idea.
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Too bad the liberal media would never cover something like this!
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Speaking of homeschooling, check this out. It’s about a judge in Mississippi who decided on his own authority to order a list be submitted to him of all the homeschooling families in his district.
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John is right. Home school graduation are nothing new.
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Yes, it is nothing new, but back then, most people thought it would either die out or only involve a few strange families. The growth of the homeschooling movement is shocking to some. Of course, there are many different reasons to homeschool and families run the gamut from very conservative to ultra-liberal. The affect on our country will be interesting to observe, since it was the public schools that brought a lot of unity to the country, whereas homeschooling brings a lot of diversity in values and ideas.
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SawGunner, what does their test scores matter to you? Or what curiculum they use? My mother is letting me pick and chose my junior year classes from a mixture of college classes and set curriculum, so is it really even needed?
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It used to be that we had local school districts run by parents who were directly involved in their children’s education. In the days of the one-room school house, parents set the standards, hired and fired the teachers and also did a good part of the educational tasks themselves.
Today’s home-schooling groups do much the same thing, but on a much higher and more sophisticated level that, by the quality of the students they produce (at a fraction of the cost), puts most public schools to shame. These home-schooling groups are the labs, so to speak, that prove local parental involvement and control is far superior to anything that the National Education Association and the Federal Department of Education ever even thought about.
If we got rid of the NEA, the Federal Department of Education, and all the State agencies fouling up our schools, concerned parents would step up and fill the gap, as home-schoolers have done, and improve our whole educational system rather quickly and for a lot less money.
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“it was the public schools that brought a lot of unity to the country, whereas homeschooling brings a lot of diversity in values and ideas.”
How does it benefit our country to have an enormous body of citizens who are “unified” in their tremendous ignorance? They can neither speak nor write properly, and have no idea what the Constitution does or even is! Public school graduates have spent their years in learning based on the lowest common denominator, using curriculum that has been intentionally corrupted by Communist scum like Van Jones and Bill Ayers.
The “diversity” of homeschoolers reflects the truth (that USED to be taught) that we live in “The Great American Melting Pot.” This is a country made up of different people with different ideas, and that is what makes us great! The power of the Constitution was in the fact that the men who created and signed it were just such a diverse crowd, contrary to what you learned in public school!
PS – You can see the results of home schooling vs public schooling right now, just by observing which kids go on to become Nuclear Engineers (Art Robinson’s children), and which ones pimp-walk around the neighborhood with their pants around their ankles.
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@ D. Rolling Kearney
) Loving it!
I use the Robinson’s curriculum for my kids
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