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Education and Urban Society
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The Ins and Outs of Homeschooling

The Determinants of Parental Motivations and Student Achievement

Ed Collom

University of Southern Maine, collom{at}usm.maine.edu

This research investigates two major aspects of homeschooling. Factors determining parental motivations to homeschool and the determinants of the student achievement of home-educated children are identified. Original survey data from an organized group of homeschoolers is analyzed. Regression models are employed to predict parents’ motivations and their students’ standardized test achievement. Four sets of homeschooling motivations are identified. Academic and pedagogical concerns are most important, and it appears that the religious base of the movement is subsiding. Several major demographic variables have no impact upon parental motivations, indicating that this is a diverse group. Parents’ educational attainment and political identification are consistent predictors of their students’ achievement. Race and class—the two major divides in public education—are not significant determinants of standardized test achievement, suggesting that homeschooling is efficacious. It is concluded that homeschoolers are a heterogeneous population with varying and overlapping motivations.

Key Words: homeschooling • parental motivations • student achievement

Education and Urban Society, Vol. 37, No. 3, 307-335 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0013124504274190


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