Homeschool: An American History

Author:   M. Gaither
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   2008 ed.
ISBN:  

9780230606005


Pages:   273
Publication Date:   15 June 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Homeschool: An American History


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Full Product Details

Author:   M. Gaither
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   2008 ed.
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.364kg
ISBN:  

9780230606005


ISBN 10:   0230606008
Pages:   273
Publication Date:   15 June 2008
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

The Family State, 1600-1776 * The Family Nation: 1776-1860 * The Eclipse of the Fireside, 1865-1930 * Why Homeschooling Happened, 1945-1990 * Three Homeschooling Pioneers * The Changing of the Guard, 1983-1998 * Making it Legal * Homeschooling and the Return of Domestic Education, 1998-2008

Reviews

<p> This is a thoughtful, capacious account of what is surely among the most important educational movements of our time.&nbsp;Home education is not only or even primarily about the quality of children's academic instruction.&nbsp;It illuminates far larger problems in American society: &nbsp;the contradiction between home and work for contemporary mothers;&nbsp;disagreements about the proper place&nbsp;of religion in civic and political life; and&nbsp;the puzzle of&nbsp;cultural difference and its ethical accommodation in&nbsp;formal&nbsp;organizations of&nbsp;all kinds.&nbsp;Gaither understands all of this&nbsp;and makes it clear by locating home education within the broad coordinates&nbsp;of U.S. cultural history. --Mitchell L. Stevens, New York University; Author of Kingdom of Children <p> Set within the broad contours of educational, religious, political, cultural, and economic history, Homeschool describes in rich detail home-based education in early America and the forces a


"""This is a thoughtful, capacious account of what is surely among the most important educational movements of our time. Home education is not only or even primarily about the quality of children's academic instruction. It illuminates far larger problems in American society: the contradiction between home and work for contemporary mothers; disagreements about the proper place of religion in civic and political life; and the puzzle of cultural difference and its ethical accommodation in formal organizations of all kinds. Gaither understands all of this and makes it clear by locating home education within the broad coordinates of U.S. cultural history.""--Mitchell L. Stevens, New York University; Author of ""Kingdom"""" of Children"" ""Set within the broad contours of educational, religious, political, cultural, and economic history, ""Homeschool ""describes in rich detail home-based education in early America and the forces and individuals that have shaped the modern homeschool movement. General readers and scholars alike will find this finely crafted, informative, and at times provocative work an invaluable resource for understanding why a growing number of parents are choosing to teach their children at home.""--James C. Carper, University of South Carolina ""While compelling quantitative research on homeschooling remains rare, quality scholarship in this area does exist. The finest example of such work is Milton Gaither's ""Homeschool: An American History."" Besides being the best historical analysis available, Gaither's text deserves recognition as the most thoroughly researched, comprehensive look at the topic altogether."" --Robert Kuzman, ""Books & Culture"""


""This is a thoughtful, capacious account of what is surely among the most important educational movements of our time. Home education is not only or even primarily about the quality of children's academic instruction. It illuminates far larger problems in American society: the contradiction between home and work for contemporary mothers; disagreements about the proper place of religion in civic and political life; and the puzzle of cultural difference and its ethical accommodation in formal organizations of all kinds. Gaither understands all of this and makes it clear by locating home education within the broad coordinates of U.S. cultural history.""--Mitchell L. Stevens, New York University; Author of ""Kingdom"""" of Children"" ""Set within the broad contours of educational, religious, political, cultural, and economic history, ""Homeschool ""describes in rich detail home-based education in early America and the forces and individuals that have shaped the modern homeschool movement. General readers and scholars alike will find this finely crafted, informative, and at times provocative work an invaluable resource for understanding why a growing number of parents are choosing to teach their children at home.""--James C. Carper, University of South Carolina ""While compelling quantitative research on homeschooling remains rare, quality scholarship in this area does exist. The finest example of such work is Milton Gaither's ""Homeschool: An American History."" Besides being the best historical analysis available, Gaither's text deserves recognition as the most thoroughly researched, comprehensive look at the topic altogether."" --Robert Kuzman, ""Books & Culture""


This is a thoughtful, capacious account of what is surely among the most important educational movements of our time. Home education is not only or even primarily about the quality of children's academic instruction. It illuminates far larger problems in American society: the contradiction between home and work for contemporary mothers; disagreements about the proper place of religion in civic and political life; and the puzzle of cultural difference and its ethical accommodation in formal organizations of all kinds. Gaither understands all of this and makes it clear by locating home education within the broad coordinates of U.S. cultural history. --Mitchell L. Stevens, New York University; Author of Kingdom of Children Set within the broad contours of educational, religious, political, cultural, and economic history, Homeschool describes in rich detail home-based education in early America and the forces and individuals that have shaped the modern homeschool movement. General readers and scholars alike will find this finely crafted, informative, and at times provocative work an invaluable resource for understanding why a growing number of parents are choosing to teach their children at home. --James C. Carper, University of South Carolina While compelling quantitative research on homeschooling remains rare, quality scholarship in this area does exist. The finest example of such work is Milton Gaither's Homeschool: An American History. Besides being the best historical analysis available, Gaither's text deserves recognition as the most thoroughly researched, comprehensive look at the topic altogether. --Robert Kuzman, Books & Culture


Author Information

Milton Gaither is Professor of Education at Messiah College, USA.

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