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Kingdom of Children : Culture and Controversy in the Homeschooling Movement
Kingdom of Children : Culture and Controversy in the Homeschooling Movement
Author: Stevens, Mitchell L.
Edition/Copyright: 2001
ISBN: 0-691-11468-4
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Type: Paperback
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Review
Summary
Table of Contents
 
  Review

"Stevens spent ten years interviewing home-schooling families, watching them teach, pitching tents at their summer camps, hanging out at their conferences, and reading their publications. He has written a careful, intelligent book"

--Margaret Talbot, Atlantic Monthly




"In the press and on television, home-schoolers are portrayed mainly as white Americans of strong Christian background, most of whom are right-wing fundamentalists. Stevens's study confirms this generic picture, yet his study helps us go beyond it. . . The intellectual origins of home-schooling are surprisingly nonsectarian."

--Howard Gardner, New York Review of Books




"Kingdom of Children is about the grown-ups behind the not-so peaceful movement...As Stevens makes clear, those drawn to home schooling tend to be a stronger-willed, contentious lot, and removing them from the public school system doesn?t make them less so."

--Rebecca Jones, American School Board Journal




"For anyone interested in home schooling, this is the book to read."

--Choice





Publisher Web Site, October, 2003

 
  Summary

More than one million American children are schooled by their parents. As their ranks grow, home schoolers are making headlines by winning national spelling bees and excelling at elite universities. The few studies conducted suggest that homeschooled children are academically successful and remarkably well socialized. Yet we still know little about this alternative to one of society's most fundamental institutions. Beyond a vague notion of children reading around the kitchen table, we don't know what home schooling looks like from the inside.

Sociologist Mitchell Stevens goes behind the scenes of the homeschool movement and into the homes and meetings of home schoolers. What he finds are two very different kinds of home education--one rooted in the liberal alternative school movement of the 1960s and 1970s and one stemming from the Christian day school movement of the same era. Stevens explains how this dual history shapes the meaning and practice of home schooling today. In the process, he introduces us to an unlikely mix of parents (including fundamentalist Protestants, pagans, naturalists, and educational radicals) and notes the core values on which they agree: the sanctity of childhood and the primacy of family in the face of a highly competitive, bureaucratized society.

Kingdom of Children aptly places home schoolers within longer traditions of American social activism. It reveals that home schooling is not a random collection of individuals but an elaborate social movement with its own celebrities, networks, and characteristic lifeways. Stevens shows how home schoolers have built their philosophical and religious convictions into the practical structure of the cause, and documents the political consequences of their success at doing so.

Ultimately, the history of home schooling serves as a parable about the organizational strategies of the progressive left and the religious right since the 1960s.Kingdom of Children shows what happens when progressive ideals meet conventional politics, demonstrates the extraordinary political capacity of conservative Protestantism, and explains the subtle ways in which cultural sensibility shapes social movement outcomes more generally.

 
  Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction

Chapter One: Inside Home Educatin
Chapter Two: From Parents to Teachers
Chapter Three: Natural Mothers, Godly Women
Chapter Four: Authority and Diversity
Chapter Five: Politics
Chapter Six: Nurturing the Expanded Self

Notes
Index

 

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