Otherwise Instructed: Issues in Education

I created this website as a permanent place for the articles I have written as a result of my research into educational topics, particularly as viewed through the lens of homeschooling.

My husband and I homeschooled our two children, now both in their twenties. I served on the boards of the Massachusetts Home Learning Association (mhla.org) and the National Home Education Network (nhen.org). Before homeschooling our children, I was a classroom teacher in both public and private schools. Since homeschooling, I have become even more interested in the process of learning and the role of schools in our society. The papers listed on this website are the result of two of my research projects.

The title of this website is inspired by the words "otherwise instructed," which have appeared since 1889 in the Massachusetts General Laws in the the compulsory attendance statute, Chapter 76 Section 1. As of today, the relevant provision states that while attendance at school is compulsory, "such attendance shall not be required of a child who is being otherwise instructed in a manner approved in advance by the superintendent or the school committee."

Nicky Hardenbergh
Massachusetts

email: nhbergh@comcast.net

 

Articles and Letters published in homeschooling publications. These are written from my personal perspective as a homeschooling parent and advocate.

 

Validity of high stakes standardized test requirements for homeschoolers: a psychometric analysis (.pdf copy of the 2008 paper)

From the paper:

In this paper, I demonstrate, through reference to the extensive psychometric literature, that the psychometric tool prescribed in current high stakes homeschool policies, a norm-referenced standardized test, is invalid for use in a high stakes testing policy. Norm-referenced test scores may not validly be used to determine if a student meets a given standard of performance.

I go on to examine another testing tool proposed by some policymakers: the state-specific high stakes criterion-referenced tests administered to public school students in every state. While theoretically valid for determining a standard of performance, such tests would be problematic for use in the homeschooling context. I end by reviewing the setting of cut points on high stakes tests, showing that, to a very large extent, the entire controversy of high stakes testing can be reduced to the question of the validity of the cut point.

After considering the psychometric evidence, I conclude that current and proposed high stakes standardized requirements for homeschoolers are baseless. Policies based on such requirements are a waste of taxpayer dollars and a needless imposition on homeschooling families.

Through the Lens of Homeschooling: A Response to Michael Apple and Rob Reich (.pdf copy of the September 2004 paper)

From the paper:

Michael Apple and Rob Reich speculate that the practice of homeschooling will have negative consequences for our society. Apple contends homeschooling contributes to the “withering” of our “very sense of public responsibility,” and Reich speaks of “the civic perils of homescholing.” Michael Apple is Professor of Curriculum and Instruction and Educational Policy Studies at the University of Wisconsin, and Rob Reich is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Ethics in Society at Stanford University. Both men were scheduled as participants in a panel discussion held at the 2004 Annual Meeting of the American Education Research Association. The session was entitled, "Educational Choice versus Civic Responsibility: Are Home Schoolers Embracing Their Responsibilities or Fleeing from Them?” I wrote this article in anticipation of their participation on that panel. The other two panel members were Scott Somerville, an attorney with the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), and Brian Ray, founder of the National Home Education Research Institute (NHERI).

A copy of this paper, with minor revisions, appeared in:

Homeschooling in full view -- a Reader
Edited by Bruce S. Cooper, Fordham University

Through the Lens (April 2004): The original version of this paper, the one prepared for distribution at the AERA panel, in .pdf version

 

This 2002 document, published by the National Home Education Network (NHEN), was written while I was Legislative Director at NHEN. The document represents a joint effort among several homeschoolers who were particularly interested in legislative issues.

Brunelle Amicus (1998)

In an amicus brief submitted to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, I argue that home visits to homeschooling families are not "essential" to evaluating home education and, therefore, cannot be required as a matter of course. The Supreme Judicial Court, in its decision, ruled against the mandatory home visits that the city of Lynn, Massachusetts had sought to require as a condition of homeschool approval.