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Can homeschoolers be involved in sports?
Volume 43, Program 9
2/13/2003
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Can homeschooled children play sports? Join us today on Home School Heartbeat, as Michael Farris, explains that it's not hard to find sports activities for home taught students.

    Mike:

    Most parents welcome sports competition as a good outlet for their child physically and socially. I'm one of those pro-sports parents.

    So how do homeschool parents offer sports opportunities to their children if they don't attend an institutional school? First, we would need to remember that most sports activities for younger children are organized independently of the public schools. Community leagues for baseball, softball, soccer, and football, just to name a few, generally are organized by park and recreation departments or independent associations like Little League. At the high school level, however, most sports do shift to the schools for the most serious sports experiences.

    There are three basic sports alternatives for homeschool high school students. A small but growing number of states have enacted laws which require local school districts to allow homeschoolers to join their sports teams. A second alternative is one my own family uses. My 17-year-old daughter, Katie, plays basketball, softball and track for a Christian high school. A final alternative is now very small, but growing rapidly. Homeschoolers in some metropolitan regions are creating their own teams that normally play in private school leagues. More and more often homeschoolers are finding they do not have to give up the advantages of home education to gain high school sports experience. I'm Michael Farris.

We've put together a great pamphlet called Home Schooling Works. We have a free copy reserved just for you. Call us toll-free at 866-338-8614. That's 866-338-8614.


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Home Schooling Works

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Dr. Lawrence M. Rudner

20,760 student achievement test scores and their family demographics make this the largest study of home education to date! Results demonstrate that home schooled students are doing exceptionally well and provide an informative portrait of America’s modern home education movement. Conducted by Dr. Lawrence M. Rudner, Director of the ERIC Clearinghouse on Assessment and Evaluation.

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