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Tracey Muir; Bethany Muir; David Hicks; Kim Beasy; Carol Murphy – Cogent Education, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in interruptions to social, economic, cultural, and educational life, with social distancing measures and well-being concerns leading to widespread restrictions to everyday activities. When COVID-19 first made an impact in 2020, many schools across Australia were closed entirely or provided limited access.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Elementary School Students
Karademir, Abdulhamit – International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2021
We are going through hard times that remind us that good health is the most important thing in life. The COVID-19 pandemic has immensely affected everybody. Measures taken by all countries, including Turkey, to prevent the spread of the coronavirus have deprived students (from preschool to university) of face-to-face education. While the pandemic…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Childrens Attitudes, Parent Attitudes
Guterman, Oz; Neuman, Ari – International Review of Education, 2017
Homeschooling is an alternative to conventional education in many countries all over the world, though legal regulations vary. This article examines why parents opt for homeschooling. The large body of research on the topic (especially from the United States) points to a variety of reasons for making the choice to homeschool. The most common…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Foreign Countries, Mixed Methods Research, Parent Student Relationship
Parczewska, Teresa – Education 3-13, 2021
The aim of the research project is to present parents' perceptions and experiences related to home education during the coronavirus pandemic, and the ways of coping with difficult situations, taking into account sociodemographic factors. At the end of March and beginning of April this year, a survey was conducted on a group of 278 parents living…
Descriptors: Coping, Stress Variables, Children, Parents as Teachers
Donmus Kaya, Vildan; Eroglu, Mehmet – Journal of Educational Technology and Online Learning, 2021
The study aims to examine parents' opinions about Emergency Remote Education (ERE) during the pandemic and the feasibility of home-schooling in Turkey. The study uses a causal-comparative model. 654 parents took part in the study. ERE for Homeschooling Questionnaire developed by researchers is used to collect the data. Descriptive statistics,…
Descriptors: Emergency Programs, Distance Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Delès, Romain – European Educational Research Journal, 2021
The period of confinement in the spring of 2020 is of great interest in highlighting the parental work of educational support. While parental support is usually more diffuse, and is secondary in relation to what is done at school, occurring at different moments of daily life, home schooling during lockdown revealed new ways of helping and framing…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Parent Participation, Parent Student Relationship, Home Schooling

Hancock, Roger – British Educational Research Journal, 1998
Describes an evaluation of the Parental Involvement in the Core Curriculum (PICC) Project that developed home-school practice in the curriculum at three London (England) schools. Suggests that teachers need to establish feasible initiatives for parental involvement. Concludes that teachers need more preservice and inservice support in order to set…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, Core Curriculum, Foreign Countries
Williams, David D.; And Others – 1984
This paper presents selected results of some initial attempts to describe and understand the home school phenomenon. Two types of research activities investigating the nature of family curricula are reviewed: (1) informal descriptions of home schools and their participants' reflections as already published, and (2) several case studies of families…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Home Schooling, Nontraditional Education, Parent Responsibility

Seuffert, Virginia – Policy Review, 1990
Discusses the history and advantages of home schooling. Reviews available curricula. Emphasizes immediate feedback, character development shaped by family values and religious beliefs, and low per-pupil costs. (FMW)
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Elementary Secondary Education, Home Schooling, Nontraditional Education

Charlton, Kenneth – History of Education, 1994
Asserts that parents, especially mothers, were expected to assume responsibility for the early education of children in preindustrial England. Discusses the role that mothers played regarding education at home or through church-related agencies. Concludes that women accepted the responsibility of providing for the education of children. (CFR)
Descriptors: Children, Educational History, European History, Family (Sociological Unit)
Chatham-Carpenter, April D. – 1992
Noting the lack of basic information necessary to begin to make conclusions about a home schooled child's social contacts, a study investigated the social networks of home vs. public schooled children (with a child's "social network" defined as all of the people who interact on a regular basis with the child at least once a month). The…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Communication Research, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education
Williams, Lawrence T. – 1991
A nationwide sample of home-schooling parents and their children was surveyed in a study of: (1) the characteristics of home-schooling families; (2) variations in instructional approaches used by home-schooling parents; and (3) the possible relation of creativity of home-schooled children to differences in family characteristics or instructional…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Secondary Education, Family Characteristics, Home Schooling

Mayberry, Maralee; Knowles, J. Gary – Urban Review, 1989
Examines parents who teach their children at home. While families have complex motives for home schooling, a common factor is parents' desire to maintain or further develop family unity, and to resist the effects of urbanization and modernization on the family. Suggests benefits of home/public school partnerships. (AF)
Descriptors: Compulsory Education, Elementary Secondary Education, Family (Sociological Unit), Family School Relationship
Welner, Kariane Mari – 2002
When homeschooling parents discuss public schools, they often draw on their own notions of citizenship, and each parent's view of public schools is also likely influenced by his or her larger view of government's proper role in society. This article reports on a 3-year study designed to seek a better understanding of these issues. The study…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civil Liberties, Democratic Values, Elementary Secondary Education

Scott-Jones, Diane – Journal of Negro Education, 1987
Both high- and low-readiness low-income Black first graders may play an active role in their own learning. The greatest amount of didactic interactions occurred in the homes of the low-readiness children; however, their mothers appeared not to possess the skills they were trying to teach their children. (BJV)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Achievement, Black Mothers, Black Students
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