With States Hands-Off, Homeschooling Takes Off |

With States Hands-Off, Homeschooling Takes Off |

South Dakota epitomizes the rapid growth of homeschooling in America. Guided by the principle that parents, not the government, have the right to determine what and how their kids are taught, homeschooling families have overturned existing rules and batted down attempts over the last decade to impose new ones in many states, including South Dakota. 

What’s left in much of the United States today is essentially an honor system in which parents are expected to do a good job without much input or oversight.  The rollback of regulations, coupled with the ill effects of remote learning during the pandemic, have boosted the number of families opting out of public schools in favor of educating their kids at home.  

Reflecting a national trend, the number of children homeschooled in South Dakota rose more than 20{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} in both of the last two school years. 

Homeschoolers in the Mount Rushmore state advocated for a new law that strips away key pieces of the state’s oversight and eases the way for parents leave public schools.  Last year Senate Bill 177 ended the requirement that parents provide annual notice to a district of their intent to homeschool their child. More significantly, homeschool students no longer must take standardized tests, as public schoolers do, or face possible intervention by the school board if they fail. 

“It was a big win for parental rights,” says Dan Beasley, then a staff attorney at the influential Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), which helped craft and pass the legislation. “It cut out unnecessary regulation and streamlined the process so parents can invest their time in providing the best education they can for their children.” 

This freedom stands in contrast to outraged parents who feel powerless over how their kids are taught in public schools. In high-pitched battles at school board meetings, some take aim at the easing of admissions standards, others at what they see as the promotion of critical race theory and transgender rights, and still others at segregated classrooms and the presence of police officers on campus. And almost everyone is concerned with the sharp decline in already low reading and math scores of students in nearly every state during the pandemic, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress released in late October.  

For a growing number of parents, homeschooling is the answer to the institutional barriers to the education they believe in.  Beyond requirements that homeschooling parents teach a few core subjects like math and English, they are free to pick the content.  
 
American history, for example, can be all about the glory of the Founding Fathers and the prosperity of free markets, or the oppression of Native Americans and people of color and the struggle for equality. For many homeschoolers, history is taught through a Christian lens, while others follow a standard public school curriculum.  

Parents’ Rights vs. State Control 

The push to deregulate homeschooling raises difficult questions about how to balance the rights of parents to educate children as they see fit with the responsibility of the state to provide educational opportunity – and protect kids when things go wrong. While U.S. courts have stood behind parental rights, with the caveat that states have the authority to impose reasonable regulations to ensure students are educated, European countries lean the other way. To safeguard children, they have imposed much more stringent oversight of home schools.  
 
Cases of child abuse and academic neglect in home schools are a real concern, especially as the guardrails are removed. Most cases of mistreatment are discovered and reported by teachers in public schools, a protection that doesn’t help homeschooled children. Homeschool alumni at the Coalition for Responsible Home Education (CRHE) and academic researchers have documented hundreds of examples of harm to children, many leading to criminal charges, ranging from fatalities and sexual abuse to poor instruction from parents who can’t or don’t teach.  

But calls by CRHE and others for more protections don’t get much traction in the United States. In March, after Maryland lawmaker Sheila Ruth introduced a bill to create a homeschool advisory council to collect information from homeschooling parents and advise state officials, she was inundated with calls and emails. A few were so nasty and threatening that her office called the police. In a Facebook post, Ruth promised the homeschool advocates that she would let the bill die and pleaded with them to stand down. 

Virginia-based HSLDA has spearheaded the opposition to regulations in court and legislative chambers, often in collaboration with local organizations. The group helped defeat many requirements, including that families provide notification of their intent to homeschool in Illinois, that students take standardized tests in South Carolina, and that home schools submit to visits to ensure the safety of children after one starved to death in Iowa, according to an Arizona Law Review article by Elizabeth Bartholet, a Harvard Law emeritus professor.  

“There is a significant segment of homeschooled children who are at serious risk for maltreatment,” Bartholet says. “And no homeschooled children have safeguards to protect them since they are not seen by teachers. That seems deeply wrong to me.”  
 
Homeschool advocates don’t face much political opposition, at least not yet. That may soon change. Teachers’ unions, for one, have an obvious motivation to become adversarial: School districts have been losing students, and thus funding, at historic rates during the pandemic, and some of those kids are going to home schools.  
 
The National Education Association, the nation’s largest professional union, issued a resolution in 2021 essentially opposing homeschooling. It said home schools “cannot provide the student with a comprehensive education experience” and called for regulations that force them to basically duplicate public schooling at home. Other than that, NEA has been curiously silent about homeschooling and isn’t seen as much of an opponent by HSLDA. 
 
“HSLDA has been enormously influential,” says Robert Kunzman, an authority on homeschooling at Indiana University. “They have been able to mobilize a lot of legal resources and grassroots organizations to push back on regulations.” 

A Wide Spectrum of Rules

Just a handful of states, like Colorado and New York, have maintained a comprehensive set of rules, according to CRHE. These states require the teaching of a full list of subjects without dictating the actual content of courses. They also mandate the total annual hours of instruction and formal assessments like standardized tests in an effort to make home schools accountable. In New York, districts can intervene, with the threat of putting the home school on probation, if the student performs poorly. 

Most states, such as Texas and Idaho, are much more laissez-faire. They require a short list of subjects be taught but no assessments. Texas is also among a dozen states where parents don’t have to tell the school district that they are homeschooling.  
 
In half a dozen states, like Mississippi and Utah, there are no subject, time, or assessment requirements, according to CRHE. Parents are completely free to do as they wish. 

As states have eased requirements for parents, the number of homeschooled students has expanded significantly, from an estimated 850,000 in 1999 to about 1.7 million in 2016, or about 3.3{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of the school-age population, according to the National Center for Educational Statistics. While experts agree that homeschooling grew quickly during the pandemic and will probably continue to do so but at a slower pace, there is no reliable national data, with some estimates that exceed 3 million students in 2021 considered to be inflated. 

Homeschooling took off in the 1960s, fueled by religion and ideology. Christian conservatives wanted to imbue their children with religious doctrine away from the temptations of public schools, and progressive anti-institutionalists sought to nurture the kind of free thinking in their offspring that rote education stifled. 

In recent years a more diverse group of families, including a notable percentage of black parents, have turned to homeschooling for more practical concerns: to escape poor performing public schools, unsafe campuses, bullying, progressive ideology, and racism. 

At the same time, public schools, aiming to retain at least a limited grip on homeschooled students, are increasingly supporting them with everything from art and music classes to athletics and online education tools. What has emerged is a hybrid model in which students toggle back and forth between home and public schools. For instance, some students start their education at home and then enter public schools in their mid-teens to take more advanced classes that parents can’t teach.  
 
Whatever the motive for homeschooling, deregulation has made it a much easier choice for parents.  
 
“The movement to reduce regulatory barriers has definitely opened up homeschooling to growth for people from all socio-economic walks of life,” says Brian Ray, co-founder of the National Home Education Research Institute and a longtime advocate. “I don’t think there’s any doubt about that.” 

A Success Story in Missouri 

In Missouri, Kim Quon had only a few rules to abide by when she decided to homeschool her two kids so they could learn about Christian faith from her point of view. In her in St. Louis County home, she had to provide 1,000 hours of instruction a year, with 600 of those hours in key subjects like math and English, and keep a written log of the work completed, according to the state’s homeschool law. 

Otherwise, Missouri, like most states, takes a mostly hands-off approach. It doesn’t test the students and has no way of knowing if parents are doing a bad job of teaching them unless a report of educational neglect is filed, in which case the Department of Social Services may investigate. A spokesperson declined to say whether educational neglect is a concern in Missouri and said the department doesn’t release data on the number of complaints it receives. 

“There have been claims of educational neglect, but the vast majority are not legit,” Quon says. “Most homeschool parents take their job very seriously.” 

Quon certainly did. After finishing the required classes, her children had a lot of time left in the day to explore their own interests, which is one of the biggest benefits of homeschooling. The enormous workload of educating two children was made easier for Quon by relying on curricula created by homeschool groups, online resources, and community college for advanced math classes. 

“I’m not a college graduate,” Quon says. “So you don’t have to be a brainy person to homeschool your kids because there are so many resources and people available to help.” 
 
Homeschooling prepared both of her children for college. They went to the University of Missouri in St. Louis and did well, like most homeschoolers who seek post-secondary degrees. Her son studied anthropology and works at the Heritage Museum in St. Charles County. Her daughter earned a degree in biology and works at the St. Louis Aquarium. 

After homeschooling her kids, Quon was recruited by Families for Home Education, a statewide advocacy group, to direct its operation in the greater St. Louis region. While FHE has 1,200 members, its network of 10,000 to 20,000 supporters has been quickly mobilized to bombard lawmakers with calls and emails to defeat attempts to place additional rules on homeschooling that were first established in Missouri in the mid-1980s. There are grassroots groups like FHE in every state. 

FHE has successfully opposed proposals to make students start school at age five rather than the current seven. The group is now struggling to change a Missouri scholarship program that would force homeschooled students to take standardized tests and allow a review of their educational records, which FHE considers an unnecessary government intrusion. 
 

“Lawmakers pretty much leave us alone,” Quon says. “I would like to think it’s because of our presence as a lobbyist, and that we built those relationships over the years.”

Educational Neglect 

Quon’s dedication is common among homeschoolers, but what’s less understood is the extent of educational neglect since most states don’t collect assessment results. From his perch at Indiana University, Robert Kunzman has an anecdotal view of the problem after spending hundreds of hours with dozens of families in many states observing their homeschooling practices.  

The professor has been impressed with some home instruction – highly structured and directed lessons as well as those allowing exploration and creativity – but he has also witnessed serious problems: families who focus almost exclusively on a small subset of subjects they are comfortable with; a teenager who still counts on his fingers to do math; a mom who doesn’t know how to help her daughter sound out words, creating much frustration between them; and a parent who considers an episode of Little House on the Prairie to be a history lesson.  

“These are the kinds of things that are certainly going on,” says Kunzman, who wrote a book on Christian homeschooling. “It’s a small percentage of homeschoolers, perhaps less than a quarter, in which children’s educational interests are being profoundly neglected.” 

Homeschool advocates tend to dismiss this concern. While a small number of parents may not do a good job educating their children, Quon says, the same can be said of teachers in public schools, where many students graduate with skills far behind what’s expected of a 12th grader, or drop out. 

Brian Ray, the influential researcher embraced by the homeschool movement, also says he isn’t too worried about educational neglect. A Ph.D. in science education and the father of eight homeschooled children, Ray points his and other studies purporting to show that homeschoolers significantly outperform public school students on standardized tests. In his view, the research supports his position that government oversight of homeschooling is unnecessary.  

But Kunzman and other scholars have criticized the papers as advocacy masquerading as research. They point out that some of the studies have been designed and funded by HSLDA and say that they have methodological limitations. 

In Ray’s 2010 national study of achievement on standardized tests, for instance, homeschoolers who volunteered scored in the 86th percentile, well above the 50th percentile national mean. 

But the homeschoolers in this study, and in others like it, were an unrepresentative and privileged group: almost entirely white (97{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}) and raised by married parents (98{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}) with college degrees (64{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}). These traits are strongly associated with high academic achievement and don’t reflect the much more diverse and less educated population of public school parents.  

Ray waves off this issue, saying these traits don’t have much of an impact on home school performance, but researchers still question his results.
 
“The idea that homeschool students do better on standardized tests has been repeated so many times by advocates and the media that legislators take it at face value and it is now accepted common knowledge,” says Kunzman, who cofounded the International Center for Home Education Research to support non-biased studies. 

Calls for Regulation 

CRHE and Harvard’s Bartholet don’t buy Ray’s findings. They are advocating for what they consider reasonable protections for children. They say parents need to tell districts if they are homeschooling each year; they should cover the same subjects as public schools; and students should be assessed to make sure they are making progress. 

“We get messages every week from people around the country who know a homeschool child who is being educationally neglected,” says Chelsea McCracken, CRHE’s research director. “Where there is no annual notification, subject requirements, and assessments, there is no way for states to ensure that children’s rights are protected.”  

Kunzman sees such reforms as politically untenable. He advocates for a more modest approach: Require homeschoolers to take a basic skills test in literacy and numeracy. That’s it. The proposal might face less resistance since parents generally share a common belief that, despite religious and political differences, every child should learn how to read and do some math. Kunzman’s test would identify the students who are not learning so they could get some help. 

Ray thinks all the proposals for regulation are nonsense. Just look at public schools. “For many decades public schools have had regulations including certified teachers and testing,” Ray says. “And we have children who are illiterate and can’t do basic math. All the testing schools do every year doesn’t guarantee anything.” 

But Ray and Kunzman do agree on one thing – homeschooling will continue to expand.  

New elementary school honors the Kumeyaay nation

New elementary school honors the Kumeyaay nation

San Diego Unified University District officially opened its latest elementary faculty, Thursday.

Nipaquay Elementary in Mission Valley was named in honor of the indigenous people today who 1st lived on the land in which it now sits.

“We strived to depict the real truth of the unique men and women of this territory,” explained Olympia Beltran who is Indigenous American and a member of the San Diego Human Relations Fee. She was also portion of the committee that assisted the school district occur up with a identify for the campus.

Nipaquay translated usually means “a 2nd house.” The land together the San Diego River belonged to the Kumeyaay country for 600 generations in advance of Europeans colonized the area.

The naming committee considered the background and the long run of learners who will go as a result of the campus.

“They feel at ease right here. They truly feel it is a area to increase. They master and examine and sense that this educational place is their other property,” explained Beltran.

San Diego Unified University Board trustees began talking about a new faculty in the Civita neighborhood of Mission Valley back again in 2008. An environmental effects examine preceded a long time of setting up and approvals. A ribbon-cutting ceremony, Thursday, officially opened the school to learners in universal TK by second quality. Each individual calendar year a quality stage will be extra until eventually there is a 5th-quality class.

IMG_9449.jpg

Janele Thornton reads to her learners in a mixture of very first and next-grade classes at the new Nipaquay Elementary in Mission Valley on Nov. 3, 2022.

Nipaquay has hybrid school rooms that are indoor and out of doors learning areas, there’s a collaborative library and devoted playgrounds designed for exploration and discovering.

There is an educational concentration on environmental science and science, technology, engineering, the arts and arithmetic (STEAM), which is supported by a sustainable style and design that incorporates solar electrical power and electrical power performance.

Kerly Sanchez-Silva and her husband, Mario Silva, enrolled their 4-12 months-old, Othnair, this tumble. The loved ones speaks Spanish, Portuguese and English. The Silvas are fully commited to diversity, inclusion and the mission of their new historical past-creating college.

“Why not have your 2nd dwelling be one thing particular? Somewhere you can find out and develop into an individual who can modify the long run,” Sanchez-Silva mentioned.

IMG_9455.jpg

Mario Silva with his son Othnair, 4, and spouse Kerly Sanchez-Silva exterior the TK classroom at Nipaquay Elementary School on Nov. 3, 2022.

Her spouse agreed, “This school did get a massive part in honoring Native American heritage, the record of men and women from the previous, as well as integrating what is heading to come about in the future,” Silva claimed. “It teaches the youngsters the importance to know where they appear from so you can have an understanding of exactly where you are heading.”

Educational Consultants, Primary and Secondary Sales (Term Time) job with Oxford University Press

Educational Consultants, Primary and Secondary Sales (Term Time) job with Oxford University Press

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The Instruction Division delivers print and digital assets across Secondary, Main and Trade and Children’s marketplaces, the two for the Uk and for prospects around the globe. We are passionately committed to our mission to educate and inspire by means of ebook, board and display screen.

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 Ideally you will have some profits / customer company practical experience and are now seeking for the future action up. We will offer total gross sales and item education. You really should be a sturdy listener and have a purely natural means to have out a consultative income assembly, making sure you are gathering all appropriate details to properly account handle your shoppers. If you have knowledge of Primary or Secondary education and learning that would be a bonus, but not critical.

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Hong Kong’s Education Market – Trends and Opportunities

Hong Kong’s Education Market – Trends and Opportunities

Hong Kong’s education market, renowned for its diversity and excellence, is undergoing new developments as the city seeks to transform itself into a regional education hub for training talent in the Greater Bay Area. At the same time, the city has fostered the growth of a vibrant private education sector covering e-learning, private tutoring, and edtech. We look at the latest trends and opportunities for investors within the sector, as well as the government’s role in shaping the market’s development.


Hong Kong has been the center for education in Asia for many decades, home to a diverse and international student body and some of the world’s best universities. The city is adept at cultivating multiple generations of high-skilled talent, and today continues to place a huge amount of importance on educating its youth. 

The pandemic has accelerated trends toward digital and online learning, offering new growth opportunities for the host of new edtech and e-learning start-ups that support the city’s formal education system.  

In addition, the government is seeking to turn the city into a “regional education hub” for higher education by deepening collaboration with institutions on the Chinese mainland and making it the center for learning and talent cultivation in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA). 

In this article, we provide an overview of Hong Kong’s education market and discuss some of the new trends and opportunities arising within the sector. 

Overview of Hong Kong’s education market 

Hong Kong’s education landscape 

Hong Kong’s education system was based largely upon the British system until an overhaul in 2012 led to the Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE) replacing the Hong Kong Certificate of Education Examination (HKCEE), the latter modeled after the UK’s GCSEs and the UK-based A-Levels. 

Hong Kong has nine years of free compulsory education for children aged six to 15, covering six years of primary school and three years of junior secondary school. Kindergartens and childcare centers are only available for a fee and are normally provided for children aged three to six. All kindergartens in Hong Kong are therefore private and can be run as either a for-profit or non-profit institution. All kindergartens for children aged three to six are regulated by the Education Bureau, while kindergartens and childcare centers for children under the age of three are regulated by the Social Welfare Department.

Hong Kong’s Education Landscape in Figures

Number of kindergartens: 1,042
Enrolment: 155,956 

Number of primary schools: 591
Enrolment: 348,994 

Number of secondary schools: 508
Enrolment: 325,927 

Number of international schools: 54
Number of higher education institutes: 22 

Estimated government expenditure on education for the 2022/23 school year: HK$111.9 billion (US$14.3 billion)
Percentage of total estimated government expenditure: 13.8 percent 

Note: The above figures are the latest available. The number of institutions is from the 2021/22 school year; enrolment figures are as of September 15, 2022 for the 2022/23 school year. 

Source: Hong Kong Education Bureau

According to statistics from Hong Kong’s Education Bureau, in the 2021 to 2022 school year, there were a total of 1,042 registered kindergartens, 591 registered primary schools, and 508 registered secondary schools. Among the kindergartens, 16.7 percent were non-local, meaning they cater to non-Chinese-speaking children. 

Hong Kong Education Schools

*Kindergartens are registered only as local/non-local. All kindergartens are privately run. 

Note: Figures include only kindergartens and schools registered under the Hong Kong Education Bureau. Primary and secondary school figures do not include special schools. 

Source: Hong Kong Education Bureau.

Meanwhile, among the registered primary schools, 19 percent were private, of which almost 40 percent were international. 11 percent of the registered secondary schools were private, of which 57.8 percent were international. 

Hong Kong Education Enrolment

*Kindergartens are registered only as local/non-local. All kindergartens are privately run. 

Note: Enrolment figures are as of September 15, 2021. Figures include only kindergartens and schools registered under the Hong Kong Education Bureau. Primary and secondary school figures do not include special schools. 

Source: Hong Kong Education Bureau. 

Hong Kong is also home to 22 degree-awarding higher education institutes, including four that are listed among the top 100 universities in the 2022 Times Higher Education rankings: the University of Hong Kong (30), Chinese University of Hong Kong (49), the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (66), and Hong Kong Polytechnic University (91). 

Growth drivers of Hong Kong’s education market 

As a small city with limited natural resources and land area, talent is one of Hong Kong’s most important assets, and education is the backbone propping up the development of this key resource. Estimated government expenditure on education in the 2022/23 school year is HK$111.9 billion (US$14.3 billion), which amounts to 13.8 percent of the government’s estimated expenditure over that period. 

On an individual level, Hong Kongers also place high value on education, as it is seen as one of the main drivers of social mobility. Many families are therefore willing to pay out of pocket for additional educational resources and services. For instance, although kindergartens are not free for children in Hong Kong, almost 100 percent of children aged three to five attended kindergartens in the 2021/22 school year, according to the Hong Kong Education Bureau. Hong Kong is also home to an extremely lucrative private tutoring industry, with parents spending thousands of dollars a month on extra-curricular learning in the form of private tutors, cram schools, and prep classes. 

There has also been a trend of local Hong Kongers sending their children to private, fee-paying schools in Hong Kong, rather than local public schools, as there is a view that they provide higher quality learning than public schools. 

The higher education industry is also an important sector in Hong Kong, home to some of the best universities in Asia. With most higher education institutions offering courses in English, the city also attracts thousands of international students every year. 

Trends and opportunities in Hong Kong’s education market 

International day schools 

Hong Kong is a highly diverse city and home to people from many different nationalities, cultures, and ethnic backgrounds. As such, a range of international schools have been established to cater to the children of foreign workers as well as non-Chinese speaking families. There was a total of 54 international schools in Hong Kong in the 2021/22 school year, many of which provide both primary and secondary school grades.

The international schools also offer range of foreign curricula and degrees, including British, American, Japanese, and French curricula, the international baccalaureate (IB), Montessori, as well as religious-based and foreign language curricula. Notable international schools in the city include Harrow International School, Wycombe Abbey School, and Nord Anglia International School.  

Hong Kong recently announced a series of new incentive policies to attract more international talent in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. The possible influx of more foreign workers will in turn have a positive impact on the foreign student intake at international schools.

Moreover, the government actively encourages the development of international schools in Hong Kong, “mainly to meet the demand for international school places from non-local families living in Hong Kong and families coming to Hong Kong for work or investment”, as written by the Education Bureau. 

Higher education institutes 

Hong Kong has long been a center for higher education in the region and is still home to some of the world’s top universities. The majority of Hong Kong’s universities offer English-language courses, facilitating cooperation with global institutions and greatly lowering the barrier of entry for international students, although enrolment of undergraduate and postgraduate foreign students (including mainland Chinese) is capped at 20 percent. 

There has also been a marked uptick in the number of mainland Chinese students choosing to study at Hong Kong universities, especially as universities in western countries become less attractive following the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The government is seeking to build upon the city’s excellent educational legacy by turning Hong Kong into a “regional education hub” through internationalization and diversification.  

“The Government’s aim is to nurture talents for other industries and attract outstanding people from around the world, boosting Hong Kong’s competitiveness and facilitating the long term development of Hong Kong, Pearl River Delta region and the nation as a whole” – Hong Kong Education Bureau 

The vision to develop Hong Kong’s higher education institutes ties into the city’s position within the GBA, which will see it foster talent for the development of key industries in the area. These are mostly surrounding the high-tech and emerging industries, in particular integrated circuits, advanced manufacturing, biopharmaceuticals, and more, but also fields such as finance, professional services, and trade, among others. 

In terms of development trajectory, the government is seeking to develop Hong Kong’s education in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) in order to create a highly skilled workforce that aligns with China’s overall development goals for technological and scientific development. 

New talent schemes introduced in the GBA incentivize young skilled and sought-after talent from Hong Kong to work in the nine Guangdong cities of the GBA. Hong Kong’s higher education institutes have also taken steps to deepen cooperation with counterparts on the mainland through the establishment of research institutes. For instance, the Chinese University of Hong Kong established a mainland China campus in Shenzhen in 2012 and the Hong Kong Polytechnic University established the Shenzhen Research Institute to focus on R&D, technology transfer, and talent cultivation. The Education University of Hong Kong also began a scheme for undergraduates in the 2022/23 academic year to do work and internship placements in mainland GBA cities. 

Online education and education technology 

As is the case in many other places in the world, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the uptake of e-learning and the edtech that facilitate online classes. Although in-person classes are likely to prevail post-COVID in the K-12 sector, many schools are still looking to integrate digital learning modes into their curricula and digitize their educational systems. This segment of the educational industry therefore still presents significant opportunities for vendors providing services and products, such as e-learning platforms and edtech consulting. 

It is also important to note that e-learning and edtech have been developing in Hong Kong for many years prior to the pandemic, and now present one of the main growth areas in the city’s education sector. Hong Kong has fostered the rise of a range of e-learning and edtech start-ups covering a wide range of sectors, from K-12 to university to adult and vocational learning. Notable Hong Kong edtech and e-learning companies include italki, the online language-learning platform, Spredemy.com, which provides online tutoring for K-12 students, AfterShcool, an online DSE prep school, and Snapask, a homework help platform. 

Private tutoring 

The private tutoring industry is difficult to quantify due to the fact that many private tutors are informally employed and arranged privately, but it is clear that the industry is still highly lucrative. Unlike in mainland China, Hong Kong has not placed any restrictions on the development of the private tutoring industry, and it currently appears unlikely that it will do so. 

In addition to the high value placed within Hong Kong society discussed above, private tutoring continues to be an important resource for families out of necessity. As explained in a research report written by Richard Eng, co-founder of Beacon College, a chain of cram schools in Hong Kong, a limited number of university spaces and minimum requirements for entrance for topics such as English, Chinese, mathematics, natural sciences, and geography, among others, has led to increased pressure on students and families to excel in school. 

As with formal learning, private tutoring has also been swept up in the e-learning wave. Although this trend has been accelerated by the pandemic, which forced many people to experience online learning for the first time, the trend did not begin in 2020.

Richard Eng wrote in the report in 2019 that, due to Hong Kong’s declining birth rates and an aging population, tutoring institutes in Hong Kong are no longer able to rely on a growing student-age population for growth, and will instead have to focus on increasing the value of services and decreasing the cost of operations. This will include increasing the number of online classes and decreasing the number of in-person classes. 

In addition to the trend toward online learning, the tutoring industry is also likely to follow the trend of many other sectors and begin placing more emphasis on personalization. This may include tailor-made courses and classes for individual students, as well as teachers-cum-influencers and social media replacing traditional marketing tactics. 

The shift to online learning for private tutoring will naturally also come with an increased reliance on edtech and digital learning platforms, and the private tutoring sector will therefore likely develop closely alongside the edtech industry.

Support for educational institutions 

There are generally no restrictions on foreign investment in Hong Kong, and foreign investors are permitted to set up wholly foreign-owned private schools and educational institutions. 

QEF scheme 

Launched in 1997, the Quality Education Fund (QEF) provides grants for “quality education projects” in K-12 schools and local companies helping to implement these projects. Funding is mostly given to projects that fall into five broad categories: projects for promoting effective learning, promoting all-round education, implementing school-based management, research projects exploring education issues, and application of IT. In addition, the QEF will normally set a range of “priority themes” for project funding each year, which will usually align with the government’s overall goals for education. For instance, for the 2020/21 school year, the priority themes included STEM education and information technology (IT) for education.

Companies that provide services and products for schools to implement these projects may be able to apply for grants from the QEF or benefit indirectly from schools that receive grants to implement projects and hire the company as a vendor. 

The QEF also runs an e-learning support program for all primary and secondary schools by subsidizing laptops and internet support services for children who are unable to access these resources due to financial constraints. 

NET scheme 

The Education Bureau runs a Native-speaking English Teacher (NET) scheme to help attract native English teachers to public primary and secondary schools in Hong Kong. The Education Bureau assists schools by recruiting English teachers and appointing them to a public school and covering the teachers’ salaries and living costs. 


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Dan Cox was shaped by Maryland’s Christian home-school movement

Dan Cox was shaped by Maryland’s Christian home-school movement

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Dan Cox’s time had come.

It was the spring of 2015, years before Cox would be elected to the Maryland House of Delegates, let alone win the Republican nomination for governor. Cox was an all-but-unknown lawyer. The figure whose endorsement would one day propel his political fortunes — Donald Trump — was still weeks away from announcing his first presidential run.

It was nevertheless a special day for Cox and for the home-schooling organization, Walkersville Christian Family Schools, whose students he was preparing to address. His father, pastor Gary Cox, had founded the group more than three decades earlier to help conservative Christians provide their children with an alternative to the secular education offered in public schools.

Gary Cox stood at the microphone at a Baltimore County church, recalling how he had delivered a commencement speech when Dan, the oldest of his 10 children, completed the group’s home-schooling curriculum 23 years earlier. Now it was Dan’s turn to deliver the speech, and his son Josiah — Gary’s grandson — was among the graduates.

It was “a precious opportunity for one generation to the next,” Gary Cox said, ceding the lectern to his son.

Dan Cox, wearing a suit and tie, delivered a 33-minute exposition of biblical themes in which he repeatedly warned the class that the beliefs imparted by Walkersville Christian Family Schools were alien to much of the world. The 17 young men and women before him had been educated according to “the best interests of your parents,” he said, an experience that “sets you apart.”

“We live in a day and age when the Bible is scorned,” Cox said, according to a YouTube video of the ceremony. “ ‘Old-fashioned.’ ‘Nonsensical.’ ‘Nonapplicable.’ ‘No bearing to modern reality.’ But most of the people who say that have never read it.”

Seven years later, Cox, now 48, is speaking to a much larger audience. Instead of a single church, he has the ears of many GOP voters across Maryland, who chose him in last summer’s primary over the candidate favored by outgoing Republican Gov. Larry Hogan.

Polls show Cox, who did not respond to repeated requests to comment for this article, trailing far behind Democratic candidate Wes Moore. Yet whatever the outcome Nov. 8, his rise to the top of the Maryland GOP and his endorsement by Trump represent a landmark for an increasingly influential force in American politics and culture: the Christian right’s home-schooling movement.

Cox’s family has played an active role in that movement since its emergence in the 1980s, and its tenets have profoundly shaped Cox’s personal and political life.

As a child, Cox watched his father fight in Annapolis against state efforts to more strictly regulate home schooling. His wife, Valerie, was also home-schooled through Walkersville Christian, and the couple, who have 10 children, has used the group’s curriculum to educate their own kids. Cox worked at the organization for a decade before he obtained a law degree. (Originally based in Walkersville, Md., the group changed its name to Wellspring Christian Family Schools after moving to new locations in Frederick County.)

While Cox has not made religious home schooling a focus of his public statements or campaign materials, he has borrowed heavily from the movement’s rhetoric as he condemns teaching about gender and sexuality in public schools. And during his brief time in the legislature, he has repeatedly sought to pass “parental rights” bills that echo model legislation written by conservative Christian home-schooling activists.

Maryland Gubernatorial candidate Dan Cox (R) said that “parents should be able to opt their children out” of teaching gender identity for young children. (Video: The Washington Post)

The sudden prominence of a home-schooling graduate in a state struggling with questions about the quality, equity and funding of its public education system is all the more notable given the instruction offered by Wellspring Christian Family Schools.

Among other things, Wellspring’s curriculum and textbooks teach children that a married woman should “desire to be under submission” to her husband, that the United States’ civil government should “acknowledge the Lord of Scripture and be reconstructed according to His demands,” that the universe is 6,000 to 8,000 years old and that the theory of evolution is “the biggest assault of the devil against the knowledge of God.”

Those who study the Christian home-schooling movement say its leaders have been remarkably successful in exporting their language of “parental rights” to debates over library books, bathrooms and vaccines in public schools. And they say Cox’s gubernatorial nomination — at a moment when interest in home schooling has exploded after prolonged pandemic school closures — is an unmistakable measure of the movement’s progress.

“They’ve been very explicit that their point is to create people who can enter public life so they can take the country back for Christ,” said Samantha Field, government relations director at the Coalition for Responsible Home Education, an organization founded by home-school alumni to advocate for stricter regulation of home schooling. “Dan Cox was the entire reason this movement was started in the first place — to create him and people like him.”

‘He understands the battle’

Cox stood in a white dress shirt on the midway at the Great Frederick Fair, blinking into the September sunlight as he mingled with Maryland voters. His brown hair neatly parted, Cox made small talk with passersby, his demeanor invariably polite, his face fixed in the slightly distracted expression he has often worn during public appearances since his victory in the July primary.

“We’re making headway.”

“I feel like I’m in a marathon.”

“I’m a farmer.” (Cox is a lawyer but said he had lived and worked on farms earlier in his life.)

Cox has adopted many messages dear to the GOP base, decrying vaccine mandates, crime, and the rising cost of gas and groceries. He has repeated falsehoods about the theft of the 2020 presidential election and tweeted that Vice President Mike Pence was a “traitor” as rioters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — then deleted the tweet and called it a “poor choice of words” amid calls for his expulsion from the legislature.

Yet there is a central theme to which Cox reliably returns, and it was the same one that animated many of the supporters he spoke to at the fairgrounds: parents’ control over the upbringing and education of their children.

It was a point of connection with Brian Hetrick, an Eastern Shore farmer worried that radical ideas about gender were being taught in schools. “I don’t want them forcing it down our kids’ throats,” he said.

Likewise with Alexander Twine, 48, who lives in Frederick: “They need their ABCs and 123s, not how to take drugs and do bad things, and he’s a boy, he’s a girl, no he’s not.”

Chelsea Neal, a 37-year-old Frederick County mother who began her children during the pandemic, said she appreciated Cox’s background in and support for home instruction.

There were more than 42,000 children being home-schooled in Maryland during the 2020-2021 school year, according to the State Department of Education. That represents a 54 percent jump from the previous year.

Nationwide, the number of home-schooling households doubled during the first year of the pandemic, according to the Census Bureau, with just over 11 percent home-schooling children by the fall of 2020.

The motives of this much-expanded group have not been closely studied. The last thorough look at home-schooling families’ beliefs and demographics — a 2016 survey from the National Center for Education Statistics — found that just over half said a “desire to provide religious instruction” was an important factor in their decision.

In an October interview with Real America’s Voice, a right-wing media outlet, Cox vowed to appoint leaders to the state board of education who would “put parents back in charge of their children’s education.” But his devotion to the cause predates the eruption of America’s latest education culture wars.

He wasn’t yet 10 years old when his father, Gary, founded Walkersville Christian Family Schools in 1983. In a 2019 interview with the Frederick News-Post, Cox said his father studied to be a Catholic priest and “ended up nearly losing his faith” but was brought “back to God” through the evangelical movement and became a pastor.

Approached at his church, Gary Cox declined to comment for this story.

In the 1980s, Maryland state education officials sought to effectively outlaw home schooling, making it a legal option only for parents who had teaching certificates. Gary Cox was at the forefront of those who pushed back, said Manfred Smith, founder of the Maryland Home Education Association.

Smith — a German-born atheist inspired by the Objectivist philosophy of novelist Ayn Rand — formed an unlikely partnership with Gary Cox as the pair fought, and frequently won, policy battles in Annapolis. He said the pastor was cordial and strategically astute, sometimes moderating the more defiant impulses of other activists, including Smith, and urging them to be realistic about what they could achieve.

“You have polar opposites here, yet Gary and I are friends. We respect each other,” Smith said.

Smith said he did not remember ever meeting Dan Cox. But Glen Lindengren, a real estate developer and general contractor from Queen Anne’s County who educated all six of his children through Walkersville Christian Family Schools, said that even as a child Dan was “in the middle of it all” as his father fought against home-schooling restrictions.

“Dan was involved in that ever since he was a young kid,” Lindengren said. “He knows what he’s doing. He understands the battle we’re up against.”

In his 2019 News-Post interview, Cox said he first traveled to Annapolis at age 7, and at 12 received an “ovation” from state senators after he testified at a committee hearing. He said he couldn’t remember what he had spoken about.

Maryland education officials relented, allowing parents to home-school as long as they periodically submitted proof of children’s academic plans and work. No tests or other assessments were required, and families who wanted to avoid interaction with the government could submit to oversight by private “umbrella” groups, including church-run schools or education programs.

One of those groups was Walkersville Christian Family Schools.

‘An alternative universe’

After Dan Cox graduated from Walkersville Christian, he began attending Mount St. Mary’s University in Emmitsburg in 1992 but left after his junior year. In 2002, he obtained a bachelor’s degree in government and politics through University of Maryland University College, an adult education and distance-learning program. Four years later, he earned his law degree from Regent University, a private Christian school in Virginia Beach founded by the televangelist Pat Robertson.

From 1995 to 2005, according to a brief biography posted on the state legislature’s website, Cox was a high school teacher at Walkersville Christian. It is unclear what subjects he taught, but Brad Main, a former employee who said he worked alongside Cox and served with him on Walkersville Christian’s board, remembered him serving in an administrative role — helping families and students to follow the program’s curriculum and meet its standards — that he gave up when he attended law school.

Today the Cox family’s home-schooling organization offers a variety of programs to families, according to its website. They range from a review of students’ work and confirmation that parents are meeting state requirements to an “academy” in which children follow courses and lecture series while still learning day-to-day in their homes. Students who choose the latter option can also attend conferences and field trips, and eventually earn a high school diploma granted by Wellspring Christian Family Schools.

In addition to classes in writing, accounting and other subjects, Wellspring emphasizes a deeply conservative interpretation of what the Bible has to say about science, civics and gender roles.

The 2021 final exam in one course, “Dogmatic Creationism,” involves writing a letter to an atheist to explain statements such as “Creationism is a self-evident dogma whose evidence is universally visible in every created thing, such that it can’t be refuted.” The class textbooks are the Bible and “The Early Earth,” which suggests juvenile dinosaurs — small enough to fit among other animals — may have boarded Noah’s ark.

Another textbook, “God and Government,” argues that the United States is a Christian nation and that “civil government must be called upon to acknowledge the Lord of Scripture and be reconstructed according to His demands.”

In a videotaped lecture posted online for a course entitled “Biblical Foundations for Family Life,” Gary Cox tells students that “the protection of the wife from satanic destruction is by being tucked under the headship of her husband as God ordained it.” Referring to Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, he adds: “There’s a picture here of someone ruling and someone being ruled … a picture of voluntary submission. It’s important that the wife, again, desire to be under submission. It’s pretty much impossible to rule over somebody that doesn’t want to be ruled.

In another course lecture, he highlights a passage from Psalm 127 that is famous among many Christian home-schoolers, who believe it directs women to bear as many children as possible: “Like arrows in the hand of a warrior are the sons of one’s youth. Happy is the man who has his quiver full of them.”

“The bottom line is this: Every gift that a woman has will find maximum expression as she serves God in the home, raising her children,” Gary Cox explains in the same lecture.

Dozens of Wellspring Christian Family Schools staff members and past or present families declined or did not respond to requests for comment from The Washington Post. School leaders did not respond to a note left with Wellspring employees by a reporter who visited the group’s office, a modular building next to a church amid rolling hills and corn fields in remote Sabillasville, Md.

Lindengren, who said he withdrew his children from public schools out of desire for an explicitly Christian alternative that included teaching about creationism, said he and his wife were deeply satisfied with their experience at Wellspring.

“They see the world from the biblical foundation,” Lindengren, 69, said of his children. “And that’s what we were looking for as parents.”

It is unclear whether Dan Cox — who has repeatedly advocated strengthening science and math instruction in public schools — personally taught or still believes the ideas promoted by his family’s organization. But Elizabeth Bartholet, a Harvard law professor emeritus who advocates dramatically increasing regulation of home schooling, said they are common among ideologically committed Christian home-schoolers.

“Many of them are clearly committed to ideas about women that are very different from our anti-discrimination norm in our society,” Bartholet said. “Many of them are committed to ideas about science, reality, that are very different from what are taught in our schools.” Conservative Christian home-schooling activists, she said, “want to both enable parents and encourage parents to raise their children in an alternative universe.”

After Cox won election to the House of Delegates in 2018, those activists found a new friend in Maryland.

‘A child’s best interests’

Cox had been in office just over a year when he sat down before the House of Delegates Judiciary Committee to champion a bill guaranteeing that parents in Maryland have “the fundamental right to direct the upbringing, education, care, and welfare” of their children. It was March 5, 2020 — six days before the World Health Organization’s declaration of the coronavirus pandemic.

Cox fiddled with a computer for a moment before playing a video.

“There’s one thing we can all agree on: When it comes to raising children, family is better than the government,” the narrator’s voice intoned. The 85-second video went on to warn that “parents of all backgrounds are seeing their rights slowly slipping away.” It ended by urging viewers to “sign up” at the website parentalrights.org.

Cox’s bill was based on model legislation created by the Parental Rights Foundation, an offshoot of the Home School Legal Defense Association, which since the 1980s has been the leading national organization in the Christian home-schooling movement.

The legislation had its roots in the ideas of Michael Farris, one of the association’s founders, who is a lawyer and whose children were home-schooled. He has fought against home-schooling oversight and other perceived threats to parental control, including the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Farris has warned would curtail Americans’ ability to “administer reasonable spankings” to their kids.

Farris, who ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor of Virginia in 1993, has long argued for a constitutional amendment that would make parental rights “fundamental,” or subject to the same deference given to freedom of speech and freedom of religion.

Critics say that such an elevation of parental rights would come at the expense of vulnerable kids, making it harder for social workers, teachers, doctors and courts to intervene in cases of abuse or neglect. The same criticism was leveled at Cox’s bill by groups representing victims of sexual and domestic violence. The Women’s Law Center of Maryland worried it could “make a parent’s rights more important or superior to a child’s best interests.”

The bill died in committee, but Cox introduced a new version this year.

Will Estrada, president of the Parental Rights Foundation, said the past few years have shown that parental concerns about control over their children’s upbringing transcend political and religious divides.

“In one regard, it’s significant that someone like Dan is a major-party nominee, but on the other, it’s not really big news,” he said. “Parental rights are larger than home schooling. They’re larger than Christians. They’re larger than Republicans or Democrats.”

Cox’s connection to the world of religious home schooling remains as much personal as political. Among the private security guards — wearing bulletproof vests and holstered pistols — who turned journalists away from a recent rally at a farm in Carroll County was a graduate of Walkersville Christian Family Schools.

It was Josiah, the candidate’s son, who at his 2015 graduation ceremony had listened with his classmates as Dan Cox urged them to take seriously the words from Romans 14:8: “Whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lord’s.”

Erin Cox and Ovetta Wiggins contributed to this report.

UW Oshkosh physical education alumna honored with early career award

UW Oshkosh physical education alumna honored with early career award

A fourth school calendar year has started for College of Wisconsin Oshkosh alumna Taylor Wilch ‘19, a trainer who been given an early-occupation condition honor this spring.

Wilch, a  actual physical schooling trainer at Germantown Substantial College, was awarded the Wisconsin Association of Faculties of Trainer Schooling (WACTE) Early Job Educator Award—presented for excellence in the initially a few decades of educating. She graduated from the UWO human kinetics and health training (HKHE) department with a diploma in bodily training.

“When I uncovered out she received the award, I was excited for her,” claimed Alexander Mueller, professor in the HKHE who nominated Wilch for the honor. “Too normally the added points go unnoticed by some others in the developing simply because they do not know what anyone is up to exterior the college working day. It was nice to be in a position to existing this award in entrance of the workers.”

Taylor Wilch

Mueller explained Wilch has immersed herself in extra than just training inside her first three many years in the field—going around and over to offer one of a kind encounters to her learners.

Amid them, she came up with the first tailored bodily training neighborhood subject excursion and authors a month to month newsletter to improve family engagement.

“For my tailored actual physical education and learning class I started out a newsletter to send to the families of our college students so that they can see the wonderful operate and progress our pupils are building,” she explained.

“My colleagues and I also collaborated to produce the initial adapted bodily training local community industry trip which was a big strike! The initial 12 months we went sledding at a regional park and this previous college 12 months we went bowling at a regional bowling alley. The learners have these a terrific time on the journeys (and) are able to use all the competencies that they do the job on throughout the 12 months in APE and their other functional skills classes.”

Wilch goes the further mile, attending her students’ athletic contests and performances to bolster meaningful interactions and even volunteered to officiate the powderpuff football recreation for the duration of her school’s Homecoming.

UWO alumni Taylor Wilch coaching at Carroll College.

Along with educating at the substantial school, Wilch coaches track and discipline at Carroll College.

Mueller explained Wilch has been “been putting her mark on the (high) school” with her added work inside and outside the classroom.

“Taylor is an fantastic trainer and we are very pleased of how she is representing her alma mater,” Mueller reported.

Wilch, who was Taylor Sherry throughout her time at UWO, fulfilled her spouse, Corey Wilch ’15, a instructor at the Oconomowoc School District, when they both were exceling on the UWO monitor and field team. Just about every gained many Nationwide Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) awards and set a range of school documents.

Taylor Wilch competing at UWO.

The couple are living in Milwaukee as they travel among their respective faculties and Carroll College in Waukesha.

Wilch explained she enjoys doing the job with learners and athletes, assisting them achieve accomplishment. She stated she owes a ton to her colleagues who have taught her a good deal considering that her 1st 12 months training.

“I was inspired to become a instructor and coach from all of the incredible coaches and lecturers I’ve experienced throughout my lifetime,” she stated. “They all had this kind of a big impression on my achievement and who I am as a man or woman now.”

Master much more: