Depends on the person really. Home schooled people have a slight advantage seeing as they don't have to learn all the unnecessary crap we do in school and can move on to later lessons thus making them ahead in some cases.
2006-10-29 08:50:07
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Actually they are smarter. I am home schooled and I actually understand things. When I went to a public school there was 32 kids i a class, (6th Grader then, now in 7th) AND our school increased more this year, so I don't know how many are there now! The only people who got attention were the Special kids and the Smart kids, and I was in the middle. I didn't learn as much as I do now because now I have the education I need (SO far so good!)
2006-10-31 02:37:13
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answer #2
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answered by Sam 2
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I think basic intelligence is there in any child. We all are born with a desire to learn new things. We are hardwired for it. All kids have that unless there is something very wrong with them.
Look at a classroom full of preschoolers or kindergarteners. They are so excited about what they do and what they learn. By third grade, that's not the case for most kids in most schools.
Most of the kids I know, who are homeschooled, will follow their own interests, look things up, out of a desire to know. Not because they have to do well on a report, but because they want to know something. That love of learning doesn't get zapped out of most homeschooled kids as easily, and for a good many of them, it lasts their whole lives. That happens some in kids who go to school, usually because they have parents or someone else close to them, who have that love of learning I'm talking about.
the ones who keep that desire to investigate new things, that curiosity about life in general, those are the ones that *I* see as the smarter ones, whether they go to school in the brick building with a few hundred other kids, or if they learn at home with their families.
2006-10-30 19:57:39
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answer #3
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answered by ntm 4
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generally speaking, everyone's intelligence is on an even par. It's how you train yourself that makes the difference.
Homeschooling proves to be beneficial for millions of students in that they have a more intensive training period.
Let's remember that the public school system is fairly young - less than 100 years old. over the years, it has seen many changes and updates, the majority of which do not seem to be working (ie segregating age groups, generalized curriculum etc) homeschooling provides for a more intense, interest drawn educational experience, with broader based social connections for social experience.
My children were home educated for the first years of their schooling careers. All three of them are now teens in school, and I have comments constantly from other students and adults about their excellent social skills, advanced work habits, neatness and diligence.
It's not for everyone, but in my opinion it was a good way to compromise.
2006-10-29 08:54:42
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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No, every child is "smart" in their own unique way. If schools could help every child, as per their abilities, there wouldn't be so many "failing" and "average" children in the public school system.
One of the many benefits of home education is that you can help a child learn in a way that suits them best, not the way that the school system best deems fit for everyone. Perhaps that is one of the reasons that home educated students (despite how they are learning or being taught) do test higher.
I hope that one day the school systems can benefit everyone, not just the few. No one deserves to be labeled "average" or "behind"...they simply just learn differently and have trouble with a one size fits all type of learning style.
2006-10-29 10:33:10
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answer #5
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answered by FreeThinker 3
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It really depends. I am 13 and in 8th grade. I have been homeschooled all my life. I am in calcius and 9th grade in all the other subjects. My mom spent alot of time teaching me when I was younger though.....heck I was reading when I was 3! I also have a little sister who is a really slow learner. She is 10 and is still trying to get down the basic reading skills. I guess it depends on the person and surcamstancis.
2006-10-29 19:24:23
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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It depends on the individual. There are children with special needs as well as highly gifted children who homeschool. Wide range of intelligence. Different families adopt different focuses, from very relaxed and non-academic focused to a highly academic focus.
In general, they test higher than public school kids, but that's a generalization, not an absolute rule.
2006-10-29 10:26:56
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answer #7
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answered by glurpy 7
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with the aid of fact regrettably, rather everyone seems to be many times ignorant, and have self belief stereotypes. Society has seen homeschooling to be "inferior" to public college for particularly it sluggish, or maybe nonetheless to a pair degree we glance shifting far flung from that, human beings will take an prolonged time to come again around to the thought homeschooling is an exceedingly stable decision. and a few undesirable eggs makes any team look undesirable... regrettably there are homeschoolers accessible who have not any thought what they are doing, grant substandard educations for their infants, and shelter them to the factor of isolation. that's what supplies homeschooling a "undesirable call" with the popular inhabitants. overlook approximately human beings and bypass on... do in basic terms your "subject", and additionally you will shop proving those human beings incorrect! :)
2016-10-03 02:13:23
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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Typically yes. Much of this has to do with public school education. It's a flop because 1) the government pays so the school doesn't care 2) the government pays so the families don't take the cost seriously 3) there's not much public schools can do about disruptive behavior.
2006-10-29 08:53:09
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answer #9
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answered by Robert B 5
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No, I don't think home schooled or schooled kids are smarter then each other. I think they both learn the same, only some learn at home and others learn in a school. Some kids learn better in a school and others learn best at home, it depends on the kid.
I'm 14 years old and I'm home schooled and I think both schooled and home schooled kids are the same.
2006-10-29 13:02:08
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answer #10
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answered by Blank 3
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