Logo Homeschool World ® Official Web Site of Practical Homeschooling Magazine Practical Homeschooling Magazine
Practical Homeschooling® :

It Pays to Know Your Legislator

By Sam Blumenfeld
Printed in Practical Homeschooling #64, 2005.

Why you should get to know your state legislator.
   Pin It
Sam Blumenfeld


Homeschoolers now and then have problems dealing with their local school districts, and knowing your state legislator can be a great help in asserting your rights.

I know of a case in which homeschooling parents were looking for a school in which their children could take their AP tests. Local private schools said they had "no space," and the local public school indicated they were unwilling to allow homeschoolers to take tests in subjects the school didn't offer.

As taxpayers, these homeschoolers believed that they had a right to avail themselves of the local school's proctoring facilities, which they were willing to pay for. So they decided to bring this problem to the attention of their state legislator. He called up the school superintendent, who happened to be a friend. The superintendent then called the principal, who then spoke to the guidance counselor, who discovered that it would indeed be possible for these homeschooling kids to take the AP exams through the public school.

The moral of the story is that knowing your state legislator can be very helpful in dealing with your local education establishment. He can also help in dealing with health insurance problems. For example, when one of the homeschoolers was hospitalized for double pneumonia, Blue Cross refused to pay for the lengthy hospital stay because they said his illness was a "preexisting condition." A call from the state legislator to Blue Cross was able to solve that problem to the family's satisfaction. (Incidentally, that state legislator is now a U.S. Congressman.)

It's not at all difficult to turn your state legislator into a friend. Since your children will be studying state government, a visit to your state legislator should be first on the list of visits to the state capitol. Bring him a homemade cherry pie he can share with his staff. Don't forget to supply paper plates, plastic forks, and napkins. That's the proper way to introduce your legislator to homeschoolers.

Also, you can indicate that you'd be willing to help him get reelected. That's if you really like the guy and he believes in homeschoolers' rights. Getting active in a political campaign is a great learning experience for your children.

Homeschoolers have been long aware that the chief enemy of their rights is the public education establishment, with its near-monopoly on schooling in this country. All of the people in this establishment are on the government payroll, financed by the taxpayer.

The only way they can force the taxpayers to fund our present dysfunctional system is to control the legislators who vote for the school budget. That is why educators have become so politicized, and that is why homeschoolers must learn the ways of politics. Incidentally, even though legislators are under great pressure from the educators to give them what they want, they also know how to count noses. Parents greatly outnumber teachers when it comes to votes.

Most homeschooling organizations have newsletters. Make sure your legislator is on the mailing list. Another great learning experience is interviewing your legislator for the newsletter. That's an easy, inoffensive way of learning something about your legislator's family life. And if you give him or her a good write-up, he or she will be your friend for life.

Another way to be a help to your legislator is by providing him with information he may not have. For example, do a survey of the primary schools in your district and find out how reading is being taught in those schools. If the schools are using whole-language programs, inform the legislator that this will mean increased costs for remedial programs and special education to help the reading disabled. Suggest the use of a successful phonics reading program in the state's schools.

Your legislator may not know much about the reading problem. So here you will have a golden opportunity to tell him something he doesn't know. Find out how many children in your district are on Ritalin or some other drug. The information you bring to your legislator will help him understand why you are homeschooling.

It pays to know your state legislator for all the help he can provide and all the doors he can open. Politics is the great American game for power and influence. It's not a bad idea to learn how to play it.

Free Email Newsletter!
Sign up to receive our free email newsletter, and up to three special offers from homeschool providers every week.

Popular Articles

Montessori Language Arts at Home, Part 1

How to Win the Geography Bee

Discover Your Child's Learning Style

Getting Organized Part 3

Art Appreciation the Charlotte Mason Way

Teach Your Children to Work

Interview with John Taylor Gatto

Whole-Language Boondoggle

The Equal Sign - Symbol, Name, Meaning

Top Tips for Teaching Toddlers

Give Yourself a "CLEP Scholarship"

University Model Schools

The Gift of a Mentor

A Reason for Reading

Saxon Math: Facts vs. Rumors

Classical Education

Critical Thinking and Logic

Shakespeare Camp

Montessori Math

The Benefits of Debate

Joyce Swann's Homeschool Tips

Can Homeschoolers Participate In Public School Programs?

Combining Work and Homeschool

Teaching Blends

Patriarchy, Meet Matriarchy

What We Can Learn from the Homeschooled 2002 National Geography Bee Winners

Character Matters for Kids

Who Needs the Prom?

Myth of the Teenager

The Charlotte Mason Method

Getting Organized Part 1 - Tips & Tricks

Columbus and the Flat Earth...

The Charlotte Mason Approach to Poetry

How to "Bee" a Spelling Success

Narration Beats Tests

Don't Give Up on Your Late Bloomers

Why the Internet will Never Replace Books

The History of Public Education

Top Jobs for the College Graduate

The Benefits of Cursive Writing

AP Courses At Home

Laptop Homeschool

Advanced Math: Trig, PreCalc, and more!

I Was an Accelerated Child

Getting Started in Homeschooling: The First Ten Steps

Bears in the House

A Homeschooler Wins the Heisman

What Does My Preschooler Need to Know?

Phonics the Montessori Way

Start a Nature Notebook

          
Terms of Use   Privacy Policy
Copyright ©1993-2024 Home Life, Inc.