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Home arrow Home School Researcher arrow Volume 17, Issue 2 May 09, 2008
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Volume 17, Issue 2
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Item Title
An Analysis of the Economic Impact of Home and Private Schooling in Nevada

ARE HOME AND private schools a “cost” to traditional public schools? This argument has often been used by local school districts, and others, to push for legislation that would restrict the establishment of these alternative schools. By focusing on home and private schools, and using Nevada as an example, this paper analyzes the impact of these alternative schools in depth. What is found is that aside from their superior effectiveness (Duvall, Delquadri, & Ward, 2004; National Center for Education Statistics [NCES], 2002; Rudner, 1999), the reduced public school enrollment caused by the presence of alternative schooling results in lower educational costs for the affected school district.

John T. Wenders, Ph.D. & Andrea D. Clements, Ph.D., Volume 17, No. 2, 2007, p. 13-35
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An Analysis of Homeschooled and Non-Homeschooled Students’ Performance on an ACT Mathematics Test

The current study does not try to establish any comparison between public school students’ results on ACT and their homeschooled counterparts. Rather the goal was to take homeschooled students and compare their test results to the group of all other students. It is true that the second group results will be largely influenced by public school students’ results. But it is also true that the second group includes students who do not belong to public education (i.e., private schools). Simply put, the goal of this study was to compare homeschooled students to everybody else, with regard to their scores on an ACT mathematics achievement test.

Basil Qaqish, Ph.D., Volume 17, Number 2, p. 1-12


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Research Facts

An increasing number of black (African American) parents are homeschooling their children; an estimated 85,000 to 105,000 k-12 students in 2002-03.
- Brian D. Ray, Ph.D.

 
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