Next, data show that homeschoolers are a diverse population, putting to rest the stereotype that home education is exclusively the domain of white Christian conservatives. While white families homeschool at higher rates than Black and Hispanic families, between 29 and 40 percent of homeschoolers are students of color.
Furthermore, less than half of homeschool parents say they are Republicans, which should alert policymakers to the fact that homeschooling draws support across the political spectrum. Regardless of partisan affiliation, parents want what is best for their children, and for many, this means a home-based education.
Additionally, and perhaps surprisingly, many homeschooling families are connected to the public education system in some form. It’s rare for children to be homeschooled for their entire K–12 education, and more than one-third of homeschool households have at least one child enrolled in a public school. This underscores that, even within the same family, children have vastly different needs that can only be satisfied by a diverse supply of education providers. If maximizing each child’s unique potential is a primary goal for K–12 education, then it only makes sense to give families robust options through policy mechanisms such as education savings accounts, charter schools, and public school open enrollment. Policymakers should be sector-agnostic when it comes to cultivating K–12 education systems.
Finally, these findings offer valuable insights into where public schools are falling short and provide guidance on how they can improve. The fact that 45 percent of homeschool parents cite either concerns about school environments or dissatisfaction with academic instruction at other schools as the most important reason for homeschooling should raise flags for policymakers, especially at a time when lax discipline, chronic absenteeism, declining enrollment, low academic standards, and curricular controversies are making headlines from public school systems across the country.
The latest data and research clearly demonstrate that homeschoolers are diverse in many ways and that past conceptions about them should be discarded. They also provide lawmakers with an accurate understanding of modern homeschooling, its role in the education system, and insights into what public schools can learn from the reasons parents choose to homeschool. This is a critical time in K–12 education. With public schools falling short for families in a variety of measures, homeschooling is increasingly becoming an attractive alternative. Overregulating the sector in response to that preference won’t solve any of those problems, but it may add to them.


