by Homeschool Idaho | Jan 1, 2023 | ESA
The richly rewarding homeschool tradition of co-op classes and activities will be severely damaged when the parents who normally volunteer to teach a low-cost class will be shunted aside for expensive ESA-funded tutors and activities. These classes will not be better...
by Homeschool Idaho | Jan 1, 2023 | ESA
A perceived barrier to homeschooling for some families is that one or both parents must work outside the home. ESAs alone simply do not provide enough money for a parent to stay home to homeschool. ESA dollars would not spread as far as private dollars because of the...
by Homeschool Idaho | Jan 1, 2023 | ESA
Those who oppose ESA legislation have been unfairly characterized as not caring about low-income students who are trapped in failing public schools. This simply is not true. One can care deeply about these students while being firmly opposed to ESA legislation. In...
by Homeschool Idaho | Jan 1, 2023 | ESA
When proponents of ESAs are asked about ongoing funding of education savings accounts, rather than addressing the elephant in the room (increased taxes), they often deflect to the free market as the solution. The logic goes something like this: the government has a...
by Homeschool Idaho | Jan 1, 2023 | ESA
Idaho is one of many states debating ESA legislation, and ESAs have become a nationwide discussion. Here you’ll find links to research, articles, and discussions on ESAs and their impact. Posts Explore Government-Funded Education vs. Privately Funded...
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