1 in 6 Families Cite Mental Health Needs as the Reason They Pulled Their Child Out of School
This has been on my mind today…
Mental health has quietly become the leading reason families are choosing homeschooling. Not ideology. Not religion. Not rebellion. Mental health.
According to new UK figures, more than 126,000 children were being taught at home last autumn, a 15 percent increase in a single year. One in six families cited psychological or mental health needs as the primary reason they pulled their child out of school.
That number should stop us in our tracks.
For years, homeschooling has been framed as a lifestyle choice. Something parents opt into because they want more flexibility or control. But this data tells a different story. For many families, homeschooling is a response.
A response to anxiety that does not fade.
A response to burnout in children who are barely ten.
A response to kids who once loved learning and now dread school mornings.
When parents say mental health, they are not talking about small discomforts. They are talking about panic before school. Emotional shutdown after class. Kids who are told they are fine because their grades look fine, even while they are struggling internally.
This is especially true for neurodivergent and highly sensitive kids. Children who feel the world more intensely. Noise. Pressure. Comparison. Speed. In systems designed for scale, these kids are often labeled difficult or behind. Over time, they internalize that message. The real loss is not academic. It is emotional.
One thing we see again and again is that children are rarely taught how to understand what is happening inside them. They are expected to manage big emotions without being given the language, tools, or space to do so. This is why emotional literacy matters just as much as reading or math.
When kids learn how to name their thoughts, understand their feelings, and recognize that emotions are information not failures, something shifts. Confidence starts to rebuild.
This is exactly why we created
Thoughts and Feelings
, a guided emotional learning book and curriculum at Schoolio. Not as therapy. Not as a fix. But as a way to help children slow down, reflect, and build self awareness in a world that keeps asking them to speed up. For many families, this kind of emotional groundwork becomes the bridge between surviving school and actually healing from it.
You can learn more about the Thoughts and Feelings program here:
https://schoolio.com/product/thoughtsfeelings/
Homeschooling, when done with care, is not hiding from the world. It is a pause. A reset. A chance to rebuild trust in learning and in oneself.
The rise in homeschooling should not be read as parents giving up on education. It should be read as parents stepping in when the system cannot meet their child where they are.
The real question is not why homeschooling is growing.
The real question is why so many children are struggling in silence.
Parent takeaway: If your child’s mental health is declining and you feel like you are constantly managing damage instead of supporting growth, you are not imagining it. Education should never come at the cost of emotional safety. Teaching kids how to understand their thoughts and feelings is not extra. It is foundational.