Parents Do Not Choose Homeschooling for Novelty
This has been on my mind today…
I read about one of Afghanistan’s most iconic girls’ schools being turned into an empty shell. Classrooms that once held ambition and possibility now sit silent. Not because girls stopped wanting to learn. But because power decided who gets access to education and who does not.
What stayed with me was how fragile education really is. We like to believe progress always moves forward, but history keeps proving otherwise. When systems fail or fear takes over, learning is often the first thing taken away.
It reminded me that schooling and learning are not the same thing. Schools can close. Buildings can be taken. But the desire to learn lives inside people. When doors shut, that desire looks for another way in.
This is something homeschooling families understand deeply. Learning can happen anywhere. Around a kitchen table. Through conversation. Through curiosity. Through care. Homeschooling is not about opting out. It is often about protecting a child’s right to grow when the system cannot or will not support them.
At Schoolio, we work with families who did not choose an alternative path for novelty. They chose it for safety, dignity, and confidence. Children pushed out or worn down by systems that could not see them. Parents trying to hold onto their child’s love of learning.
Education poverty is not just about access to schools. It is about access to dignity and possibility. When a child is denied the right to learn freely, the damage goes far beyond missed lessons.
This story was a reminder of why flexible, resilient learning matters. Learning that travels with the child. Learning that adapts. Learning that cannot be shut down by a single decision.
Learning your way is not a luxury. For many families, it is survival. And protecting that right is work worth doing.
still learning, still unlearning