Once a Crime, Now a Cornerstone

Once a Crime, Now a Cornerstone

 

This has been on my mind today…

Not that long ago, homeschooling in Georgia was treated like a fringe idea. In some cases, it was outright illegal. Families who chose it were questioned, judged, and often misunderstood. Today, it has become one of the fastest growing education choices in the state. That shift tells us something important. Not just about Georgia, but about where education is heading everywhere.

The Atlanta Magazine story lays it out clearly. Georgia’s homeschooling boom did not come from one moment or one policy. It grew slowly, family by family, as parents watched their kids struggle in systems that were never designed for how they actually learn. Some were burned out. Some were anxious. Some were bored. Some were quietly disappearing in classrooms that moved too fast or not fast enough.

What changed was not just permission. It was trust. Trust that parents could make thoughtful decisions. Trust that learning does not need to look the same for every child. And trust that education can happen outside a building without losing its value.

Many of the families featured did not start out wanting to homeschool. This matters. Homeschooling is rarely the first choice. It is often the response to a moment where something feels off. A child stops asking questions. A once curious learner becomes withdrawn. School becomes a daily negotiation instead of a place of growth. Parents notice these signals long before report cards do.

What stands out is how diverse today’s homeschoolers are. They are not one type of family. They include working parents, single parents, military families, neurodivergent kids, gifted kids, and kids who just needed a different pace. Homeschooling in Georgia is no longer about opting out. It is about opting into something more intentional.

This is where the conversation gets interesting. The rise of homeschooling is not a rejection of education. It is a critique of rigidity. Parents are not saying learning does not matter. They are saying the current model is not flexible enough to meet real human needs.

At Schoolio, we see the same pattern across North America. Families come to homeschooling because their child needs time to breathe, space to think, and learning that adapts instead of demands. Especially for sensitive and neurodivergent kids, the traditional classroom can feel overwhelming. Noise, pace, pressure, and comparison all pile up. When those kids are given a calmer environment and lessons that meet them where they are, something shifts.

The Georgia story also shows how infrastructure is catching up. Co ops, hybrid programs, online platforms, and community groups are making homeschooling less isolating and more sustainable. Parents are not doing this alone anymore. They are building ecosystems around their kids.

This is the part many people miss. Homeschooling today is not about recreating school at home. It is about redesigning learning around the child. Academics still matter. But so does emotional safety. So does confidence. So does the ability to learn how to learn.

For parents reading this, the takeaway is simple. If your child is struggling in school, it does not mean they are broken. It means the environment might not fit. Georgia’s homeschooling boom is proof that when families are given options, they choose what works for their kids.

Education is changing because families are changing it. Not through protest, but through choice. And once a choice becomes a cornerstone, there is no going back.

 

Sathish

still learning, still unlearning

Source: Atlanta Magazine

https://www.atlantamagazine.com/news-culture-articles/once-a-crime-now-a-cornerstone-inside-georgias-homeschooling-boom/

Parents Do Not Choose Homeschooling for Novelty

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.

 

Sathish

still learning, still unlearning

 

My Child Is Not an Adult in Training

My Child Is Not an Adult in Training

 

A home educator dares to imagine an education that matters to the child as a child, not just as an adult in training.” — Julie Bogart

 

This has been on my mind today…

Somewhere along the way, education stopped being about childhood. It became about adulthood. Test scores. GPAs. College readiness. Career prep.

But what about being ready to be a child?

When I started homeschooling, I thought I was just taking on a different method of schooling. What I didn’t expect was how quickly my kids began to reclaim parts of themselves that had been rushed, quieted, or overlooked.

They became more playful. More curious. They asked more questions. They stopped trying to always be “on” or “perfect” or older than they were.

And I realized something. So much of traditional education is focused on preparing kids for a future life that it forgets they are living one right now.

School culture pushes kids to grow up faster than they’re ready to. To give up play for “coolness” or “serious work”.

They are not adults in training. They are kids. With real thoughts. Real emotions. Real learning rhythms that don’t always fit neat timelines.

Homeschooling gives us the chance to slow it all down.

To build a world around them that says “you matter” without needing to add “when you grow up”, let them rest when they’re tired, and let them chase the weird, wild ideas they can’t stop thinking about.

To let them enjoy learning instead of fearing it.

Let them play.

This doesn’t mean we don’t care about their futures. It means we believe that honoring their present is part of preparing them for it.

I want my kids to grow into capable, wise, thoughtful adults. But I also want them to have a childhood they can look back on with joy — not burnout.

That’s the gift homeschooling gave us. And I’ll never regret choosing it.

With love,

Lindsey

Certified Special Ed Educator & Co-Founder, Schoolio