Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Home Schooling Among Muslim Families Is Growing, But Controversial
In a story from Lodi, California today, the New York Times reports on the trend among Pakistani and other southeast Asian families to home school girls when they reach high school age. Reasons include prejudice encountered in public schools and clashes with religious and cultural traditions. In the Lodi district, 38 out of 90 high school girls, but only 7 out of 107 boys, from Pakistani and southeast Asian families are being home schooled. Many Pakistani Muslim families in Lodi are attempting to recreate their traditional conservative social culture. On a smaller scale across the country, home schooling is an option chosen by some Muslim families though the choice is a controversial one among Muslims. One California mother home schooling her children said that home school parents tend to be converts to Islam. Immigrant parents, she said, more often want American public school educational opportunities for their children.