LINKS for Areas of "Whole-Person Education" Website

 
Comparing Options for
Whole-Person Education

Teaching and learning occur in many contexts in different types of schools.  This area looks at four types of schools:

Informal Education
• Home Schools 
• Private Schools 
• Public Schools 
• Charter Schools
 
Higher Education 

The characteristics of schools will be described and compared
(for similarities & differences, advantages & disadvantages)
regarding their educational quality and religious worldviews,
to help you make wise decisions about whole-person education.
 


 
      Informal Education
      Education is more than what happens in school.  Much of our learning occurs in the context of culture, which includes, but is not limited to, a variety of media such as music and magazines, movies and marketing, books and websites, discussions and lectures, radio and television.   
      The religious implications of informal education are discussed in WORLDVIEW EDUCATION;  and the personal benefits of lifelong learning are in LEARNING SKILLS.


      This area, School Options, will focus on the formal education in schools, especially in the United States, home of the American Scientific Affiliation.  Although this area will look at some educational content, especially regarding religious worldviews, EFFECTIVE TEACHING is the main area for exploring the process of teaching and learning.
      There are four basic types of schools.  Ranked in order of student attendance, they are public, private, home, and charter.  But to avoid an implication that public schools should be the default choice and other schools are alternatives, the order of description below will match the chronological order of appearance in American history:
      Initially, almost all education was in the home.  Outside the home, private schools developed first, followed by public schools, which gradually increased in prominence beginning in the 1840s, with major federal involvement since 1958;  public school systems began a more widespread use of charter schools in the 1990s:  A Timeline of Public Education in America.
      A quick overview of these four options is in the Great Schools website.  {unfortunately it's no longer available for free, so I won't link to it, and will find a replacement-page}

      Later, there will be a links-page devoted to evaluating and weighing criteria and Making a Wise Choice.

      Home Schools
      Currently, there is a links-page — with lots of good ideas to explore! — for HOME SCHOOLS.  And later, by mid-May 2008, this section will have a brief introduction to home schooling, which can be an excellent way to educate.

      Private Schools
      And — also by mid-May 2008 — this section will have a brief introduction to PRIVATE SCHOOLS: Christian and Secular.

      Public Schools
      Public concerns about public schools — which are regulated by government (at the local, state, and federal levels) and attended by the majority of American students — include questions about educational quality and religious neutrality.  Strategies for improving educational quality (for helping students learn more effectively in a comfortable, motivating environment) are examined in EFFECTIVE TEACHING.  Strategies for improving religious neutrality are examined in Worldviews & Religion in PUBLIC EDUCATION.

      Charter Schools
      Recently, public school systems began using new types of schools that are hybrids — that have some features of both public and private schools — and calling them CHARTER SCHOOLS.

 
 
    Higher Education
      Eventually, maybe by the beginning of August 2008, there will be information about colleges (private and public) and other educational options after high school.
 


 
There is more about this topic in
WORLDVIEW EDUCATION

and ORIGINS EDUCATION.
 

All links were checked and fixed on June 29, 2006. 
 


Above, a LINK is page-adding, opening a new page in a new window
Below, a LINK is page-replacing, opening a new page in this window

 
This home-page for School-Options, written by Craig Rusbult, is
http://www.asa3.org/ASA/education/options/index.html

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