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UGA Researcher to Study Effects of Home-schooling On Black Students

ATHENS, Ga.

A University of Georgia College of Education researcher is investigating what happens when Black parents take ownership of their children’s education through home schooling.

Dr. Cheryl A. Fields-Smith, an assistant professor of early childhood education, has received a grant from the Spencer Foundation for a project titled, “Extreme Involvement: An Investigation of Home Schooling Among Black Families.” She will study home schooling among Black families in hopes of finding new teaching methods that will lead to greater success for Black students in public schools. 

“I want to debunk the myth that African-American parents are not as involved with their children’s education as other ethnicities,” she says.

Previous literature suggests that home schooling is something that only middle-class White parents did, she adds.

The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that nearly 2 million children are home schooled each year. Although researchers have investigated home-schooled students’ academic performance, the studies rarely, if ever, focus on the experience of Black families.

“By researching Black families’ beliefs, concerns and desires for their children’s education, we can better understand the reasons Black parents home school their children and how they reach and teach their children at home,” says Fields-Smith.

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