Homeschooling Is Verboten in Deutschland
by
Sabine Barnhart
by Sabine Barnhart
DIGG THIS
It was in the
fall of 1967 when I embarked on my 10-year school career in Germany.
My mother dressed me in a short white skirt, knee-highs, and sandals.
She twisted my unruly hair in a set of pigtails adorned with white
ribbons. The leather satchel I carried on my back was a gift of
my grandmother. In my hand I held the famous Schultüte
(school cone) whose content of goodies was to sweeten my anxiously
awaited day.
The small schoolhouse
still conformed to the old way of holding school with three or four
grades sharing a classroom. Centralized school reform hadn’t hit
the rural parts of Bavaria yet until the following year. Only 23
years earlier my mother was a first grader in the same schoolroom.
Her morning greeting to her teacher was a dutiful "Heil Hitler"
in the Roman Imperial fashion. The schoolroom, as did every private
household and institution, featured the idolized image of the Führer
on the wall. Morning prayer remained a tolerable function for the
schoolchildren.
Unlike in my
mother’s days, the idolized image of the State had disappeared from
the wall. Prayers were still allowed in this dominant Catholic state
at that time. The imagery of the National State no longer had a
visible presence in my classroom (no picture of a head of state,
no national or state flag); however, its legal and constitutional
influence over all German school children remains anchored in Article
7 of the German Constitution. It reads:
Article
7
- The entire
school system shall be under the supervision of the state.
Little did
I know that starting my Elementary school years was "in the
best interest" of my legal guardian over education, the state.
I was being, after all, sozialisiert. In laymen’s terms,
this meant that I received my first compulsory and obligated introduction
to a life outside the security of my family unit according to the
conventional wisdom of pedagogical experts and academics on how
I need to properly adjust and develop to the social order of society
and as such to the imagery of a good (National) citizen.
Like all children,
there were times when school just seemed like a nuisance to me.
"I don’t want to go to school today" is the common reaction
for children going through this phase. The standard answer of my
mother has always been: "If you don’t go to school, then I
will have to go to jail." I thought she was joking. She wasn’t
joking. The German school system upholds compulsory schooling, which
demands that all children of school age must physically attend a
public or private school whose educational system is under the supervision
of the individual state (Bildungshoheit).
The law enforces
compliance with financial fines to the parents and eventual imprisonment
if they persist in keeping their children out of school. One religious
organization received fees as high as 130,000 Euros in the state
of Hessen for homeschooling their children. Parents
have been imprisoned for not paying the fines they received for
keeping their children out of state schools. In 2005 state authorities
forcefully removed a 15-year-old girl from her family for psychiatric
evaluation because her parents chose to teach Math and Latin at
home to avoid having her repeat a grade again in school. A 16-year-old
girl was sentenced to two weeks in jail for missing one month of
school. Three large fines did not bring her back, thus imprisonment
is to be used for disciplinary action. Another family was fined
150 Euros for not letting their child attend a school play, which
was against their belief, and the father was later imprisoned for
not paying the fine.
This is the
dilemma in which several German families who wish to homeschool
now find themselves. Their decisions to homeschool do not necessarily
have to be religiously motivated. If a family wants to avoid the
teaching of evolution or wants to spare their child the rigid drill
of school conformity, they should be able to do so. Also parents
should be the ones who best know their children’s interests, talents
and how to motivate and guide them into the right direction to fulfill
their potentials. Good parents want the best for their children,
and if they find the time and energy in teaching them "…within
responsibility before God, the spirit of Christian charity, humanity
and love of peace, in the love for the People and homeland…"
– as the state of Baden-Württemberg had it once quoted
in their school law book in 1983 – then they are actually upholding
their responsibility as legal guardians. Accountability then falls
on the parents, since it is neither the right of a child nor the
right of the state to conform the young to their own image.
The issue is
not highly publicized in German news, nor does the right of parents
to educate one’s own children find favor in the German courts, nor
with politicians and the general public at large. The German states
and the Federal Government do not see a conflict with compulsory
schooling upon religious grounds. The constitution again cancels
out that right in Article 7:
(2) Parents
and guardians shall have the right to decide whether children shall
receive religious instruction.
(3) Religious
instruction shall form part of the regular curriculum in state schools,
with the exception of non-denominational schools. Without prejudice
to the state’s right of supervision, religious instruction shall
be given in accordance with the tenets of the religious community
concerned. Teachers may not be obliged against their will to give
religious instruction.
Several European
states have compulsory education laws which do not enforce the physical
presence of a child in public schools, but which require the child
to be educated according to the standards of the sovereign state.
Austria permits homeschooling with a state-approved curriculum,
and a state-approved school periodically supervises testing. Switzerland
allows families to homeschool children with occasional visits by
a state official as long as the sate school plan is upheld. Denmark
hasn’t had compulsory schooling since 1855, and gives financial
aid in the purchase of materials to parents. Other countries that
allow homeschooling are Australia, Sweden, France, Great Britain
and the United States.
Germans greatly
pride themselves in their educational system. Their country is,
after all, known as the "Land of Poets and Thinkers."
The Germans' intelligence is largely reflected in their engineering,
inventiveness and the quality of their craftsmanship. But so is
their love for order, their almost obsessive-compulsive cleanliness,
and the creation and maintenance of a large state bureaucracy. They
masterfully cultivate and thrive on making life sometimes more complicated
than it really needs to be. Permitting the right of parents to educate
their young at home does not quite fit into the mind-set
of a state-educated German Citizen and his collective teachings.
It seems as
if they think that the liberty to deviate from a "National Plan"
will threaten their very existence, as it has been known since 1871.
This is when Imperial Prussia first instituted a nation-wide compulsory
schooling to help form a national identity in a land that yearned
for democracy and national unification after the Napoleonic wars.
Young Germania needed an educated and obedient Volk
in order to provide the work force to prosper and a strong, obedient
military to defend itself.
Germany was
also the first country to introduce state certification for teachers,
which had the intended effect of that raising the standard of teaching.
Germany’s children were now under the influence of continued reform
such as Neuhumanismus (New Humanism) and psychobabble
academic philosophies with Kantian influence. Streamlining the mind
of children in accordance with these "intellectuals" established
the ground for a socialist mentality, which is still prevalent in
the German population.
John Taylor
Gatto boldly explains the Prussian motive for compulsory schooling
in his book The Underground History of American Education:
The Prussian
mind, which carried the day, held a clear idea of what centralized
schooling should deliver: 1) Obedient soldiers to the army; 2) Obedient
workers for mines, factories, and farms; 3) Well-subordinated civil
servants, trained in their function; 4) Well-subordinated clerks
for industry; 5) Citizens who thought alike on most issues; 6) National
uniformity in thought, word, and deed.
Germany’s vocational
schooling and education has its roots in the Middle Ages. It was
during the 12th Century where guilds organized the teaching
of their profession so that craftsmen could become masters. Parents
taught their children the craft and gave them the education. As
far as academic education went, the first university was founded
in Heidelberg in 1386, and the remaining educational organization
was under the control of monasteries and Latin schools. Education
was mostly reserved for nobility, clergy and bourgeois upper class.
In 1524, during
the Reformation, Martin Luther began to emphasize the need to establish
and maintain Christian schools. In his letter "To the Councilmen
of All Cities in Germany That They Establish and Maintain Christian
Schools," he addressed the civic leaders of Germany and all
beloved German citizens with the urgency that councilmen possessed
– more than parents – the resources to establish schools, and that
it is their moral duty to promote the kingdom of God (from their
position of power). His good intentions created a conflict between
Church and State, which was eventually settled by the Kingdom of
Prussia. During the 18th Century, Prussia became the
first country worldwide to establish a free and compulsory primary
education. The guardian over Germany’s future school education was
now under state control. The mentality carried on through history
until it found its way into Germany’s Fundamental Law. Hitler only
refined it during the Nazi era by indoctrinating Nazi ideology into
the curriculum.
In 2000 Germany
received a major blow to its school system. A study conducted by
PISA (Program
for International Student Assessment), showed that Germans scored
very low in Math, Reading, Science, and Problem Solving. These were
embarrassing results for a country that prides itself in its intellectualism,
which systematically erased the basic function of parents and gave
it to the state in the form of welfare.
The results
were somewhat better in 2003 but still haven’t risen to a satisfactory
level.
Surprisingly,
the study also showed that the less money a country spends on education,
the better the scores. Free education does not necessarily raise
the standards of achievement. Germany is now feeling the backlash
in their society. Its top university ranks 45th place
worldwide. This places Germany in 4th place with seven
universities ranking in the top 100. A recent decision to allow
individual states to charge a basic fee of 500 Euros was met with
major student protest throughout the country, thus proving that
a sense of entitlement is a major characteristic of socialism.
Although Germany’s
individual states have autonomy of their school education, the line
between Federal Government mandates and state regulations have become
more and more blurry. In the aftermath of the shock of the PISA
study, officials called for further school reforms that would unify
the educational system across the states. The Federal Government
supplies half of a state’s school finances with the rest contributed
locally. Funds are never adequate since most states find themselves
bankrupt. A recent survey of the population shows a major support
for centralizing the educational system across the states. The fact
that so many parents rely on the state to raise their own offspring
is a sad legacy for the future.
At this time
roughly 80 families in Germany are being persecuted for choosing
to educate their own children. It is estimated that maybe as many
as 300 children are being homeschooled. The concept is gradually
taking root throughout the country with strong support coming from
the US and from religious groups that are not of the state-sponsored
Churches (Evangelical and Catholic). Germans are still very skeptical
toward religious groups such as the Baptists and Pentecostals, especially
now that Christian missionaries are settling in their country. These
independent denominations are often viewed as cults since their
communities seem to prosper outside the mainstream culture.
It is not only
religious groups that wish to have a choice in homeschooling their
children. There are many parents who are dissatisfied with the way
their children are brought up or treated in contemporary German
schools. The threat of drugs and the casual attitude toward early
sexuality may be enough reason for a parent to protect their child
from early ‘sozialisieren’ according to the opinion of a
PhD academic. However, the fear that homeschooling can create a
parallel society warrants no proof, since neighboring European countries
permit homeschooling quite successfully.
Germans are
very studious by nature. If parents want to spend the time educating
their own children, which many mothers already do by helping with
homework, then the capacity to flourish in a "living room environment"
can only stimulate the curiosity of a child. Parents are, after
all, an idolized image to the child. It is this sacred image that
the state is now distorting with its constant meddling in family
affairs and disrupting the authority and guardianship parents have
over their children.
None of these
families are seeking to abolish the educational system. They only
wish to have a choice in the techniques and content of their children's
education. Knowing about evolution or how to protect against sexually
transmitted diseases isn’t making anyone a better welder, banker
or auto mechanic. Neither will the daily interaction with one’s
peers in a classroom provide the foundation of moral character,
nor will it develop the characteristics that make us virtuous creatures.
The fact remains
that families – parents and siblings – provide the foundation for
children's abilities to interact with their immediate environment.
If a parent provides this labor of love for a child, then all of
humanity is to rejoice in their decision. An independently thinking
child is capable of making decisions when presented with choices,
and is able to solve problems and figure things out for himself.
He or she will be less reliant on state charity, and probably will
want to emulate the ways of his parents – marry and have children.
Several homeschooling
families have left Germany and gone abroad. They find refuge in
the United States, Australia or Ireland. Over 150,000 Germans have
left the country in 2004, and more leave each year in order to find
better opportunities for themselves, shows that a good part of the
educated population is saying Auf Wiedersehen to their homeland.
The declining birth rates aren’t helping the welfare state either.
Only 1.34 births per woman aren’t enough to facilitate the cost
of social welfare, social security and socialized health care. The
Federal Government calculates that maintaining the present level
of benefits will require an average rate of 2.1 children per woman.
The gap is being filled with asylum seekers and immigrants who often
aren’t willing to integrate, neither into their society nor into
their school system.
Judges and
politicians are in denial about the benefits of homeschooling and
are determined to enforce the law. Evidence shows that homeschoolers
score higher in almost all categories when tested against public
or state-educated students. Germany still relies on certificates
and diplomas for graduates to be successfully employed. Their four-system
education determines the type of career a young person will be able
to enter. Prestige also comes with higher education. A doctor, teacher
or attorney still carries a lot of status in the German society
and receives the ear of the policy makers.
Now 40 years
later I find myself facing my own school history. The recent events
over homeschooling have left me shocked to say the least. I was
still educated in the drill of repetitive study and memorizing.
I was never good in Math. I lacked the confidence. My German writing
was satisfactory, though grammar was never my strongpoint. The greatest
asset I was left with was a foreign language: English. It was in
the English language where I excelled in later years. I began to
study Math at a local Junior College, took English grammar and writing
classes, and aced them all. Natural curiosity led me to study more
history, science, and my own religion. During the process I discovered
freedom. The self-taught knowledge became mixed with my personal
experience and I began to accept certain truths to be absolute.
I realized I had to make choices in life, and self-education became
the best defense against that which wants to extinguish the reverence
of life. In my lifetime this always included parents and God. I
have ‘unschooled’ myself ever since without becoming a hermit or
a social dropout.
German
families and their homeschooled children are way ahead of where
I was. They are taking great challenges and risks in order to give
something to their children that many of us never had nor ever will
have. They give the sort of time, energy and love to their offspring
that can never be found in a sterile school environment or with
teachers that expect all children to act, think, and talk alike
according to the outdated school model of an Imperial Prussia that
has long since ceased to exist.
February
13, 2007
Sabine
Barnhart [send her mail]
moved to the US in 1980 and lives in Fort Worth, TX with
her three children. For the past 15 years she has been working for
an international service company.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Sabine
Barnhart Archives
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