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...families in that state practice home schooling for religious reasons. The new home schoolers haven't completely given up on public education, at least not the idea of it. "The problem is that schools have abandoned their mission," says Luigi Manca, a communications professor at Benedictine University in Lisle, Ill., who home schools his daughter Nora, 17. "They've forgotten about educating...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Sweet School | 8/27/2001 | See Source »

Many of the home-schooling parents we met were religious, but few were home schooling only to instill values. They had come to their decision after a variety of frustrations. Among them: the Fayetteville, Ga., school with 45 kindergartners in one room; the school administrators in Wheaton, Ill., who were so confused over what to do with Sue McCallum's boy that they put him in both remedial and gifted classes; the Glendale, Calif., school where Robert Phillipps' fifth-grader Bill saw too many fistfights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Sweet School | 8/27/2001 | See Source »

Which is great, unless you believe that kids should be kids before they are adults. John McCallum, 20, of Wheaton, Ill., began learning at home after fourth grade. On the whole, he valued the experience. But if he could change anything about his teen years, he would want more interaction with people his age. "I don't date, and that's something I attribute to home schooling," he says. Or consider Rachel Ahern, 21, of Grand Junction, Colo., who never set foot in a classroom until she went to Harvard at 18. As a child, she socialized with older kids...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Sweet School | 8/27/2001 | See Source »

...same blinkered approach can extend to academics. "I make pretty much all the decisions about what to study," says Maren McKee, 15, of Naperville, Ill., who left public school after third grade. "I wasn't interested in math or composition, so I didn't really do it. I liked to dance." But now McKee, who is dyslexic, realizes she will need more than dance steps to get into college. "My mom and I are going to spend this whole year on math and learning to write," she says, perhaps not fully appreciating that both of those skills can take much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Sweet School | 8/27/2001 | See Source »

...have done such a sorry job of managing care for healthy folks, how in the world are they ever going to do it for the sickest Americans? That's the vexing question facing health insurers and employers as they try to deal with the growing ranks of the chronically ill--a number that is expected to double, to close to 180 million, in the next few decades...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Work In Progress: Take Your Medicine | 8/20/2001 | See Source »

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