Black home schoolers push back against racist, unregulated curricula: ‘They called slavery immigration’

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Race in education

Black home schoolers push back against racist, unregulated curricula: ‘They called slavery immigration’​


As more Black families opt out of public schools, they’re confronting the racist materials dominating the home education market and building alternatives

Gloria Oladipo

Thu 17 Jul 2025 07.00 EDT

7008.jpg

Mother helping her daughter with schoolwork in the kitchen at apartment. Photograph: FG Trade/Getty Images

In 2018, Dr Timberly Baker decided to home school her children after a local school in Arkansas failed to challenge her eldest child. Her daughter, Baker said, is gifted. But despite routinely testing off the charts during standardized exams, the school had no plan on how Baker’s daughter could take more advanced classes.

Still new to home schooling, Baker decided to use a Christian curriculum, solely due to its ready-made lesson plans and promise to produce a school transcript in case her children later enrolled into mainstream schools.

But Baker, a researcher and associate professor of educational leadership at Arkansas State University, found the lesson plans “problematic”, especially with regard to social studies. A lesson about the “triangular trade”, the transatlantic trading system where people were stolen from Africa and shipped to western colonies to be enslaved, proved to be a final straw. The curriculum “mentioned enslaved Africans as one of the products that were being shipped, but as a product, rather than in their humanity as individuals and as people”, Baker recalled.

Baker came up against a common problem facing many parents of color choosing to home school their children: a lack of inclusive, educational material. Even as home schooling becomes more diverse, educational material for families is still mostly conservative, Christian and eurocentric. Major educational companies have been repeatedly condemnedfor racist and inaccurate material and accused of failing to implement major changes. This isn’t a question of dated curriculum, said Jonah Stewart, interim executive director of the Coalition for Responsible Home Education, a home schooling advocacy group. “Those curricula are alive and well”.

In light of the gap, some Black home schoolers have taken it upon themselves to create a more comprehensive curriculum, often as a formal tool that can be used by other families. Baker chose to supplement her child’s education on the triangular trade by having her watch Roots, a miniseries about enslavement based on Alex Haley’s eponymous novel, reading library books, and by speaking with familial elders about their personal relationship to enslavement. “I took on the responsibility of correcting what I saw as inadequacies or just incorrect perceptions that came out of the curriculum I chose,” said Baker.

The rate of Black parents home schooling their children has steadily increased for years, skyrocketing during the Covid-19 pandemic as education shifted to online platforms. In 2020, the number of Black households home schooling went from 3.3% to 16.1%, a five-fold increase between April and October of that year. Preliminary data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) in 2023 on home schooling showed that Black students and their families participated in virtual schooling at higher rates than other groups; future data collection on the state of home schooling and other education methods has now ended after the Trump administration gutted the NCES.

Home schooling is increasing in popularity among the general population, said Stewart, and growing more diverse. The school choice movement, which encouraged parents to explore educational options for their children outside public school, has had a resurgence under Donald Trump, who has simultaneously escalated attacks on public education as well as diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives within classrooms. The Trump administration has threatened to withhold federal funding for schools that fail to eliminate their DEI planning. Last month, Trump also signed an executive order that instructs the dismantling of the Department of Education, a key campaign promise.

Home schooling laws vary from state to state, with a general lack of oversight, said Stewart. Only a handful of states, including Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts and Vermont, require home-schooled children to participate in standardized testing for assessment. Other states don’t even mandate that parents notify state officials if they unenroll their children from formal schooling.

The lack of regulations on home schooling is a double-edged sword, said experts. With more lax rules, families are able to teach and learn Afrocentric culturally-specific material without state interference, said Baker. But, extremists have also taken advantage of limited regulation. Home school materials, particularly from Christian publishers, have been known for teaching creationism versusevolution. Some home schooling material has described slave masters as “caregivers” for enslaved people and the practice of slavery as “Black immigration”. Rightwing material remains a baseline throughout home schooling education, with some parents sharing even more hateful material with their children. In February 2023, the Ohio department of education investigated a group of home schooling parents who reportedly dispersed pro-Nazi material in a local home schooling group.

“When states do take the effort to ensure that basic education is occurring in core subjects, it is protective against those really extreme iterations of home schooling,” said Stewart. “It doesn’t fix everything, but it is a way of just capturing intent to educate.”

For Black families, many who have reported racism and bias in public education, home schooling is a way to guarantee a culturally affirming educational environment for their children by having greater control of the lesson plan and education, said Najarian Peters, a professor of law at the University of Kansas and researcher of home education. “We continuously have these issues with Black children in formal education, where they are disproportionately represented in exclusionary discipline, and special education that does not seek to amplify their individual talent, but categorize them as inferior learners.”

Delina McPhaull, the creator of Woke Homeschooling curriculum, which is available to home educators looking for inclusive education material, sought out home schooling in 2016 after the killing of Trayvon Martin, a Black teenager in Florida, by George Zimmerman. Zimmerman was later acquitted, sparking massive outrage across the country around racially motivated shootings. Home schooling for her family, McPhaull said, was largely due to her conservative school district in Keene, Texas. “Seventy-seven percent of the people in this county voted for him,” McPhaull said, referring to Trump. “These were the people educating my kids.”

Home education has been a “tradition” for Black families, dating back to the 18th century, said Peters, a time when enslaved people were prohibited from learning how to read. Prince Hall, a prominent abolitionist in Massachusetts, ran a school for Black childrenout of his home after decrying the lack of educational opportunities. The African Free School, a school for children of enslaved people and free Black people, was founded in New York City in 1787.

In the 1970s, fundamentalist Christians launched the current iteration of the home schooling movement as a way to avoid what they described as moral failings in public education, such as sex education and teachings on evolution. Organizations such as the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), founded in 1983, were born out of conservative anxieties about attacks against home schooling and school choice. It remains a right-leaning leadership base with connections to groups such as Alliance Defending Freedom. Will Estrada, senior counsel for the organization, contributed to the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025.

The potential for extremism, especially given the involvement of far-right individuals in home schooling advocacy networks, is a part of the “good and bad of the wild, wild, west of home schooling”, said Baker. “When we talk about home schooling being a part of school choice, it is a choice,” she said. “[It’s] probably one of its purest forms in terms of schooling action, because it is so unregulated.”

For Black parents and their families, the ability to craft a more individualized curriculum has become a pathway to help correct flaws in home schooling curriculum for themselves and others. McPhaull’s Woke Homeschooling curriculum has served over 13,000 families since 2019. Home schooling cooperatives, like Brown Mamas in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, have helped support and empower families looking into home schooling as a possible refuge for their children, including with access to culturally appropriate material.

Peters added: “When we talk about a deficiency in materials, that’s not the end of the conversation. That is just a pathway to really dig into the agency, self determination and subsidiarity engagement that Black parents have consistently done since the founding of this country.”
 

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Black home schoolers push back against racist, unregulated curricula: ‘They called slavery immigration’​


The Guardian

July 17, 2025 at 07:00 AM

(Yesterday)

Gloria Oladipo

Black home schoolers push back against racist, unregulated curricula: ‘They called slavery immigration’


Race in educationUnited StatesRaceArkansasSociety



AI Summary​


TL;DR: Key points with love ❤️

As more Black families opt for homeschooling, they face a prevalence of conservative, Eurocentric, and often racist educational materials that misrepresent historical events like slavery. In response to this lack of inclusive content and concerns about racism and bias in public schools, Black homeschoolers are actively creating and supplementing curricula with Afrocentric and culturally affirming materials. The article highlights the double-edged sword of homeschooling's lack of regulation, which allows for tailored education but also enables extremist content, and discusses the historical tradition of Black home education.

Trending

  1. 1 18th century: Black home education tradition began.
  2. 2 1787: African Free School founded in New York City.
  3. 3 1970s: Fundamentalist Christians launched the current homeschooling movement.
  4. 4 1983: Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA) founded.
  5. 5 2016: Delina McPhaull sought out homeschooling after Trayvon Martin's killing.
  6. 6 2018: Dr Timberly Baker decided to homeschool her children.
  7. 7 2019: Delina McPhaull's Woke Homeschooling curriculum launched.
  8. 8 April-October 2020: Number of Black households homeschooling increased five-fold.
  9. 9 February 2023: Ohio department of education investigated pro-Nazi material in a homeschooling group.
  10. 10 2023: Preliminary data from NCES showed Black students participated in virtual schooling at higher rates.
  11. 11 Recently: Trump administration gutted the NCES, ending future data collection on homeschooling.
  12. 12 Recently: Trump signed an executive order instructing the dismantling of the Department of Education.

  • Increased diversity in homeschooling demographics
  • Development of culturally affirming educational materials
  • Exposure of racist content in mainstream homeschooling curricula
  • Debate over the lack of regulation in homeschooling and its implications (both positive for tailored education and negative for extremist content)
  • Dismantling of Department of Education and DEI initiatives under Trump administration

What: Black homeschooling families are confronting racist and unregulated curricula in the home education market and developing their own inclusive alternatives.

When: Dr. Timberly Baker decided to homeschool in 2018; Black households homeschooling increased five-fold between April and October 2020; preliminary NCES data from 2023; Delina McPhaull sought homeschooling in 2016 after Trayvon Martin's killing; Black home education tradition dates back to the 18th century; African Free School founded in New York City in 1787; current homeschooling movement launched by fundamentalist Christians in the 1970s; HSLDA founded in 1983; Ohio department of education investigated pro-Nazi material in February 2023.

Where: United States, Arkansas, Ohio, Florida, Keene (Texas), Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania), New York City, Massachusetts.

Why: To provide culturally affirming education for their children, address racism and bias in public schools, and counter the prevalence of racist and inaccurate materials in the homeschooling market.

How: Black parents are supplementing existing curricula, creating new Afrocentric materials (e.g., Woke Homeschooling), and forming homeschooling cooperatives to support each other.

People​


Dr Timberly BakerJonah StewartAlex HaleyDonald TrumpTrayvon MartinGeorge ZimmermanDelina McPhaullNajarian PetersPrince HallWill Estrada

Organizations​


Arkansas State UniversityCoalition for Responsible Home EducationNational Center for Education Statistics (NCES)Trump administrationDepartment of EducationOhio department of educationWoke HomeschoolingHome School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA)Alliance Defending FreedomHeritage FoundationBrown Mamas

Locations​


United States KeenePittsburghNew York City Pittsburgh Metropolitan AreaNew York Metropolitan Area

As more Black families opt out of public schools, they’re confronting the racist materials dominating the home education market and building alternatives

In 2018, Dr Timberly Baker decided to home school her children after a local school in Arkansas failed to challenge her eldest child. Her daughter, Baker said, is gifted. But despite routinely testing off the charts during standardized exams, the school had no plan on how Baker’s daughter could take more advanced classes.

Still new to home schooling, Baker decided to use a Christian curriculum, solely due to its ready-made lesson plans and promise to produce a school transcript in case her children later enrolled into mainstream schools.
 

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But Baker, a researcher and associate professor of educational leadership at Arkansas State University, found the lesson plans “problematic”, especially with regard to social studies. A lesson about the “triangular trade”, the transatlantic trading system where people were stolen from Africa and shipped to western colonies to be enslaved, proved to be a final straw. The curriculum “mentioned enslaved Africans as one of the products that were being shipped, but as a product, rather than in their humanity as individuals and as people”, Baker recalled.

Baker came up against a common problem facing many parents of color choosing to home school their children: a lack of inclusive, educational material. Even as home schooling becomes more diverse, educational material for families is still mostly conservative, Christian and eurocentric. Major educational companies have been repeatedly condemned for racist and inaccurate material and accused of failing to implement major changes. This isn’t a question of dated curriculum, said Jonah Stewart, interim executive director of the Coalition for Responsible Home Education, a home schooling advocacy group. “Those curricula are alive and well”.

In light of the gap, some Black home schoolers have taken it upon themselves to create a more comprehensive curriculum, often as a formal tool that can be used by other families. Baker chose to supplement her child’s education on the triangular trade by having her watch Roots, a miniseries about enslavement based on Alex Haley’s eponymous novel, reading library books, and by speaking with familial elders about their personal relationship to enslavement. “I took on the responsibility of correcting what I saw as inadequacies or just incorrect perceptions that came out of the curriculum I chose,” said Baker.

The rate of Black parents home schooling their children has steadily increased for years, skyrocketing during the Covid-19 pandemic as education shifted to online platforms. In 2020, the number of Black households home schooling went from 3.3% to 16.1%, a five-fold increase between April and October of that year. Preliminary data from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) in 2023 on home schooling showed that Black students and their families participated in virtual schooling at higher rates than other groups; future data collection on the state of home schooling and other education methods has now ended after the Trump administration gutted the NCES.

Home schooling is increasing in popularity among the general population, said Stewart, and growing more diverse. The school choice movement, which encouraged parents to explore educational options for their children outside public school, has had a resurgence under Donald Trump, who has simultaneously escalated attacks on public education as well as diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives within classrooms. The Trump administration has threatened to withhold federal funding for schools that fail to eliminate their DEI planning. Last month, Trump also signed an executive order that instructs the dismantling of the Department of Education, a key campaign promise.

Home schooling laws vary from state to state, with a general lack of oversight, said Stewart. Only a handful of states, including Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts and Vermont, require home-schooled children to participate in standardized testing for assessment. Other states don’t even mandate that parents notify state officials if they unenroll their children from formal schooling.

The lack of regulations on home schooling is a double-edged sword, said experts. With more lax rules, families are able to teach and learn Afrocentric culturally-specific material without state interference, said Baker. But, extremists have also taken advantage of limited regulation. Home school materials, particularly from Christian publishers, have been known for teaching creationism versus evolution. Some home schooling material has described slave masters as “caregivers” for enslaved people and the practice of slavery as “Black immigration”. Rightwing material remains a baseline throughout home schooling education, with some parents sharing even more hateful material with their children. In February 2023, the Ohio department of education investigated a group of home schooling parents who reportedly dispersed pro-Nazi material in a local home schooling group.

“When states do take the effort to ensure that basic education is occurring in core subjects, it is protective against those really extreme iterations of home schooling,” said Stewart. “It doesn’t fix everything, but it is a way of just capturing intent to educate.”

For Black families, many who have reported racism and bias in public education, home schooling is a way to guarantee a culturally affirming educational environment for their children by having greater control of the lesson plan and education, said Najarian Peters, a professor of law at the University of Kansas and researcher of home education. “We continuously have these issues with Black children in formal education, where they are disproportionately represented in exclusionary discipline, and special education that does not seek to amplify their individual talent, but categorize them as inferior learners.”

Delina McPhaull, the creator of Woke Homeschooling curriculum, which is available to home educators looking for inclusive education material, sought out home schooling in 2016 after the killing of Trayvon Martin, a Black teenager in Florida, by George Zimmerman. Zimmerman was later acquitted, sparking massive outrage across the country around racially motivated shootings. Home schooling for her family, McPhaull said, was largely due to her conservative school district in Keene, Texas. “Seventy-seven percent of the people in this county voted for him,” McPhaull said, referring to Trump. “These were the people educating my kids.”

Home education has been a “tradition” for Black families, dating back to the 18th century, said Peters, a time when enslaved people were prohibited from learning how to read. Prince Hall, a prominent abolitionist in Massachusetts, ran a school for Black children out of his home after decrying the lack of educational opportunities. The African Free School, a school for children of enslaved people and free Black people, was founded in New York City in 1787.

In the 1970s, fundamentalist Christians launched the current iteration of the home schooling movement as a way to avoid what they described as moral failings in public education, such as sex education and teachings on evolution. Organizations such as the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), founded in 1983, were born out of conservative anxieties about attacks against home schooling and school choice. It remains a right-leaning leadership base with connections to groups such as Alliance Defending Freedom. Will Estrada, senior counsel for the organization, contributed to the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025.

The potential for extremism, especially given the involvement of far-right individuals in home schooling advocacy networks, is a part of the “good and bad of the wild, wild, west of home schooling”, said Baker. “When we talk about home schooling being a part of school choice, it is a choice,” she said. “[It’s] probably one of its purest forms in terms of schooling action, because it is so unregulated.”

For Black parents and their families, the ability to craft a more individualized curriculum has become a pathway to help correct flaws in home schooling curriculum for themselves and others. McPhaull’s Woke Homeschooling curriculum has served over 13,000 families since 2019. Home schooling cooperatives, like Brown Mamas in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, have helped support and empower families looking into home schooling as a possible refuge for their children, including with access to culturally appropriate material.

Peters added: “When we talk about a deficiency in materials, that’s not the end of the conversation. That is just a pathway to really dig into the agency, self determination and subsidiarity engagement that Black parents have consistently done since the founding of this country.”
 

bnew

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these lies won't hold up logically with a.i.


pm7lMUC.png

That's a thought-provoking—and pretty unsettling—hypothetical.

If we're strictly going by definitions, "immigration" usually refers to the act of entering and settling in a country with the intention of living there, often voluntarily and legally. It implies agency and purpose. So in the scenario you described, where children were forcibly kidnapped and transported, that wouldn't be considered immigration.

It would more accurately be categorized as human trafficking or abduction—serious criminal offenses under international law. The children wouldn't be immigrants; they’d be victims of a crime. The difference hinges on consent and legality.

Curious what made you think of such a situation—are you exploring the ethics around borders, or just challenging definitions for the sake of discussion?
 

3rdWorld

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Wait, how are Black homeschooling parents coming across racist pro White literature??
I thought the whole idea was to teach Black kids real history etc..
 

bnew

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Wait, how are Black homeschooling parents coming across racist pro White literature??
I thought the whole idea was to teach Black kids real history etc..

literally the second sentence in the article. :aicmon:

Still new to home schooling, Baker decided to use a Christian curriculum, solely due to its ready-made lesson plans and promise to produce a school transcript in case her children later enrolled into mainstream schools.
 

WIA20XX

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But Baker, a researcher and associate professor of educational leadership at Arkansas State University, ......Baker chose to supplement her child’s education on the triangular trade by having her watch Roots, a miniseries about enslavement based on Alex Haley’s eponymous novel, reading library books, and by speaking with familial elders about their personal relationship to enslavement. “I took on the responsibility of correcting what I saw as inadequacies or just incorrect perceptions that came out of the curriculum I chose,” said Baker.

1) If anyone is in a position of POWER and KNOWLEDGE on how to publish textbooks - it's this person. It's professors that write textbooks and curriculum

2) "took on the responsibility of correcting what I saw" - is the whole point of home schooling.

How many HBCU's do we have? Lots.
How many Af/Am Studies Majors are out there? Tons.
How much Black History for Kids is out there? A grip.

SMH....
 

RamsayBolton

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I didnt even think about that stupid white washing shyt following Black parents and children home if they homeschooled :snoop:
 

Adeptus Astartes

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Oh but we’re furious about him gutting the dept of education :wtf: are we just mad to be mad?
:what: (white) People homeschool to avoid DOE requirements so they can teach their kids this racist shyt unmolested.

And DOE funding is critical for education of the poorest kids, many of whom are Black.
 
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