
uhhhh run that by me again...they learn more socially hanging out at home with mommy and daddy vs being among their peers? yeah right...
Yeah, right. The job of socializing children belongs to their parents, not their peers. Children do NOT do a good job of teaching socialization skills to other children.
Correction: individualized instruction by a PARENT. Very few are teachers.
Your bias is showing here. Are only folks employed by a school as a teacher deserving of the title? Or is anyone who is teaching someone else a teacher? I use the term in the latter sense, not the former.
I'll grant you that. Although I would think (hope?) most teachers care about their student's success too.
I would hope so too, but the bottom line is that parents are much more motivated to see that their children become successful adults than are teachers who are only passing through a child's life for a year or two at most.
So learn to be independent....by hanging at home w/mom n dad.
Parents have, as their ultimate goal, raising their child to be an independent adult. That is not the goal of a teacher in the school system and independence is not learned by sitting in a classroom.
Sorry, as important and desirable as that is, this simply isn't true. Quality educational instruction is the single factor with the most impact on a child's eventual educational success. A parent's involvement can make a huge diff though, don't mean to say otherwise (and SOME parents can do both of course).
I'm sorry, but unless you can provide some evidence that quality of educational instruction is more important than the quality of parental involvement, I will be skeptical of that claim. Among other things, the higher the level of the parental involvement, the more likely the parent is to seek and find high quality educational instruction. Keep in mind, homeschooling does not imply the parent is the child's sole teacher.
ah HAH the truth comes out

That's all well and fine but as you clearly stated, this is first and foremost about getting close to your kids...ie NOT about their education.
For us, we choose homeschooling because we wanted to provide a better education for our children. However, to my surprise, the greatest payoff has been not the better education, but the closer relationships that homeschooling has fostered in our family. It makes homeschooling truly a win-win option.
Anyway sorry for any offense and if it works for you...oops I mean for your kid(s)...great. Just not a fan of the homeschool thing generally. The lack of social interaction w/peers alone is enough to turn me off, although it's not the only thing.
Your stereotype of a child learning alone at home with his/her parent is pretty far off the reality for most homeschoolers. Homeschooling does not mean the child is isolated from peers nor does it mean that the parent is the sole teacher.