Oh, I think it could be done...and am frankly (without getting into a lot of detail) in a position of authority of something that provides funds for educating youth. But the provisions cover some verifiable costs...it is not just payment.
For instance, if one wanted to, a credit could be issued to the homeschooling parent for the purchase of books, supplies, testing materials, etc.
But there are some in here who appear to be saying that the concept itself is flawed. i.e. - The state should only be providing the cost of an education in a formal, public school environment. Anything else, you're on your own.
With such a premise, methodologies don't really matter.
Originally Posted by Rudyard K
Speaking broadly about vouchers, count me in that camp. It isn't that I'm against private education (I'm a product of it) or in perfect world wouldn't want every child to choose where they want to go and have it paid for but we live in a world of scarce resources.
In many ways there are parallels to our frequent healthcare discussions here. In a world without resource constraints I'd love for everyone to have wonderful hc & not have to pay for it. It just isn't practical.
So I'm saying take state resources and improve public schools (where they need improvement; in some places they are really good).
As for vouchers for homeschooling, if I don't support them for private schools, as you probably suspect, I don't support them for homeschooling, but I don't think the distribution of them would be the hard part. I don't think you would have widespread fraud (like a babymachine saying she was homeschooling her 10 kids so she could collect more checks) - checks in the system like testing would deter it.
More than actual funding (or direct costs) I think the biggest thing the State could help homeschool parents with is the access to resources (at reasonable costs). Depending on which estimate you believe there are 1-2million homeschool kids in the US. That is a huge number. It is also one of the most fragmented & unorganized markets out there. There is a huge (for-profit) market opportunity for making the lives of home school parents easier. In fact, without getting into detail, one of the ventures I'm involved with is engaging this market.