My son in law was the principal of a Christian School. My daughter a qualified teacher. She home schooled my grandchildren until such time as she ended up being asked to work full time at the same school.
Public curriculum, no matter where you come from, presents a worldview in direct contradiction to the Christian worldview. And even Christian Schools cannot legally offer the kind of education they would prefer. And now with the recent decision by the Supreme Court, who knows what or who will be teaching your children in the future.
Public curriculums should be religiously neutral because they have to accommodate students from all kinds of religious backgrounds. .
As for the Christian worldview you are talking about, which one is that? I have an inkling that your Christian worldview differs vastly from mine or those of American mainline Churches. Who’s to decide whose worldview is the correct one? As far as I know there isn’t a Pope yet whom all American Christians would accept.
The only ‘worldview’ that should be presented in public schools are the values of the constitution, or in Germany’s case the “Grundgesetz”.
Both allow for us to vote for/against the politicians who decide on the curriculum. And as it is in Germany (sadly not in the US): the majority wins and the minority will have to put up with whatever curriculum the elected politicians deem fit. Now I’m in the comfortable position that my Christian worldview is in no way in conflict with the curriculum taught in my kid’s public school. Seeing that you’re not so lucky, I recommend you let Romans 13:1 ease your heart.
Home schooling, using approved curriculum and with support from dedicated interest groups and professionals, will always be better than public schools.
I would not commit to the “always”, but the more I’m beginning to learn about the public school system in the US, the more I’m tending to think you may have a point. Your funding system is ridiculous! Then again: if the US funding of public schools is based on local wealth, I’d guess kids in the most underfunded schools are least likely to have parents who are able to do home-schooling. But that’s just me with my personal Christian values again, thinking poor children from disfunctional families have as much a right to a good education as rich children from functional ones.
And as far as being socially well adjusted through the public system? What does that mean? It means you are risking your children's eternal destinies against temporary oneness with the world...a world that hates Christian values and despises those that promote them.
Our children’s eternal destinies are entirely in God’s hands. There’s nothing to risk here on our part.
As for Cristian values that the world supposedly hates: whose Christian values? Most people I know in the world love charity, caring for the poor, seeking justice for the oppressed … well, I suppose I’m surrounded by what you'd see as bleeding heart liberals, but I should hope these values are pretty universal.
And as far as the German public system is concerned, I would tend to believe it more in line with Catholic ideology rather than Lutheran. I have listened to some brilliant investigative lectures on education in Europe. From what I've learned the most influential group in transforming modem Education in Europe and others even the world were the Jesuits. I don't think they promoted Lutheran ideals.
Undoubtedly the Jesuits were and still are keen on education and – as far as I could find out - the first Jesuit school for non-clergy opened as early as 1548 in Italy. Cudos to them!
What I was talking about when I said public schools in Germany go way back to Martin Luther were the pamphlets he wrote on the need for public education, in particular his “Ratsherrenschrift” from 1524. Subsequently Protestant cities and heads of state implemented the first public (city council/state funded) schools in Germany, beginning with the city of Worms in 1527. Eventually Catholic states in what is now Germany also founded public schools, but were comparatively delayed.
The reason Martin Luther wanted everybody - including peasants and girls - to be educated was his belief in the “Priesthood of all Believers”. And yes, that is a concept Jesuits didn’t promote.