Technology

Google To Announce New Initiative Assisting Homeschoolers With Educational Services

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Google is set to announce an initiative Thursday in which its slate of services and products — known as G Suite, specifically G Suite Education — will be fully available to homeschoolers and their leaders for the first time ever.

The software tools are valuable for fostering collaboration, productivity, and creativity in a system of education that is often overlooked, according to the tech company and groups representing the home-schooled.

“One parent at a homeschool co-op [Partnership Homeschool Educational Association of Minnesota] described it as a ‘life-saver,'” Jennifer Holland, senior program manager in the Google for Education division, told The Daily Caller News Foundation. “It can improve the quality of writing by tracking how things change over time. Also, before, parents and students would have to turn in assignments by email and in person, making it hard to keep track of everything. Google classroom provided them that glue.”

Many Google enthusiasts, or general users of the internet due to the tech giant’s ubiquitousness, are well aware of the free proprietary applications like Gmail, Calendar, Docs, Drive, Sites, Hangouts, and Classroom.

More aptly, organizations and businesses are able to sign up for an administrator account in which they can manage those Google services for members or employees. But Google only granted such capabilities to formal education institutions initially, doing so by identifying those recognized with a “.edu” domain. The Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), a nonprofit homeschool advocacy group, reached out to Google to ask if those that it represents could be provided with such a technological capacity.

“HSLDA advocates for home-schooling because we’ve seen that the freedom, flexibility, and one-on-one elements of this educational option work,” Darren Jones, staff attorney for the HSLDA and the author of the soon-to-be-published Google blog post, told TheDCNF. “Like any teacher, homeschool co-op teachers find that ongoing interaction with students helps the children learn. Today, a lot of that interaction can occur electronically, and Google’s G Suite for Education aids that learning process.”

When asked if he and his organization was initially irritated that Google did not include homeschoolers in the first place, Jones said it’s not surprising or really the company’s fault because “no state accredits homeschools or homeschool co-ops.”

“So since Google was making its educational collaboration software available only to accredited schools, homeschool co-ops were not eligible,” he continued. “HSLDA strongly opposes discrimination against homeschool students, so we were very happy that Google has agreed to open up the software to co-ops that can use it.”

While they vary, co-ops are part of an arrangement in which anywhere from around 30 to 100 (even sometimes up to 150) students from individual homes gather weekly, biweekly or monthly to partake in educational activities that require or are benefited from team efforts, or are more hands-on.

As of 2012, there are 1,773,000 American children ages five to 17 that are home-schooled, according to data provided by the U.S. Department of Education, a 61.8 percent increase in 10 years. That means 3.4 percent of students with a grade equivalent of kindergarten through 12th grade are educated outside the public and traditional private school systems. The home-schooling movement to some observers is now more than just its more prominent manifestation in the 1980s, which seemed to be spearheaded by evangelical Christians. Now, the demographics for those taught outside standard schools are more diverse. In fact, “race, gender, urban residence and family composition make no difference” when accounting for the characteristics behind those who choose such a path, according to a study conducted by sociologists Nihan Kayaardi and Philip Q. Yang. Also, there are “no significant differences” between homeschoolers and the general U.S. population meaning pre-conceived notions may no longer apply.

“A lot of homeschooler parents see the benefit of banding together,” Zach Yeskel, Google for Education’s group product manager, told TheDCNF. “There are also a lot of activities at home, so when they separate, they can distribute the assignments through the internet.”

Google says that Classroom is particularly beneficial because it is designed to make “it easy for learners and instructors to connect — inside and outside of schools” while also saving “time and paper.” Specifically, it allows teachers to send announcements and other communications through the web and assign paperless assignments for students at multiple locations.

As homeschooling has grown, families still get together to learn,” Jones writes in an incoming blog post for Google. “In my work … I advise these groups every day, and I can see how new, advancing technology could benefit students. Through technology, homeschool co-op teachers can set and change assignments on the fly, students can work together even if geographically separated, and everyone has a common format for collaboration.”

“I think that Google is a good example of how companies can change with the times by recognizing that excellent education occurs in places other than traditional schools,” Jones told TheDCNF.

Nevertheless, there will always be privacy concerns when it comes to Google and its programs — particularly when it comes to data dealing with children, and especially at a time when recent events and revelations have piqued the public’s profound concerns of personal information acquired by tech companies and subsequently given to third-parties.

But HSLDA, a group that has been called a powerful lobbying group and is in general the target of criticism by some, doesn’t seem too worried, or at least sees the outweighing benefits of using Google’s respective services.

Jones addressed those accusations against his group, that in some specific cases people use homeschool as a veil to cover up egregious acts.

“While there has been some media scrutiny lately regarding unusual cases in which parents fraudulently use home-schooling as a screen to hide behind in abusing their children, HSLDA stands firmly against child abuse and neglect,” said Jones. “We see it as a rejection of everything that we stand for — the right of parents to lovingly choose an education that fits their individual children. We believe that both child abuse and criminal laws should be enforced to the fullest.”

Jones added that regulation of home-schooling doesn’t have a measurable effect on child abuse or neglect, and would likely have unintended consequences.

HSLDA isn’t the only group working with Google, which says it’s also been collaborating with the National Black Home Educators.

The announcement comes Thursday morning in Florida at the country’s largest homeschool convention. G-Suite for Education is expected be available sometime in early to mid-June.

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he right of parents to lovingly choose an education that fits their individual children. We believe that both child abuse and criminal laws should be enforced to the fullest.”

Jones added that regulation of homeschooling doesn’t have a measurable effect on child abuse or neglect, and would likely have unintended consequences.

HSLDA isn’t the only group working with Google, which says its also been collaborating with the National Black Home Educators.

The announcement comes Thursday morning in Florida at the country’s largest homeschool convention. G-Suite for Education is expected be available sometime in early to mid-June.

Follow Eric on Twitter

Send tips to [email protected].

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