Tim Tebow won the Heisman Trophy while playing quarterback at the University of Florida.
His pro football career has been something, well, less than stellar. Still, he remains an icon for his off-the-field endeavors, mainly due to his faith and, get this, because he was home-schooled during his high school years.
Tebow was allowed to take part in extracurricular activities in his hometown of Jacksonville, Fla., even though he didn’t attend school in the traditional sense.
Some Texas lawmakers want the University Interscholastic League to lift its ban on home-school students taking part in extracurricular activities.
Don’t to it, UIL and the Texas Legislature.
https://www.thsc.org/about-thsc/lobby-the-texas-legislature/tim-tebow-bill/
Parents are certainly entitled to educate their children the way they see fit. If they don’t want to enroll their kids in public or private school, they can teach them at home. Millions of students are taught at home as it is.
The idea, though, of allowing home-schooled children to take part in activities in actual schools shouldn’t sit well with the parents of children who are actual students in those schools.
The Texas Home School Coalition Association notes that parents who home-school their children pay property taxes that funds school activities and, thus, are entitled to have their children partake in them.
Is it fair, though, to allow parents to cherry-pick how they reap the benefits of the taxes they pay?
They don’t want their children educated by public school teachers, but insist that they be allowed to play football (as young Tim Tebow’s parents were allowed to do), march in the band, or perform in dramatic productions?
No. Those parents have made their choice on behalf of their children.