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Started By
Message
A homeschool schism: The fallout from Well-Trained Mind’s leftward turn
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:36 am
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:36 am
The Well-Trained Mind (and its associated curriculum and online academy) has been a major provider of curriculum and courses for the homeschooling community for over 2 decades. Its founder, Susan Bauer, wrote what many consider a foundational 'manual' for classical education.
Over the years, however, there has been a marked change in the angle of their curriculum and their advocacy. (the price of their classes has also skyrocketed)
So, even if you are homeschooling, you are not out of the leftist reach of militants. Always beware!
LINK
For years, Well-Trained Mind occupied a rare and trusted position in the homeschooling world. It was not just a curriculum company, but a gatekeeper of sorts, shaping how hundreds of thousands of families taught history, literature, and civics outside the traditional school system. Parents turned to it precisely because it promised seriousness, intellectual rigor, and distance from the ideological churn overtaking public education.
That trust cracked recently, because of a single statement, and then because of how the company responded when parents objected.
When Well-Trained Mind publicly weighed in on immigration enforcement in January, it did so not as an educational observer but as an overtly political actor. In a lengthy social media statement, the company asserted as settled fact that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is detaining people based on skin color and accent, Supreme Court rulings explicitly permit racial profiling, masked federal officers are terrorizing schools and neighborhoods, and Department of Homeland Security social media posts are coded calls for the removal of “nonwhite” Americans up to “100 million deportations” — shorthand for ethnic cleansing. The post framed these claims not as opinion, but as moral truth, guiding readers to a singular political conclusion and leaving no room for alternative interpretation. It was, by any reasonable standard, an aggressively political statement from a curriculum provider whose core product is teaching children to understand history and civic life.
Susan Wise Bauer’s response last week to that criticism was telling. Rather than engaging the substance of the objections, she reframed them. Those who were offended, she suggested, should interrogate their own moral failings.
Over the years, however, there has been a marked change in the angle of their curriculum and their advocacy. (the price of their classes has also skyrocketed)
So, even if you are homeschooling, you are not out of the leftist reach of militants. Always beware!
LINK
For years, Well-Trained Mind occupied a rare and trusted position in the homeschooling world. It was not just a curriculum company, but a gatekeeper of sorts, shaping how hundreds of thousands of families taught history, literature, and civics outside the traditional school system. Parents turned to it precisely because it promised seriousness, intellectual rigor, and distance from the ideological churn overtaking public education.
That trust cracked recently, because of a single statement, and then because of how the company responded when parents objected.
When Well-Trained Mind publicly weighed in on immigration enforcement in January, it did so not as an educational observer but as an overtly political actor. In a lengthy social media statement, the company asserted as settled fact that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is detaining people based on skin color and accent, Supreme Court rulings explicitly permit racial profiling, masked federal officers are terrorizing schools and neighborhoods, and Department of Homeland Security social media posts are coded calls for the removal of “nonwhite” Americans up to “100 million deportations” — shorthand for ethnic cleansing. The post framed these claims not as opinion, but as moral truth, guiding readers to a singular political conclusion and leaving no room for alternative interpretation. It was, by any reasonable standard, an aggressively political statement from a curriculum provider whose core product is teaching children to understand history and civic life.
Susan Wise Bauer’s response last week to that criticism was telling. Rather than engaging the substance of the objections, she reframed them. Those who were offended, she suggested, should interrogate their own moral failings.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:40 am to conservativewifeymom
quote:
The fallout
Where is the fallout? You linked a paywall
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:41 am to conservativewifeymom
The left has thoroughly permeated the world of educrats contaminating every corner.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:45 am to idlewatcher
It is not a paywall link when I click on it and I am not a subscriber.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:47 am to conservativewifeymom
To understand why this rupture felt so sudden and yet so inevitable, it’s necessary to zoom out. The Well-Trained Mind shift is not an isolated incident. It is part of a broader ideological realignment within homeschooling, one that has been quietly unfolding for years, largely shielded from scrutiny by the assumption that homeschooling, by definition, resists politicization.
That assumption no longer holds.
Last summer, a National Review article documented how activist frameworks, once confined to universities and public school bureaucracies, have increasingly penetrated homeschooling spaces. Curriculum developers, parent forums, and institutional leaders have adopted the language and assumptions of “social justice” pedagogy, often without acknowledging the philosophical trade-offs involved. What once distinguished homeschooling — its pluralism, decentralization, and resistance to ideological conformity — has begun to erode.
Well-Trained Mind sits at the center of that story because of its influence, but it’s not alone. Rea Berg, the creator of the popular Beautiful Feet Books, for example, has also spent the last weeks posting anti-ICE content on her own personal social media.
That assumption no longer holds.
Last summer, a National Review article documented how activist frameworks, once confined to universities and public school bureaucracies, have increasingly penetrated homeschooling spaces. Curriculum developers, parent forums, and institutional leaders have adopted the language and assumptions of “social justice” pedagogy, often without acknowledging the philosophical trade-offs involved. What once distinguished homeschooling — its pluralism, decentralization, and resistance to ideological conformity — has begun to erode.
Well-Trained Mind sits at the center of that story because of its influence, but it’s not alone. Rea Berg, the creator of the popular Beautiful Feet Books, for example, has also spent the last weeks posting anti-ICE content on her own personal social media.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:49 am to conservativewifeymom
Homeschooling is not nor should be done with the mindset of traditional education. If you do not like a curriculum, get a new one, or make it up yourself. We review all curriculums we use with our homeschool kids. We avoid aspects of it we do not like or feel is a waste, and we amend it to the needs of each of our kids.
There are hundreds if not thousands of different curriculum available, which is the beauty of homeschooling. If you are invested in it, you will find the good stuff. If you are lazy with it, you might as well put your kids back in the farm system.
There are hundreds if not thousands of different curriculum available, which is the beauty of homeschooling. If you are invested in it, you will find the good stuff. If you are lazy with it, you might as well put your kids back in the farm system.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 9:54 am to DellTronJon
You're absolutely correct! I have come across way too many would-be homeschoolers who do more research into buying a car than into homeschooling.
I think this article is important because both Well Trained Mind and Beautiful Feet are rather major providers and have been around for quite a while, and many homeschoolers see them as pillars of the curriculum market.
I think this article is important because both Well Trained Mind and Beautiful Feet are rather major providers and have been around for quite a while, and many homeschoolers see them as pillars of the curriculum market.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:05 am to conservativewifeymom
Never heard of this. The good thing about homeschooling is you can drop & change curriculum in the middle of the semester. Based on my experience and interactions, I can't imagine anyone homeschooling blindly following a curriculum that was teaching something they didn't want to teach.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:07 am to rds dc
Well Trained Mind has been around for at least a couple of decades, and have been offering online classes for at least one of those decades. You can't homeschool and not have heard of them.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:09 am to DellTronJon
quote:
There are hundreds if not thousands of different curriculum available, which is the beauty of homeschooling. If you are invested in it, you will find the good stuff. If you are lazy with it, you might as well put your kids back in the farm system.
There are hundreds if not thousands of different curriculum available, which is the beauty of homeschooling. If you are invested in it, you will find the good stuff. If you are lazy with it, you might as well put your kids back in the Cultural Marxist farm system.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:10 am to conservativewifeymom
Anyone not homeschooling or putting their kids in a Christian private school is doing a huge disservice to their kids.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:35 am to conservativewifeymom
Posted on 2/3/26 at 1:59 pm to conservativewifeymom
To me it just seems simpler to enroll the kids in a good private (possibly religious) school. Or better yet, move to an area where there are great schools. There are dozens of great schools all around the country with everything from a general approach to a more focused theme.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:12 pm to Eurocat
That would be wonderful IF it was the case.
Public schools use curricula selected by state boards of education. Those boards of education reflect the political leanings of the voters in the state. Standards have been dumbed down for years in an attempt to close the 'achievement gap' and the leftist infusion of 'knowledge' is flooding just about every subject and resource. When students are encouraged to leave the classrooms and go out and 'protest' while so many of them are functionally illiterate and way below math standards, the public education system has a huge problem.
Now it seems that prudent homeschooling (or other schooling) parents also have to peruse the available resources and be aware of outfits like WTMA seeking to poison students' minds.
Public schools use curricula selected by state boards of education. Those boards of education reflect the political leanings of the voters in the state. Standards have been dumbed down for years in an attempt to close the 'achievement gap' and the leftist infusion of 'knowledge' is flooding just about every subject and resource. When students are encouraged to leave the classrooms and go out and 'protest' while so many of them are functionally illiterate and way below math standards, the public education system has a huge problem.
Now it seems that prudent homeschooling (or other schooling) parents also have to peruse the available resources and be aware of outfits like WTMA seeking to poison students' minds.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:17 pm to conservativewifeymom
The Good and the Beautiful makes one of, if not the, best home school curriculums. Their math program is fantastic. The ELA/Reading programs can be a bit much but they are still good. Just overkill.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:20 pm to Eurocat
quote:
To me it just seems simpler to enroll the kids in a good private (possibly religious) school. Or better yet, move to an area where there are great schools. There are dozens of great schools all around the country with everything from a general approach to a more focused theme.
Paying $10k+ per year per kid isn't exactly "simple" for most folks and even private schools are doing the same thing public schools are doing. There is nothing simple about it.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:27 pm to conservativewifeymom
State boards set the minimum standards for graduation. It is up to the paretns (they have to really get involved) and the local schools, teachers, Dean's, Principals, to set the highest expectations.
If high expectations are set, they will be met (not always, but frequently).
And you don't have to do private, just find a good school district with good public schools.
If high expectations are set, they will be met (not always, but frequently).
And you don't have to do private, just find a good school district with good public schools.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:28 pm to Eurocat
I am referring to content of curriculum and its biases.
I happen to live in a 'high performing' school district. What a farse!
I happen to live in a 'high performing' school district. What a farse!
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:33 pm to notsince98
My only concern with the Good and the Beautiful has been any Mormon influences from its LDS creators. So far, reviews from mainstream Christian friends using it say that it does a good job staying focused on topic and not doctrine.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:38 pm to conservativewifeymom
quote:
When students are encouraged to leave the classrooms and go out and 'protest' while so many of them are functionally illiterate and way below math standards, the public education system has a huge problem
this is just plain nuts. Any teacher doing it should have their credentials negated and that school should be on strict probation for a decade or more.
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