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At Florida Homeschool Convention, Family Education Merges with Politics

By Katherine Stewart
desantis homeschooling
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during the Florida Parent Educators Association Homeschool Convention in Kissimmee, Fla., May 23, 2024. (Photo via office of Gov. Ron DeSantis)

With an estimated 1.7 million American children being educated outside of traditional schools, homeschooling is a big tent. An extraordinarily diverse mix of families bring up their kids this way — urban and rural, countercultural, religiously conservative, liberal and unaffiliated, neurodiverse and, as of 2020, people on the run from the turmoil caused by the pandemic.

The homeschooling movement, on the other hand, is a much more focused entity. The 36th annual Florida Parent Educators Association Homeschool Convention, which took place in May at the Gaylord Palms Resort and Conference Center in Kissimmee, billed itself as the largest and oldest such event, drawing an estimated 18,000 attendees, exhibitors, and presenters.

But though the attendees were mostly families, and the breakout sessions included universally applicable fare such as combating screen time, managing sibling rivalries and filling gaps in home math curricula, the overarching message of the convention was about politics, not education.

And those politics were a familiar mix: authoritarian, anti-feminism, anti-public education, pro-traditional family, and pro-Trump — in short, an extension of the religious right of the Republican Party. 

This is hardly representative of American homeschoolers, not all of whom are Christian, let alone conservative Christian (though the data is murky, to be sure). But you wouldn’t know that from spending time in Kissimmee.

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FPEA homeschool
Attendees arrive at the Florida Parent Educators Association Homeschool Convention in Kissimmee, Fla. (Photo: Facebook)

“Today, if you homeschool, there is a 95% chance you’re a conservative,” said keynote speaker Joel Salatin, a self-identified “Christian libertarian environmentalist capitalist lunatic,” who founded and runs Polyface Farms, a sustainable agricultural operation in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley. 

The 36th annual conference kicked off on a Thursday night with addresses by representatives from Trail Life USA and American Heritage Girls, faith-based and “Christ-centered” alternatives to the Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts, according to conference organizer and emcee Suzanne Nunn.

Trail Life CEO Mark Hancock took the podium to explain that his group was created 10 years ago “in the wake of the Boy Scouts beginning to abandon their traditional values.”

Later that morning the keynote speaker, Nick Adams, author of “Trump and Churchill,” among other partisan political books, boasted that he is Donald Trump’s favorite writer, citing Trump’s tweets praising his pro-Trump tomes. “We want faith, not secularism,” Adams said.

The exhibitors’ booths also showed the ties between MAGA and conservative Christian homeschooling. Turning Point USA, Eagle Forum, Liberty Counsel, the Heritage Foundation’s Heritage Action for America, and other religious right-aligned activist groups were all on hand.

One booth, advocating an Article V Convention of States, also known as a constitutional convention, had some relevance to the proceedings, as it is a pet project of Michael P. Farris, who is the founder of the Home School Legal Defense Association, which relentlessly opposes any government oversight of the sector. Farris is also the founder of Patrick Henry College, which prepares a large number of home-schooled youths for careers in government.

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File Photo/ Michael Farris (left) and political commentator Mark Levin appear at an event in May 2014. (Photo via social media)

Farris is also a member of the Council for National Policy, founded in the 1980s by “Left Behind” author Tim LaHaye and religious right architect Paul Weyrich, who once served as CEO and general counsel for the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF). The ADF is a religious-right legal powerhouse with an annual budget of over $100 million that formerly employed House Speaker Mike Johnson.

The conference proper also included more political training than you might expect at a homeschooling conference. At a breakout session called “The America Project: How to Get Involved in Elections: Rules, Laws, and Tools,” session leader Tim Meisburger, a former Heritage Foundation fellow, pronounced “a crisis of confidence in election integrity” before promoting a website, Voteyourvision.org. The website aims to engage conservative voters in local elections, including “How to become an election challenger”; “Challenging a procedure”; and “Challenging a voter.” 

Meisburger, who as a Trump appointee at USAID, reportedly told colleagues not to support the Biden transition, quickly lapped over into the dominant grievance narrative of the Trump campaign. “We are increasingly governed by a ruling elite that is capturing our institutions to create a one-party state, governed by authoritarians,” he said. 

Fears about a loss of social control were also present at the conference. Rebekah Ricks, founder of the anti-vax organization, Moms for Medical Freedom, informed conference-goers that they “have an opportunity to put a spotlight on all the little nefarious mechanisms done in our system. We are raising up sheriff auxiliaries to be engaged and emboldened in the process.” She ended her talk on a note of hope: “The communists who have taken over our country are losing control.”

Jason Ickes, a “fair elections” advocate and guns rights activist, told his audience, “The last four years, a communist coup d’état is taking over our country. The first thing communists do is abolish gun rights. They tried it here.” Tying it all back to the Big Lie, he added, “There have been numerous convictions that you don’t read about over ballot harvesting, tampering with election systems.”

Linda Lacour Hobar, the author of a world history curriculum written from a “biblical worldview,” traced the evolution of many political ills to the socialist threat, which she equated to the power of the state being placed above that of God. Explaining in her seminar “The Threat of Socialism” that “feudalism was socialism,” Lacour Hobar said that German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel influenced Karl Marx, author of “The Communist Manifesto.” On her PowerPoint, a graphic read, “Marx v. The Bible.”

“They were anti-family. Hegel said we should worship the state,” she added. Citing Rand Paul and Rod Dreher, she asserted that it all goes back to Adam and Eve: “Doubting God’s governance,” she said, is the root of all evil. In another seminar, Lacour Hobar connected the Nazis and the Holocaust to the short-lived, far-right German Worker Party, which she seemed to see as an indictment of the evil of socialism all over again.

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A Trail Life USA color guard at the Florida Parent Educators Association Homeschool Convention in Kissimmee, Fla., May 23, 2024. (Photo by Katherine Stewart)

For decades, Christian nationalist leaders have denounced public schools for allegedly promoting secularism and waging war on family values, while economic ideologues have condemned schools as purported hotbeds of socialism. Together they characterize the existing system of public education as “an indoctrination factory” or “camp.” The unspoken assumption in Kissimmee, however, was that all education is indoctrination — it’s just a matter of deciding who gets to do the indoctrinating.

When the sessions addressed teaching, especially history and science, counterprogramming liberals was a main concern. At “Wild World of History: Teaching Globalism, its Rise and Decline,” Larry Schweikart, a retired rock-and-roll drummer-turned-professor whose curriculum goes by the “Wild World” tag, announced that he was “teaching Patriots History.”

“I wrote this textbook because we didn’t like all the liberal textbooks we were dealing with,” he said, adding, “I was on the Glenn Beck show in 2010 and I gave him a copy. He held it up every night on his show.”

In the vast exhibition hall, quite a few nonreligious vendors had made it into the mix: The Nectar Group specializes in helping with dyslexia and other learning challenges. There also were First Frets Online Music Lessons, Match Champs Tutoring Services, and the American Sign Language Virtual Academy. But it appeared that half of the booths or more were of the genre of Master Books, which offers books on “science” by creationist Ken Ham.

In “Climate Change for Kids,” Ham assures readers, “Man cannot destroy the earth. God promised that. But God’s Word makes it clear that one day, Jesus, who returned to the Father in Heaven after His Resurrection, will one day return to this fallen, groaning earth and judge this earth and the whole universe with a fiery end!”

Despite its avowed distrust of government, the Florida conference had its political heroes, all of them in the Republican Party. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis swooped in on the first night of the conference and in a speech ticked all the far-right boxes. He had similarly addressed the convention two years prior, in May 2022.

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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during the Florida Parent Educators Association Homeschool Convention in Kissimmee, Fla., May 27, 2022. (Photo via social media)

Public education, he averred, is an “indoctrination factory.” He credited his administration’s takeover of New College and the creation of the state-funded Hamilton Center with destroying diversity, equity and inclusion programs, critical race theory, gender studies programs and the like.

He promoted “classical education,” which appears to be an interchangeable term with “patriot history.” And he delivered reminders of his cash contributions to the cause: $3,000 to teachers for taking a 50-hour professional development course on civics education, with materials drawn from conservative Hillsdale College.

The conference wound down on Saturday evening with worship music, followed by the final keynote speaker, Levi Lusko, founding pastor of Fresh Life Church, with campuses across the mountain states and Pacific Northwest.

Lusko, who had little to say about homeschooling or politics per se but offered his thoughts on the nation’s spiritual future, said he’s “so excited about what God’s doing here.”

Katherine Stewart is an American journalist and contributor to Religion News Service. 

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7 Responses

  1. If this were entitled “Opinion Piece” it would be more appropriate. The author’s personal views and opinions run rampart in this. Honestly, I would have expected this article to appear in a secular blog. I’m disappointed in the name calling, strategic quotation marks, and general animosity permeating this article against the desire for parents to education their children from a biblical worldview.

    1. biblical worldview is one thing – calling textbooks that teach actual history “liberal” is not.
      For example, in Texas, it is against the law for public schools to teach the truth that Texas war for indepencence and the Battle of the Alamo was fought because Mexico had outlawed human slavery, but this ran contrary to the very reasons that Austin had brought settlers to the area. One needs only read Austin, Bowie, etc…own letters to see they were fighting, not against an evil empire, but for the right to keep slaves. Instead, Texas school children are taught the ‘hero narrative’ – https://www.texastribune.org/2018/09/12/alamo-heroic-texas-education-board/

      One doubts the history books with the words “Patriots History” are going to be fair analyses but just more “hero narratives”

  2. I’m surprised by the tone of this article. Generally, your articles are neutral and informative. This one does not follow that pattern. For instance, in the sentence about the Home School Legal Defence Association, the author writes the group “relentlessly opposes any government oversight of the sector.” “Relentlessly?” That term is meant to characterize the group and convey a message. I wonder if the group would agree to that full characterization, given the context of the rest of the article.

    I believe the bias of the writer hampers her ability to truly see her subject, and, as such, renders her unable to truly understand the topic about which she is writing.

    It seems this should have an “opinion” label. At present, it seems nothing more than bad journalism. I learned the event happened, but I will need o seek a more unbiased source to feel like I could assess what happened properly.

    I am one who is concerned with the convergence of faith and politics. But this article does nothing to add nuance to the arguments and only serves to strengthen biases on the subject.

  3. Here are three comments/quotes from this article that are extremely telling:
    “Today, if you homeschool, there is a 95% chance you’re a conservative,” said keynote speaker Joel Salatin, a self-identified “Christian libertarian environmentalist capitalist lunatic,”

    Later that morning the keynote speaker, Nick Adams, author of “Trump and Churchill,” among other partisan political books, boasted that he is Donald Trump’s favorite writer, citing Trump’s tweets praising his pro-Trump tomes.

    Jason Ickes, a “fair elections” advocate and guns rights activist, told his audience, “The last four years, a communist coup d’état is taking over our country. The first thing communists do is abolish gun rights. They tried it here.”

    I researched each name quickly from the quotes above. I could not find that any significant link between any of the names and education, or homeschooling, or significant research or work with children. Yet, each was a keynote speaker at a “homeschooling” conference. Multiple people in the comment section are calling the author biased. I think they missed her point.

  4. The comment from Lindsay Kent is very interesting. I am personally very interested in what is happening in our nation related to Christian Nationalism and patriot politics on the extreme right. I feel like this article lacked the ability to drive a clear point. The purpose from the title did not seem to develop in way where I was left feeling like I learned something. I find myself more confused with a little bit of intrigue. Maybe this is in part due to the nature of the event? I recently had my own personal experience at one of these homeschooling events in Wisconsin called the CHEW Conference. It left me struggling for words and I felt confused why the agenda of CHEW needed to be so politically charged as it was. This sounds similar to what took place in Florida at the Homeschool conference there. It seems these type of events are becoming the norm for homeschoolers across the country? Something is very unsettling about it to me. I’m a Christian. I would consider myself a conservative as far as conservatism’s original ideology is concerned. The present day “conservative” ideas coming from the current Republican narrative is not the same as true conservative thinking. It has a darkness to it that is troubling. Maybe that’s why the author struggles to make her point and carry a strong narrative? The details of the event in Florida when put all in one place is mind bending. That’s how I felt when I left the CHEW conference in Wisconsin. My mind was bending.

  5. “We are increasingly governed by a ruling elite.” Wouldn’t that apply to someone whose 2nd home is a $100-million triplex on the 56th, 57th, and 58th floors of a tower in New York City, complete with 24-karat gold features?

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