Part I: Ready for What?
Part II: Are Your Children Ready for Real Life?
Part III: Arts and Culture
Part IV: Science and Medicine
Part V: History and Law
Part VI: Vocations
Part VII: Q&A Session
Conclusion
One of my readers alerted me to a webinar series hosted by the Western Conservatory of the Arts and Sciences, led by Geoffrey Botkin. The Ready for Real Life webinar series, hosted by the Botkin family, is a seven-part audio series on how Christian homeschooling families should teach children.
"Starting this September, the Botkin family will be hosting a 7-week webinar series on educating children for leadership in the real world. Featuring all seven Botkin children, as well as Geoffrey and Victoria, they’ll be taking on the tough questions: What do you do if your child has a special gifting? How should we teach our sons and daughters marketable skills? How do we teach them to navigate the real world without becoming like the world? How do we find the best resources without breaking the bank? How do we prevent homeschool dropouts? What constitutes “success,” and how do we help our children achieve it? What should we do about higher education? And how do we teach our children well about things we don’t know ourselves?"I have purchased access to the webinar series, and I will be posting a series of blog posts on its content soon. What I've listened to thus far has depicted the state as an antagonistic entity and Christian homeschooling as a positive force for freedom, children, and the future of faith. As the series progresses, I am eager to hear how the Botkin's views on gender roles, "statism", and children as torchbearers color their views on children's education.
For readers unfamiliar with the family, the Botkins are a fundamentalist Christian family with strong ties to Vision Forum. The Botkins are not only supporters of fundamentalist Christian homeschooling, but vocal proponents of Christian patriarchy. For instance, books by the Botkins at the Western Conservatory of the Arts and Sciences are supportive of Christian patriarchy tenets such as courtship and traditional gender roles. Geoffrey Botkin took part in an interview for the anti-contraception film The Birth Control Movie. Also, So Much More by Anna Sofia and Elizabeth Botkin encourages young women to be helpmeets to their fathers and promotes a "stay-at-home-daughters" vision for girls. Websites such as Overcoming Botkin Syndrome, Time to Live Friend, No Longer Quivering, and Love, Joy, Feminism have criticized the Botkins for promoting sexism and unhealthy family relationships.
To boot, Geoffrey Botkins is vehemently opposed to so-called "statism", painting the modern state as a bloated, intrusive entity at odds with the Christian community. For instance, at this summer's History of America Mega-Conference, Geoffrey Botkin devoted a talk to the alleged harms of the "Messiah state" and social safety nets. In a 2009 commentary piece, he attacked the state's alleged "Marxist social engineering", accusing it of seeking to kill Christendom, emasculate boys, exploit women through the workforce, and confiscate wealth. Geoffrey Botkin's caricature of the modern state must be understood in order to understand his enthusiasm for fundamentalist homeschooling and Christian patriarchy.
With this in mind, the Botkins' webinar series should offer a revealing glimpse into their ideology. Stay tuned for commentary on the "Ready for Real Life" webinar series!
the Botkin family will be hosting a 7-week webinar series on educating children for leadership in the real world.
ReplyDeleteYes, because the world is just crying out for leadership by the kind of doofuses who will be produced by these nutbars' home-schooling efforts.
I can hardly wait for the commentary. Hope the access didn't cost you too much money.
Infidel -- Not too much. $39 for the full webinar series. From what I've listened to thus far from the first installment, the series will probably be a doozy.
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