As a former teacher, I assure you, I do have, a clue. I don't know what your personal credentials are, but you most certainly don't appreciate the need for children to attend mainstream schools and to receive a fully rounded education.
I am also a former teacher.
It is not the case that mainstream schooling is the best thing for everyone.
The decision not to send children to a mainstream school is a big one - whether you choose home schooling or a specialist school. Everyone is aware that it has its downsides, but that doesn't mean it is always the wrong decision.
"Since our countries are so large and our people are from so many different kinds of backgrounds (this was said most recently to me by a Canadian) don't we need some kind of social glue to make us stick together, to give us a sense of unity in spite of all our differences, and aren't compulsory public schools the easiest and best places to make this glue?
Children in public schools are able to meet, and get to know, many children very different from themselves. If they didn't go to public school, how would this happen?
How are we going to prevent parents with narrow and bigoted ideas from passing these on to their children?
If you don't send your children to school, how are they going to learn to fit into a mass society?
If you don't send children to school, how are they going to be exposed to any values other than the commercial values of a mass society?
If children are taught at home, won't they miss the valuable social life of the school?
How are we going to prevent children being taught by "unqualified" teachers?
How am I going to teach my child six hours a day?
How are children going to learn what they need to know?
My greatest concern is that I don't want to slant my children's view of life all through "mother-colored " glasses. . .
I also wonder if I can have the thoroughness, the follow-through demanded, the patience, and the continuing enthusiasm for the diversity of interests they will undoubtedly have.
Most unschoolers seem to live on farms growing their own vegetables (which I'd like) or have unique life-styles in urban areas, and heavy father participation in children's education. What about suburbanites with modern-convenienced homes and fathers who work for a company 10 to 12 hours a day away from home? What differences will this make? Will unschooling work as well?
What if the children want to go to school?"
John Holt.
Difficult to gainsay all that, isn't it?