Homeschooling in Canada
In Canada, homeschooling has increased in popularity since the advent of the 21st century. It is legal in every province, with each province having its own regulations around the practice. In some provinces, funding is available. In 2016, the number of homeschooled children in Canada was approximately 60,000 ; this corresponds to approximately one in every 127 school-aged children. In 2020, the average growth rate of the practice amounted to more than 5 per cent per year. Canada has a large proportion of non-religiously motivated homeschoolers compared to some other countries. It is also one of three countries worldwide, along with the United States and South Africa, that hosts an organization with lawyers on staff which serves the legal needs of home educators.
History
Unlike in some other countries, there has never been a time in which homeschooling was illegal in Canada. The Ontario Education Act, for example, states in Section 21 that "A person is excused from attendance at school if the person is receiving education elsewhere."Homeschooling started to become significantly more popular in Canada in the 1970s. In 1979, just over 2,000 Canadian children were being homeschooled. In 1995, Meighan estimated the total number of homeschoolers in Canada to be 10,000 official and 20,000 unofficial. Karl M. Bunday estimated, in 1995, based on journalistic reports, that about 1 percent of school-age children were homeschooled. In April 2005, the total number of registered homeschool students in British Columbia was 3,068. In Manitoba, homeschoolers are required to register with Manitoba Education, Citizenship and Youth. The number of homeschoolers was noted at over 1500 in 2006; 0.5% of students enrolled in the public system. In 2016, approximately 1% to 2% of North American children are homeschooled, which includes about 60,000 in Canada.
One technique that is specifically Canadian, specifically British Columbian, is the distributed learning approach to homeschooling. Distributed learning is an online program that is directed by a teacher that meets provincial standards for education. The program draws on public and private curricula. This is distinctive to British Columbia because it is the only province that has a distributed learning policy. It is one of the most popular forms of homeschooling.