homeschooling

UNESCO Tentatively Declares Homeschooling a Human Right

28 October 2025

3.1 MINS

UNESCO has tentatively declared homeschooling a human right.

They made the statements in a 45-page review published late September.

For all the good in it, the UNESCO report — called “Homeschooling through the Lens of Human Rights” — is not a complete green light for home education.

For example, the agency asserts that educational freedom (parental choice) is not an absolute, universal human right.

Homeschooling, they determined, was to be viewed as a conditional human right due to the complex nature of the option.

Such as the need for a balance between parental choice and the universal rights of children.

As I summarised in a recent article for Caldron Pool discussing Brazilian Christian homeschooling mum Regiane Cichelero, UNESCO’s conditional affirmation of homeschooling comes with claws.

Educational freedom was to be viewed, UNESCO explained, as a conditional right because safeguards were necessary.

Mandatory Training

Conditions on parental rights were determined by whether or not home education violates or weakens universal protections for children, and upholds minimum education standards.

To remedy its concerns, UNESCO proposed invasive mandatory training for parents who are home educators.

This included a “minimum qualification threshold, which may be necessary to safeguard children’s right to a quality education.”

This would, the report said, “ensure parents were equipped to teach.”

Caution, conditions, and caveats aside, UNESCO did assert that “the right to education can be upheld with respect to homeschooling.”

Quoting Farida Shaheed, the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on the right to education, UNESCO said,

“Home-schooling may be considered as part of educational freedom, with families retaining the liberty to ensure the education of their children at home.”

“As homeschooling continues to evolve,” they said, “adopting a rights-based approach becomes crucial for balancing freedom of choice with the need for quality education.”

Overall, the report reads like a half-hearted rapid response to the homeschooling phenomenon sweeping the globe.

While welcome, the review is a skittish probe into the “complex world of homeschooling”.

Squeamish bureaucrats are on the back foot and they’re now trying to play catch-up.

Even the authors acknowledge that the report is not a “complete analysis, because it lacks substantial quantitative, qualitative and empirical data.”

This is, they explained, “an exploratory review, based on the information at hand.”

Government Control

An estimated 7.5 million children are homeschooled worldwide, and this global estimate may be a lot higher.

This is because available homeschooling numbers are drawn only from countries where homeschoolers are registered and data is accessible.

For instance, at least 30,000 kids are homeschooled in Australia. 3.1 million are in or from the United States.

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Responding to the UNESCO report, the parental rights advocacy group Family Voice Australia (FVA) told The Daily Declaration that they had serious concerns.

Western Australian director Darryl Budge said he saw the report “as a potential pathway to increased government oversight.”

“When the UN defines something and grants it ‘legitimacy,’ it often paves the way for regulation and restriction.”

“I distrust this UNESCO report entirely,” he added.

“Especially its language on page 28 emphasises children’s rights over parental authority.”

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Questioning UNESCO’s conditional affirmation of homeschooling, Budge said, the language “could empower external ‘experts’ to control family decisions.”

The only good he sees here is the “nod to Article 17.1 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966), which protects against arbitrary interference with family privacy.”

However, this nod was severely undermined by UNESCO’s “push for government inspections” of homeschooling families.

This, he implied, appeared to negate those civil rights.

They’re “claiming this right offers no ‘blanket protection’ against oversight — a dangerous erosion of parental freedoms.”

Budge then slammed legacy media’s “accidental homeschooler” — “it’s only for neurodivergent children” — narrative as an attempt to discount the rapid rise in homeschooling.

This report, he warned, hand-in-hand with media propaganda, could be a precursor to a global crackdown on homeschooling.

“Families must protect their choices or risk going underground,” Budge concluded.

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Whether the UN’s foray into the subject of homeschooling is a positive sign or a false dawn remains to be seen.

I agree with Budge — UNESCO’s caution, conditions, and caveats raise alarm bells.

All in all, the review is big news for the homeschooling community, and can be read in its entirety here.

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2 Comments

  1. e8bb2e62d2c730e997dece78954b123bc9765acb72ef0bf9d6c1df64bf9b6810?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    James 28 October 2025 at 10:52 am - Reply

    Government operated schools as the basis of education only began in the late 19th century. Australia was among the very first to go down this road. Prior to that there were ‘private’ schools for those who could afford them and there were ‘church’ schools, also mostly for those who could afford them. One notable exception being the Catholic parish schools who relied on teaching sisters and brothers to keep their fees low.
    None of these schools were given any oversight by ‘the government’ of the time. All of that has evolved since the very early 20th century. Look where it has got us in practically every single western nation!
    The United Nations and our interfering governments need to keep well away from home schooling.

  2. f910f8648b50864a0a4fa9cff6838335a9df65757870ba46526d3fd0fd4d5768?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Ian Moncrieff 28 October 2025 at 9:54 pm - Reply

    Home-schoolers unite! You’re on a good thing!
    Good for your children, good for you and good for Australia – keeping the woke out.

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