It's difficult to estimate the number of youngsters involved in home schooling, where children are not sent to school and receive their formal education from one or both parents. 1 and court decisions have made it legally possible in most states for parents to educate their children at home, and each year more people take advantage of that opportunity. Some states require parents or a home tutor to meet teacher certification standards, and many require parents to complete legal forms to verify that their children are receiving 2 in state-approved curricula. Home education claim that it's less expensive and far more 3 than mass public education. Moreover, they cite several advantages: alleviation of school overcrowding, strengthened family relationships, lower 4 rates, the fact that students are allowed to learn at their own rate, increased 5 , higher standardized test scores, and reduced 6 problems. Critics of the home schooling movement 7 that it creates as many problems as it solves. They acknowledge that, in a few cases, home schooling offers educational opportunities superior to those found in most public schools, but few parents can provide such educational advantages. Some parents who withdraw their children from the schools 8 home schooling have an inadequate educational background and insufficient formal training to provide a satisfactory education for their children. Typically, parents have fewer technological resources 9 than do schools. However, the relatively inexpensive computer technology that is readily available today is causing some to challenge the notion that home schooling is in any way 10 more highly structured classroom education.