That stereotype pushed by public school supporters came from two things:
One of the earlier reasons for modern homeschooling was people pulling their kids out of public school because they weren't adapting well to school life. Those were already "not socially adjusted" kids, so it was a self-selecting phenomenon. It had nothing to do with the homeschooling.
Public schools are daycare prisons full of hypersocialized faggots obsessed over things that have nothing to do with learning. Even when they graduate a portion of them continue to act like immature high-schoolers. When thrown into that dynamic, a well-adjusted homeschooler or anybody sane would feel out of touch - because they aren't among their peers. The homeschooler is more grounded and most likely gets along with normal people just fine. Especially if they took lessons on speaking, leadership, and networking which aren't taught in American public schools at all.
Some of the earlier "homeschool programs" did not include social activities, but now it's almost universal with coops and such so it's a really dated stereotype if it was ever true.
That stereotype pushed by public school supporters came from two things:
One of the earlier reasons for modern homeschooling was people pulling their kids out of public school because they weren't adapting well to school life. Those were already "not socially adjusted" kids, so it was a self-selecting phenomenon. It had nothing to do with the homeschooling.
Public schools are daycare prisons full of hypersocialized faggots obsessed over things that have nothing to do with learning. Even when they graduate a portion of them continue to act like immature high-schoolers. When thrown into that dynamic, a well-adjusted homeschooler or anybody sane would feel out of touch - because they aren't among their peers. The homeschooler is more grounded and most likely gets along with normal people just fine. Especially if they took lessons on speaking, leadership, and networking which aren't taught in American public schools at all.
Some of the earlier "homeschool programs" did not include social activities, but now it's almost universal with coops and such so it's a really dated stereotype if it was ever true.