I know several kids who are homeschooled, and several adults who were for part or all of their primary and secondary education, and none of them lacked social skills. One was raised in a very religious environment, and I feel she was overly sheltered, and her religiousity of course is something I do not really identify with; I feel like her education was lacking. But, that one example has more to dowoth the particular parents and family. The other people I mentioned, are smart, some went to college, all in all I think they did fine with their home schooling.
Personally, I think it depends on the child, what is available where you live, and the parents. Some children thrive in a homeschooling environment, some in private school, some in public. I have one friend whose son did all his education in private school. He was a calm boy, very acedemically oriented, liked structure, and his mom wanted him to have a Cathoic education. Then her daughter comes along and she is very adventurous, likes to try all sorts of varied things, and the public schools had way more to offer for her, even as young as elementary school. Spanish class, and cheerleading after school, and her personality seemed well suited for the magnet public school. Her mom struggled with whether to switch her over to the Catholic school, because religion is important to her, her son had done so well at the Catholic schools, and she did not want her daughter to feel she did not have the same opportunity at education. She wound up sticking with public education for her, and wound up being extremely happy. Her daughter has excelled.
Another friend of mine home-schools all three of her children. She says her kids can go to school at any time if they want to try it, which I believe. The one thing I question is, I think most kids have some fear of the unknown, and young children tend to want to stay with their mothers. So, I don’t see how a very young child would say they want to go to school when they have never been. They have no idea what it is like, and the homeschool community tends to talk about school being a scary place, which I think kids pick up on.
I know another girl, well now she is grown up, who was homeschooled through 10th grade and then her parents moved, because their son was training to be a tennis pro. In their new city there was a magnet performing arts high school and their daughter was studying to be a ballerina. She enrolled and it was great! She had no trouble adjusting, and the school provided more opportunity than homeschooling ever would have.
I could give you more examples, but I won’t bore you. My point is, I think it best to not decide when a baby is born what their education will be through the age of 18. I think a parent should evaluate the options and the particular child, and be willing to be flexible as circumstances change. I recommend never speaking negatively about any type of education in front of young children, but just that they are different options. Not only bevause one day you may shift your feelings and beliefs regarding an education option, but also because you would not want to raise children who shun or tease other children who are having a different education.