Texas homeschooling rights are similar to Illinois home education legalities. Per a Texas Supreme Court ruling, homeschoolers in Texas are considered private schools the same as any brick and mortar private school building in the state. The 1950 Board vs Levisen IL Supreme Court ruling determined our Illinois private school status as homeschoolers. There have been other similarities with Texas along the way. But the IL State Board of Education hasn’t called for an audit as the Texas Education Agency has.
The Texas Education Agency audited more than 22,000 public school withdrawal records to determine whether the transfers were intending to homeschool -as the records indicated, or whether public school officials had jimmied the records in a manner to keep the dropout rate down in their school districts.
In an attempt to ensure that public school districts aren’t disguising high school dropouts, the Texas Education Agency is conducting an audit of students who withdrew under the auspice of home schooling. …… More than 22,620 Texas secondary students were listed as withdrawing to home-school in 2008 — raising a red flag among some experts and educators who worry that Texas’ lax regulations are encouraging abuse in the hands-off home-schooling category. The 2008 figures reflect a 24 percent jump from the prior year and roughly triple the number of high school home-schooling withdrawals from a decade ago.
The Houston Chronicle published the article quoted above earlier this month [High number of home-schooled students leads to state audit JENNIFER RADCLIFFE Sept. 2, 2010]. The quote calls the Texas homeschooling rights “lax regulations”, but that is an unfortunate description. Our rights aren’t lax, they’re free of bureaucracy. And homeschoolers are not responsible for the lax accountability of public school officials. Other than the tax monies expended. Tim Lambert has it right.
The Texas Home School Coalition applauds the state’s efforts to crack down on public school districts who are “dumping” dropouts in the home-schooling category. Although the group strongly opposes government involvement in home schooling, it acknowledges that this audit is not being conducted to reproach families who are educating their children at home. “School administrators are violating the policy and causing these problems,” coalition president Tim Lambert said. “The solution is, in our view, to put in place some sort of penalties for school officials who are abusing this process.”
Firing tax paid officials doing this doesn’t seem out of the question. I’ve seen this process used in at least two different Illinois school districts, and the brush off of those students and families was not intended to be in the kids’ best interests.
In Illinois, school authorities have contorted the issue into a “no-school” problem, trying to draw homeschoolers into their net. It’s odd and disturbing. Clinton-Marion-Washington County Regional Office of Education Supt. Keri Garrett seems to have gone a different direction and invented a truancy problem, suggesting she must have daytime curfew ordinances because : “Instead of figuring out the problem, they’ll [parents] yank the child out because they’re not old enough to drop out and tell me they’re going to homeschool”. She wrote up daytime curfew ordinances for various towns in her area that call for town authorities to report any homeschoolers to her office, if they are stopped and questioned while out and about during ‘school hours’. As private schools, Illinois homeschoolers are not restricted by the public school schedule or calendar. They are also not required to report to bureaucrats.) She attempted pushing this ordinance in Salem and Salem homeschoolers fought back. The ordinance was dropped. I should mention that in 2009, Salem had a .2 % chronic truancy rate. That’s just one example emanating from one Regional Office of Education.
Some similar questions about artful public school dodging have arisen from some of our neighbors to the east. Richmond, Indiana’s high school received the Lugar Education Patriot Award from their Senator Lugar heralding the school’s apparent change in status from a 2007 “dropout factory”. In 3 years, their graduation rate has increased from 56% to 80%, and I’m sure all schools officials want to know their secret.
The leap in the school’s reported graduation rates has not come without some heightened scrutiny and concern, including from one school board member.
Longtime board member David Stidham, who is serving in his final term, questioned during a board meeting last November how a reported increase in home-schooled students has impacted dropout rates.
Students who transfer from one school to another, as with those who choose home schooling, do not count against graduation rates but dropouts do.
Seems to be a pattern.
Homeschool advocate, Ben Bennett (Indiana Home Education Network), asks on his blog:
The question is: will the attacks on the homeschooling community come before the facts about the tactics of Government Schools are known?
The attacks on the Illinois homeschooling community are here. Looks like Texas is trying to deal with the issue, the Indiana Education Agency seems to be ignoring it, and Illinois school authorities are trying to restrict homeschooling rights because of some public school system twists and turns. The time is now to fight back. Stay tuned…
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