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Charles,
in Brief
In
Massachusetts, there is no statutory scheme that deals specifically
with the approval of home education plans (statutes are laws passed
by the legislative branch of government). While there are some
statutes that concern all "school age" children, (e.g.
the compulsory attendance statute), the approval of home education
plans in Massachusetts is guided by the legal principles and guidelines
set forth in the Charles decision (known as case law, since
decided by the judicial branch of government). AHEM strongly recommends
that anyone homeschooling their children, or interested in homeschooling
their children, read Charles
in its entirety. To pique your interest, we have prepared a summary
of the Charles case, detailing those points most relevant
to our concerns as homeschoolers.
The
issue before the Charles court was how to accommodate the
rights of parents under the US and Massachusetts Constitutions
with the governmental interest in the education of its citizens.
In
August 1985, the Charles parents notified the Canton school
officials that they would be homeschooling their three children.
In September, the parents presented their proposal at a school
committee meeting. School committee members voiced their concerns
about certain aspects of the proposal, including the parents'
objection to school department testing and evaluation of the children's
progress. The committee asked the parents to prepare a more detailed
proposal since they hoped to make a decision at the October school
committee meeting.
The
father met with the school superintendent prior to the October
school committee meeting. At that time, he refused to detail the
educational background of himself and his wife. He refused to
provide the school department with the number of hours and days
that would be devoted to instruction. He also refused to allow
a home visit by school officials. The father did agree to provide
copies of the tables of contents of the curriculum materials when
they arrived, and did state his preference for using a particular
standardized test.
The
parents declined to attend the October school committee meeting,
asserting they had no additional information for the school committee.
The school committee prepared a memorandum of agreement, and sent
this to the parents, saying if the parents signed the memorandum,
it would facilitate the school committee's consideration of their
proposal. The parents returned an unsigned edited version of the
agreement.
At
the November school committee meeting, the members voted to accept
the recommendation of the school superintendent that the parents
be denied permission to homeschool their children for the following
reasons:
1.
Superintendent had not been given reason to believe the parents
were competent to teach their children.
2.
The parents had indicated that their children would be spending
less time on formal instruction than the public schools.
3.
The parents objected to the school's efforts to monitor/observe
the instructional methods, and periodically test the children
to determine whether they were making reasonable progress.
The
school department initiated truancy proceedings, and filed a petition
for care and protection of the children. In May 1986 a judge found
that the children were in need of care and protection with respect
to educational care, and ordered the children to school. The parents
retained both legal and physical custody of the children. The
parents appealed the judge's order to the Appeals Court, and the
Supreme Judicial Court took the case on its own motion. While
the appeal was pending, the lower court's decision requiring the
children to go to school was stayed, and the children were NOT
sent to school.
The
Supreme Judicial Court heard the case, and in March 1987 decided
the following:
1.
The school committee was the proper party in maintaining a
care and protection proceeding.
2.
A school committee's process of approval of a home education
plan is to be governed by the same body of law as the approval
of a private school. (Mass. General Laws, Chapter 76, section
1) "School committees shall approve a private school
when satisfied that the instruction in all the studies required
by law equal in thoroughness and efficiency, that in the public
school in the same town."
3.
Approval must be obtained in advance, i.e. prior to removal
of the child(ren) from school. However, the court goes on
to say that if the parents commence the education of their
children at home in the face of the school committee's refusal
to approve the parents' home school proposal, the burden of
proof shifts to the school committee to show that "the
instruction outlined in the proposal fails to equal in thoroughness
and efficiency, and in the progress made therein, that in
the public schools in the same town."
4.
The court recognized certain factors that may be considered
in determining whether to approve a home education plan. The
four factors are:
a)
Proposed curriculum and number of hours of instruction in
each of the proposed subjects, noting that the public schools
are required to operate for a minimum of 180 days.
b)
Competency of parents to teach their children. The school
officials may inquire as to academic credentials and other
qualifications. The court noted that parents need not be
certified, nor must they have college or advanced academic
degrees.
c)
Superintendent or school committee may have access to textbooks,
workbooks, and other instructional aids, and to lesson plans
and teaching manuals, to determine the types of subjects
to be taught, and the grade level of instruction for comparison
purposes with the curriculum of the public schools. They
may not use this access to dictate the manner in which the
subjects will be taught.
d)
Superintendent or school committee may properly require
periodic evaluation to ensure educational progress and attainment
of minimum standards. Means of evaluating progress may be
standardized testing, periodic progress reports, or dated
work samples. The Charles court, in their decision,
required the parents and school officials to work together
in trying to reach agreement on the issues in dispute. Based
on this, it is likely that the court preference would be
that parents and school officials work to reach an agreement
on the method of evaluation to be used. If no agreement
can be reached, it may be that school officials could require
standardized testing as a method for evaluating progress
-- although no court has made a final decision on this point.
School officials may not require home visits as a condition
for approval (later decided by the Brunelle court).
The
Supreme Judicial Court vacated the lower court decision and required
all parties to proceed expeditiously in a serious effort to resolve
the matter by agreement, now having the legal principles and guidelines
set forth in Charles to guide them. It is notable that
the court said, "We conclude that the interests of all will
be best served [if the parties] proceed expeditiously in a serious
effort to resolve the matter by agreement."
So,
in addressing the basic issue before the court, i.e. how to reconcile
the rights of parents under the US and Massachusetts Constitutions
with the governmental interest in the education of its citizens,
the Court seemed to say that while parents of school age children
have the basic constitutional right to educate their children,
the school committee of the town in which they reside could protect
the State's interest in the education of its citizens by enforcing,
through the approval process, reasonable requirements. However,
the Court said, "Having concluded that the approval process,
under Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 76, section 1, is constitutionally
permissible, we caution the superintendent or school committee
that the approval of a home school proposal must not be conditioned
on requirements that are not essential to the State's interest
in ensuring that 'all children shall be educated.'"
The
approval of home education plans in Massachusetts continues to
be guided by the principles set forth in this decision. The "equal
in thoroughness and efficiency" standard is still used by
school officials in evaluating plans. The court sanctioned factors
that may be considered by superintendents or school committees
in evaluating a home education plan continue to be the only factors
school officials may take into account when evaluating a home
ed plan.
The
information on this website does not constitute legal advice;
it is provided for informational purposes only.
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