In California, how hard is it to start homeschooling after a child is enrolled in public school?
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The Homeschool Association of California has an article on their website about the special situation of withdrawing a student from school in order to homeschool. http://www.hsc.org/chaos/legal/special_situations.php
Basically, there are two parts:
1. You the parent, notifies the school that your child is transfering to another school, just the same as if you were moving, enrolling in a private school, etc. They may have papers for you to sign, books to return, etc. Do not neglect this step, unless you wish to subject yourself to accusations of truancy.
2. As the director of your own private school, you can then send a request to the old school for the student’s cumulative records. Here’s a sample letter:
http://hsc.org/chaos/legal/cfile_letter.php
In CA, there is no homeschool statute. Do not tell the school you plan to “homeschool” because legally that is not what you will be doing. The school bureacracy may not know how to process that. They would be correct to say “Homeschooling is not a legal option in CA.” The legal and technical situation is that your child is attending a private school, if you are homeschooling independently. Of course, I’m assuming you are following the private school guidelines, such as submitting the PSA in October, keeping required records. All these issues are covered in depth at the HSC website.
www.hsc.org
The four legal options for CA homeschooling families are more succinctly stated in the HSLDA CA legal analysis:
1. Establish your own private school.
2. Hire (or be) a credentialed tutor.
3. Enroll in a public school or charter school ISP.
4. Enroll in a private school ISP.
http://www.hslda.org/laws/analysis/California.pdf
If you want someone to talk you through the process or recommend local homeschool support groups, there are county contacts listed on the HSC website as well.
Happy Learning!
You and your husband need to discuss this, and be on one page, and support each other, home schooling is about family, and a life style as well.
I would not like the idea of a charter, virtual, or umbrella school either.
Home schooling is about having the choice of teaching method, and content of the materials, as well as the time and place of instruction.
Correct me if I am wrong but are home schools in California not considered private schools?
If so why would you need a charter?
Enrolling him in a charter means he is still a public school student, he just does the work at home.
For all state requirements, and information on this go to;
http://www.hslda.org/
My question would be why wait until there is a problem, would it then not complicate things further?
Best of luck, whatever you decide 🙂
A) Please dont let your child be homeschooled, no matter how smart they are, they wont get ahead because they wont have social skills
B) The Public School system sucks. It is the WORST in the nation. If you plan on sending them there, move away like my family did.
C) Private School is 30,000 yearly there, but its great lessons in everything. This is the way to go if you got the $$$
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