CHECKLIST FOR PULLING A STUDENT
OUT OF PUBLIC SCHOOL DURING THE
SCHOOL YEAR
THE
FOLLOWING DOES NOT CONSTITUTE LEGAL
ADVICE.
This recommended course of
action is based on past experiences of home
educating parents in our area. You will
need to contact an attorney for legal advice.
1. Consult with your spouse
and be sure you are together on this. Pray
for wisdom and for God
to go before you each step of the
way.
2. Tell the teacher and
principal that you are going to be privately
educating your child and go ahead and pull him
out. (Do not tell them you are planning to home
educate unless you already know that they would
be supportive. Home educators deal with
the office of the superintendent, not the
school.)
3. Notify your
superintendent by mail that you have decided to
home educate.
Tell him you will have your
Notice of Intent form to him within 30 days as
allowed by the law in
22.1-254-1(B). Send this (and
all correspondence) by certified mail so that
you get a signed card back as proof that they
received your letter. Keep a copy of the
letter.
4. Apply for admission to
Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA). If
your need is urgent, they will process you as
quickly as they can. Call them for
instructions.
We strongly recommend that you
join HSLDA. We have not had anyone in our
area end up in court for a long time.
However, there are plenty of people who are
hassled by the school systems. We have
even had families come home to a note on their
door left by the superintendent or visiting
teacher, meaning they were paid a
visit! It will be so much easier to
deal with any problems if you have a lawyer who
specializes in the home education rights of
Virginians to do the difficult confrontational
work for you.
5. Decide on curriculum and
order it right away. Get Math and Language
Arts right away. You can order the rest
after you have more time to look and
decide. If you know the teacher well and
have a good relationship, and he/she knows you
are going to home educate, ask if you may use
the books your child is in for the rest of the
year. Some counties will let you rent
books, some will not. Do not do this if
your relationship with the school is strained or
if you do not know how the teacher/principal
will respond to the idea that you are home
educating! Check
Curriculum
and Resources for types of curricula and
places to order them. If you are teaching a
special needs child that has an IEP, follow that
for the rest of the year, making adjustments as
necessary.
6. Get your
Notice
of Intent Form filled out and mailed in as
soon as possible. Send it by certified
mail and keep a copy of the filled out form for
your own files. Do not talk to school
officials on the telephone. If they
call you and want to get information from
you by phone, tell them to request it in writing
and you will be happy to respond. This is
very important, so that you have everything down
on paper in your files, and it will never come
to their word against yours. Keep copies
of everything! Once you receive the request in
the mail, you can call HSLDA and have them tell
you what to answer and what to ignore according
to the law. Do not volunteer any
information. IF you are a member of HSLDA,
ask the official for their name and telephone
number and tell him that you will have your
attorney contact him to respond to his
questions.
7. If anyone representing
the school system, Social Services, or the
police shows up at your door: Ask if the
official has a search warrant. If there is
no search warrant, under most circumstances, you
should not allow the official into your home
!! If the official has a legitimate reason
to believe that a child or other member of your
household is in imminent danger, it may be best
to allow the official in to prove that no danger
is present. (If they are following up on a
week-old report, that doesn't qualify.)
Call
HSLDA immediately (preferably while the officer
is on your porch). You can only do this if
you are a member of HSLDA. If you cannot
call before letting them in, call as soon as
they are in your house! As with the phone
call, tell them that you will answer their
questions in writing, and have them mail their
concerns to you.
Do not volunteer any
information.
8. Call or
email
GRHE
(342-6111) if you have other
questions. We don't know all the
answers, but may be able to steer you in the
right direction. Join
HSLDA to have
legal advice available to you.