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A
Homeschooling Fable
Inspired by the article "Handling
It Ourselves," Suzanne MacDonald was moved to write about
her own experience of facing school officials:
I consider
myself a somewhat seasoned homeschooler as my kids have never
been to school, my oldest being 14. Yet, it took me four years
after we moved to Bellingham to get the courage up to go to my
superintendent's office to hand deliver my proposals along with
my end of the year evaluations and plan for the following year
( I just give it to them all at once and then I'm done with it
for a year) for the purpose of asking for a letter of acceptance
so that I can take advantage of the homeschooling discounts at
various bookstores.
The
letter they send does not actually say anything about accepting
my homeschool plan. I receive the same formatted letter each year
stating something like, "upon receipt of standardized test
scores and quarterly reports, we are prepared to approve your
plan..." Each year I send my reply educating them about the
legal homeschooling requirements based on the Charles decision,
and that is the end of it. I never hear back from them but I don't
have proof that I am a homeschooler with an approved plan, which
is what our Barnes & Noble in Bellingham requires to get an
educator's discount card.
So last year I went into the superintendent's office, hand delivered
my homeschool materials, asked for a letter of acceptance, and
stated my reason for wanting it. I went on to inform them that
I receive a letter each year but it doesn't actually say it approves
my plan. Not only did the secretary never even look at my proposal,
she did not hesitate and right then and there rewrote the letter,
with a little help from me standing there, that was still in her
computer file and handed it to me. Out the door I went saying
to myself, "Whew that wasn't nearly as bad as I thought it
would be. Another year done!" I intend to do the same thing
this year.
I left
the office realizing that I think it is a situation where more
often than not they just don't know the legal requirements, and
they have so much on their plates, rather than focus much effort
on homeschoolers, they do what they think they are supposed to
do or what they've seen other towns do, thinking that is law.
That's where things become misinterpreted and bogus!
Moral of the story: Face your fears! It's not as bad or intimidating
as you might think. And very likely you will discover that school
officials only do what they think they are supposed to do most
often out of ignorance.
Back
to Meet Massachusetts Homeschoolers.
The
information on this website does not constitute legal advice;
it is provided for informational purposes only.
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