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Summary of Data from Homeschool Policy and Practice Database
Here are collated responses to Advocates for Home Education in Massachusetts’s questionnaire about homeschool policy and practice in Massachusetts. For over four years, AHEM has been collecting information from homeschoolers about official town policy (including the policies themselves), and about how homeschooling actually works in towns in Massachusetts, according to homeschoolers. So far we have received 236 responses. The majority of respondents are people who receive regular AHEM updates either via email or US mail, although some respondents received the questionnaire as a forwarded email and others found it on our website. The results draw an interesting picture of the way homeschooling works in general (pretty smoothly) and homeschoolers’ personal experiences of dealing with school officials (overall, no major problems).

How much in advance of the school year do school officials ask that you submit homeschooling plans? What do you do? Please explain.
Most schools request that plans be filed before beginning to homeschool, or before the beginning of the school year. Some mention a specific amount of time prior, ranging from one week to three months before school starts. Most homeschoolers submit a plan over the summer, the majority in August. There were no reports of problems if a plan was filed later than requested.

Do school officials ask to meet with homeschoolers? Do you comply? Please explain.
Sixty-seven percent of respondents report that school officials do not ask for face-to-face meetings. Eleven percent report that school officials asked for an initial meeting with homeschoolers when they filed their first plan; seventy-eight percent of these agreed to a one-time meeting when first starting homeschooling. Twenty-two percent of homeschoolers are asked to meet annually with school officials. Of these, forty-nine percent choose to comply, fifty-one percent do not. While it sometimes took some negotiating to decline a meeting, homeschoolers who chose not to meet with school officials were ultimately approved.

Do school officials ask to visit your home? Do you comply? Please explain.
Ninety-six percent of respondents do not have school officials ask to visit their homes. There were no negative consequences for not agreeing to a home visit. Indeed, the 1998 Brunelle Supreme Court decision made it clear that home visits cannot be required as a condition of approval.

Do school officials ask for a daily schedule? For number of hours on each subject? Do you comply? Please explain.
Seventy-two percent of respondents are not asked for a schedule or number of hours, a decline in requests for schedules from last year. Twenty-eight percent of respondents are asked to supply a schedule or number of hours per subject.

Of those asked to supply a schedule, twenty-five percent comply, and seventy-three percent do not. (Two percent were unclear whether or not they comply.) Forty-one percent of these seventy-three percent state instead that they will meet or exceed the 900/990 hours of instruction in the public schools, and that seems to be acceptable. There were no negative consequences for those who chose to give the broader answer rather than a grid type schedule.

What form of assessment do you provide and how many times a year?
Fifty-eight percent of respondents write a progress report. About eight percent of the people who write progress reports indicate that the schools expect them to also submit work samples (a report combined with work samples is commonly referred to as a portfolio). Please note that Charles requires homeschoolers to submit only one form of evaluation. A report alone should suffice, or work samples without any written narrative, should suffice. While a portfolio is nice to have as a record for your own use, there is no need to give that much information to school officials.
Fourteen percent of respondents choose to test. Tests used include the California Achievement Test (CAT), the Personalized Achievement Summary System Test (PASS), the Wide Range Assessment test (WRAT), the Comprehensive Test of Basic Skills (CTBS), the Iowa Test of Basic Skills, and the Stanford Test.
Eleven percent of respondents submit work samples.
Eleven percent of respondents submit no evaluation at all.
Five percent of respondents indicated their evaluation method varies; parents choose from year to year.
One percent of respondents indicated use of a form of evaluation other than testing, progress reports, or work samples.

Eighty-six percent of homeschoolers who indicated frequency submit evaluation once a year, twelve percent submit twice a year, two percent submit four times a year.

Do school officials provide you with a letter of approval?
Eighty-one percent of respondents receive an approval letter. Nineteen percent do not receive a letter of approval.

Do school officials allow homeschoolers to participate in school activities? Please be specific.
Eighty-two percent of respondents report that their school allows them to participate in either classes, sports, extracurricular activities, or some combination of these. Eighteen percent report that their school does not allow them to participate in school functions at all.

"On a scale of 1 to 5, with 1 being very easy to deal with and 5 being very difficult, how would you rate your town's treatment of homeschoolers?"
Eighty-four percent of respondents reported their town to be easy or very easy to deal with, 11% reported their town to be average, 5% reported their town to be difficult, and less than one percent of respondents considered their town to be very difficult to deal with. Some towns that homeschoolers rate as friendly include Cambridge, New Bedford, North Andover, Waltham, and Woburn.



In summary, things continue to go pretty smoothly for homeschoolers here in Massachusetts. Most homeschoolers report no difficulties in dealing with school officials. In cases where school officials ask for more than Charles allows, we see over and over again that homeschoolers who are aware of their rights simply submit what Charles allows, and there are no negative repercussions for standing up for oneself in this way. Furthermore, standing up for your rights in this way strengthens the ability of other homeschoolers to do the same, and lessens the likelihood that school officials' demands will escalate. We can't say it enough: School policies that exceed Charles and Brunelle do not have to be adhered to by homeschoolers. See Tips for Writing your Education Plan for ways to satisfy the requirements of Charles without going into needless detail. Questions? Call AHEM.

This is an ongoing project: We hope you will help us build the database further as the more responses we get, the clearer the picture of homeschooling in Massachusetts becomes. The more questionnaire responses we receive, the easier it is for us to pinpoint hotspots or identify trends. Please take a few minutes to fill out the questionnaire, which you can find here.

Click here to read a January 2007 summary of questionnaire results.

Back to Questionnaire.

The information on this website does not constitute legal advice; it is provided for informational purposes only.


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