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December 1, 2008
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Home > 2008 > March (Web-only)Christianity Today, March (Web-only), 2008  |   |  
California Court Says Religious Claim Doesn't Grant Homeschooling Right
Appellate judge: "Parents do not have a constitutional right to homeschool their children."



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A California appellate court ruled last week that a family's religious convictions do not guarantee a right to homeschool their children.

"California courts have held that under provisions in the Education Code, parents do not have a constitutional right to homeschool their children," wrote Justice H. Walter Croskey for California's Second District Court of Appeal.

The parents, identified in court papers only by the last initial L, but identified by several news organizations as Phillip and Mary Long, told the court that their religious beliefs for homeschooling "are based on biblical teachings and principles." But that's not enough for an exemption from California education requirements, the court ruled February 28.

"Such sparse representations are too easily asserted by any parent who wishes to homeschool his or her child," Croskey wrote.

The court ruled that minor children must attend a public school unless the child attends a private school or is taught by a teacher with a valid state teaching license.

"This case probably sends that kind of chilling message for people who are trying to homeschool legally," said Charles Haynes, senior scholar at the First Amendment Center.

Mike Smith, president of the Virginia-based Homeschool Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), estimates that 60,000 families who homeschool in California could be affected by the decision, because many parents do not have teachers' licenses.

"Ten percent or less would be able to homeschool under this interpretation," Smith said. "If a school district got hold of this opinion, they could attempt to drag a family into court."

Families who homeschool their children in California are required to file a private school affidavit with state regulators or to enroll their children in alternate education programs such as private school satellite instruction or independent study.

Last week's court ruling may tighten the requirement further. The court ruled that the state's education law allowing for independent study "does not apply to mother's home schooling of the children." The children in the case had been enrolled in Sunland Christian School, an institution that coordinates independent study programs for homeschooling families.

Smith said California is the most restrictive state in the country for homeschooling families. He said the family was not a member of the HSLDA, but the organization hopes to appeal the case by arguing for the family's constitutional rights to homeschool.

The case came to the attention of the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services after one of the family's eight children reported "physical and emotional mistreatment by the children's father," according to the opinion.

An attorney for Children and Family Services asked a juvenile court to order that the children be enrolled in a public or private school. The trial court refused, citing the parents' right under the California Constitution to homeschool their children.

Despite its refusal to issue the order, the juvenile court gave the "opinion that the homeschooling the children were receiving was 'lousy,' 'meager,' and 'bad,'" Croskey wrote. The lower court also said that homeschooling the children deprived them of ways to interact with people outside the family, that other people could provide help if something was "amiss" in the children's lives, and that the children could develop emotionally in a broader world than the family's "cloistered" setting.





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John G.   Posted: March 06, 2008 3:47 PM
Most of the others have said it well. I retired last year after 38 years as a public school teacher, and am now teaching a Spanish class for a local group of homeschoolers. Homeschooling, when properly done, has organization, accountability, and even socialization. Yes, there are some abuses, but any system is subject to abuse. These kids are, overall, much better off than those who are herded through the public school system. And statistics show a very high percentage of homeschooled kids who go on to operate their own businesses. Sadly, we live in a time of increasing government encroachment -- which will only intensify if a Democrat is elected as president!

John the Baptist   Posted: March 06, 2008 1:49 PM
Y.P. - while there are, from time to time, a few cases where home schooling may be done badly, in most cases it is not. The opposite is true for public schooling - there may be a few cases where it is done well, but in most cases it is done very badly indeed. The tired old lines about the children being poorly adjusted, not "socialized," etc ad nauseum have proved to be myths and fabrications. Homeschooling is vastly superior to public schooling. Homeschool parents go to great lengths to educate their children, the support groups of which I have been a member and of which my son and daughter-in-law are members have been very good. We homeschooled our children, and our grandchildren are being homeschooled to provide them with superior educations. Our eldest is now a professor of English at a state university. He has to deal every day with the products of our public education systems. There is no way he will subject his children to that!

Jim B   Posted: March 06, 2008 1:18 PM
I think if the judge took a good look at the public school system in most of the metropolitan areas of California, he would find that state-educated kids are receiving is equally 'lousy,' 'meager,' and 'bad.' What is going to do for the millions of kids stuck in that situation. Plenty of publc school families are brutalized emotionally and live in desperation. The real cloistering is having thousands of kids packed together for most of each day without much adult interaction (except the security patrols in the hallway looking for guns, knives and drugs). If the judge's ruling stands, thousands of kids may be forced in to the already overcrowded public schools. Not a good idea.

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