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Georgia State Laws
Compulsory Attendance
Ages: "between 6th and 16th birthdays." Official Code of Georgia
Annotated § 20-2-690.1. However, if a child is under 6 and has
attended more than 20 days in a public school, he is then subject to
the compulsory attendance laws. § 20-2-150(C).
Required Days
of Instruction: 180 days. Ga. Code Ann. § 20-2-690(c)(5).
Required
Subjects: A basic academic educational program that includes, but is
not limited to, reading, language arts, math, social studies, and
science. Ga. Code Ann. § 20-2-690(c)(4).
Home School Statutes: Ga. Code Ann. § 20-2-690(c).
- Parents must submit a
declaration of intent to home study to the local superintendent
thirty days after the establishment of the home study program and
by Sept. 1 every year thereafter. This declaration must include
the names and ages of students, the location of the home school,
and the time the parents designate as their school year. Ga. Code
Ann. § 20-2-690(c)(2).
- The home school must
provide "a basic academic educational program." Ga. Code Ann. §
20-2-690(c)(4). (see "subjects" above).
- Each school day must
consist of four and one-half hours. Ga. Code Ann. §
20-2-690(c)(5).
- Attendance records
must be kept and submitted to the superintendent each month. The
records will "not be used for any purpose except providing
necessary attendance information." Ga. Code Ann. § 20-2-690(c)(6)
- Parent must write an
annual progress report and retain it for three years. Ga. Code
Ann. § 20-2-690(c)(8).
- "Parents or guardians
may teach only their own children in the home study program... but
the parents or guardians may employ a tutor who holds at least a
high school diploma or GED to teach such children." §
20-2-690(c)(3). No specific amount of hours required for tutor to
teach.
- According to the
Attorney General of Georgia, the local superintendent does not the
have the authority to require parents to affirmatively produce
evidence of their continuing compliance with the law in the
operation of home study programs or require the production of
documents. Although the superintendent has the authority to
"request" such materials, he cannot require parents to submit
them. 1986 Op. Att'y. Gen. No. U86-19.
- This statute resulted
from a home school decision by the Georgia Supreme Court, Roemhild
v. Georgia, 251 Ga. 569, 308 S.E.2d 154 (Ga. 1983), which found
the former law to be "unconstitutionally vague." Roemhild, 308
S.E. 2d at 159. The court reasoned: "...we conclude that the
statute is not sufficiently definite to provide a person of
ordinary intelligence, who desires to avoid its penalties, fair
notice of what constitutes a "private school..." Roemhild at 158.
"Furthermore, the statute violated a second due process value in
that it impermissibly delegates to local law enforcement
officials, judges, and juries the policy decision of what
constitutes a private school." Id.
Teacher
Qualifications: The "teaching parent" must have at least a high
school diploma or a GED. Or the parents may employ a private tutor
who has a high school diploma or GED. Ga. Code Ann. §
20-2-690(c)(3).
Standardized
Tests: Children must take a national standardized achievement test
every three years beginning at the end of the third grade. "Test
scores are not required to be submitted to public school
authorities." Ga. Code Ann. § 20-2-690(c)(7). Parent must write an
annual progress report and retain it for three years. Ga. Code Ann.
§ 20-2-690(c)(8).
THIS ANALYSIS DOES NOT
CONSTITUTE THE GIVING OF LEGAL ADVICE.
Testing and the Home
School Law
Georgia’s Home
Study law (GA Code Ann. 20-2-690-(c)(7), requires that children take
a national standardized achievement test every three years,
beginning at the end of the third grade. These test scores are NOT
to be submitted to public school authorities, but are only to be
seen and kept on file for at least 3 years by the parents. There is
NO exit exam required of home school high schooled students to
graduate.
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