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Connecticut’s homeschoolers are unregulated, and they want to keep it that way

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On a recent morning, Lina Schlotter sat at her granite kitchen counter in Simsbury, reading a child’s version of Shakespeare’s “Taming of the Shrew” aloud to her 10-year-old son, Tucker.

Soon, he’ll be reading the bard’s original text, while also reading the works of Plutarch, “Pilgrim’s Progress,” and a biography of Marco Polo — all a part of Schlotter’s home schooling plan for her son.

“I feel like I’m giving my child a steak education, and the public school tries to give them McDonald’s,” Schlotter said

So Schlotter, like the hundreds of home-schooling parents who made their views known to legislators this year, was relieved when last month the legislature’s Education Committee stripped Gov. Ned Lamont’s education bill of a provision that would have required home-schoolers to register annually with their school district.

“I would prefer to have no regulation because I don’t need it,” Schlotter said, though she did allow there might be families who could use some help.

Regulation vs. parents’ rights

However, while the provision is gone, the idea of requiring home-schoolers to register is not dead.

In fact, at the meeting where Lamont’s home schooling provision was excised, Rep. Liz Linehan, a Democrat from Cheshire who sits on the Education Committee, said the decision to remove the home schooling bill made it more difficult for her to decide whether to support the governor’s bill.

In the end, she did support it but said shortly before voting, “I believe there should be some regulation of home schooling. … I think that’s an important piece.”

Linehan, who is also co-chairwoman of the Children’s Committee, later said of the proposal to register home-schoolers: “I hope it does come back. We are one of only 11 states without any regulatory framework for home schooling.

“Anyone can strongly support and acknowledge parents’ fundamental rights to direct and protect the educational upbringing of their children,” Linehan said, “but you can still support a regulatory framework that’s narrowly tailored to ensure that children are educated and protected from abuse and neglect.”

Those are alarming words for home-schooling parents who believe that a plan to register their children won’t guard against abuse and neglect — one of the motivating concerns behind the legislation — and who worry that registering students is just the first step in a plan to further regulate home schooling.

“We believe in the fundamental right of parents to train up their children,” said Pam Lucashu, who home-schooled her children and is now legislative liaison for The Education Association of Christian Homeschoolers of Connecticut (TEACH CT), “because that right resides with the parents. There isn’t any need to involve the state.”

“Any time you put anything into law, you’re putting your nose under the tent, opening the door to increased regulation,” said Lucashu, noting that Connecticut laws currently are silent on home schooling.

That contrasts with neighboring states — Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New York — that all have “high regulation.” Connecticut is one of 11 states without even a requirement that parents notify the state of plans to home-school, according to the Home School Legal Defense Association. States in Connecticut’s category include Idaho, Texas and Oklahoma.

Other states have requirements such as an annual notification of plans to home school; records of a child’s progress and a portfolio of work; a description of curriculum; attendance records; and annual assessments.

No rules, no monitoring

So how is it that Connecticut — a state frequently criticized for having too many regulations and unfunded mandates — has essentially no legal requirements for educating students at home?

Connecticut’s statute that enables parents to take children out of school says “each parent or other person having control of a child five years of age and over and under eighteen years of age shall cause such child to attend public school regularly … unless … the parent or person having control of such child is able to show that the child is elsewhere receiving equivalent instruction in the studies taught in the public school.”

Thomas Mooney, an expert on education law and a partner with the Hartford law firm, Shipman & Goodwin, said he interprets the statute as meaning that “parents are obligated to show that their children are elsewhere receiving instruction equivalent to the studies taught in the public schools, so that’s not voluntary. It’s a statutory obligation that the State Department of Education has historically not enforced.

“My view is that the state has abdicated its responsibility,” he said.

This Home School Legal Defense Association map shows how states regulate home schooling. Connecticut is among those with the fewest regulations.

Lawyers for the state Department of Education disagree with that interpretation. A statement from the agency’s spokesman said that Connecticut “is one of only 11 states that does not explicitly require home-schooling parents to provide notice to the district regarding their intent to home-school.”

While the state does not require notification, it did provide guidance in 1994 recommending — but not requiring — that parents file “a notice of intent form” with their district providing basic information about their home instruction program. The state also provides a sample form with subjects listed — to be checked off yes or no — including reading, writing, spelling, English grammar, geography, arithmetic, U.S. history and citizenship.

The guidance also suggests that districts hold “an annual portfolio review” with parents and school officials “to determine if instruction in the required courses has been given.”

The death of Matthew Tirado, a 17-year-old Hartford teen with autism who died on Feb. 14, 2017 from starvation, dehydration and child abuse, has also raised troubling questions about the regulation of home schooling.

In an investigation, Sarah Eagan, the child advocate, found that Matthew, though enrolled in the Hartford Public Schools, had not been allowed by his mother to attend school for about a year before his death. The Office of the Child Advocate also reported that despite numerous reports by the school district to DCF alleging abuse and neglect in the Tirado home over the years, Matthew’s mother successfully withdrew his younger sister from school in November 2017 simply by filing a notice with the district that she would “home-school” the child.

After Matthew’s death, DCF found no evidence that his sister was in fact being home-schooled.

Out of school, out of sight

Prompted by that case, Eagan became concerned about whether some parents might “use the notion of home schooling as a subterfuge for what the parent is actually doing, just hiding the child from public view.”

The Office of the Child Advocate decided to review information from six districts, including Hartford, to learn whether there were other children who were removed from school to be home-schooled and who lived in families that had a history of involvement with DCF due to reported concerns of abuse or neglect.

The study showed that the six districts received notices of intent to home-school 380 students between 2013 and 2016 and that more than a third of the children who were withdrawn from school to be home-schooled came from families who had previous involvement with DCF because of reported concerns of abuse and neglect.

“Our recommendation … was to bring folks to the table to look at how the state could create a safety net for students who are not being removed from school to be educated,” Eagan said in a recent interview, “but are being removed from school to be hidden.”

The investigation showed that many — though not all — parents file for the annual notification, Eagan said, but “nobody was doing the annual portfolio review. Once the child was removed from the school district, there was no follow-up.”

Eagan said the proposal for registration in the governor’s bill would have been “a starting point at least.”

Linehan said that Eagan’s report raised concerns about “kids falling through the cracks.”

“I don’t think we are in any way saying that home-schoolers abuse and neglect their children,” she said. “What I’m saying is that often times, children who are abused and neglected are removed from school under the guise of home schooling.”

It is the linking of the home-schooling provision to Eagan’s report, and a fear that DCF might become involved with their families, that was particularly irksome for parents.

“Look at what’s going on in the schools. They’re not safe there, but yet they are going to be watching us to keep us safe?” asked Donna Person, vice president of the Christian home-schooling group, TEACH CT. “That’s not to say abuse and neglect does not happen in home schooling. Obviously, it can happen in any educational setting, but it doesn’t happen at a higher rate. To single out a group of people and start limiting their freedom. There’s no basis to do that.”