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State Homeschool Requirements

A Breakdown of Each State's Regulations

By Charlotte Gerber, published Jul 24, 2006
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Each state in the U.S. varies in their individual requirements for homeschooling. There are currently four separate categories of state homeschool requirements. They are:

1. States requiring no notice
2. States with low regulation
3. States with moderate regulation
4. States with high regulation

States that require no notice do not require parents to initiate any contact. The states with no notice requirements are: Idaho, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Connecticut, New Jersey and the territories of Guam and Puerto Rico.

States that have low general requirements only require that parents notify the school district that they are homeschooling. These states are: California, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Arizona, New Mexico, Nebraska, Kansas, Wisconsin, Kentucky, Mississippi, Alabama, Delaware, Washington D.C. and the Virgin Islands.

Moderately regulated states require parents to provide the school district with notification of intent to homeschool, test scores and provide a professional evaluation of the student's progress. These states are: Oregon, Colorado, South Dakota, Iowa, Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, Ohio, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Maryland and American Samoa and Northern Mariana Islands.

The high-regulated states require all of the previously listed information and the states provide the parents with the required curriculum or the parents are required to provide a curriculum for approval. These states also require the parent to allow visits by state officials to check the student's progress. These states are: Washington, Utah, North Dakota, Minnesota, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, Maine, Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Students in these states that do not meet requirements after two quarters (90 days each) will be sent back to their local public school or the parents will have to enroll them in a private school. Highly regulated states may also require an annual assessment at the end of the school year.

Takeaways
  • Parents are considered competent teachers if they follow their state's regulations
  • Parents do not have to posess a college degree in order to homeschool
  • Your local public school district office can provide you with homeschool information
Did You Know?
There are over 1 million homeschooled children in the United States.
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