Sunday, May 17, 2009

Accept No Substitutes

Some 1500 public school teachers gathered in Raleigh this week to protest plans to cut teacher pay (by as much as $250 a year, said the Winston-Salem Journal) in the midst of the state's revenue reductions.
"It gets to the point where they're hurting our children," said Denise McCoy, Konnoak Elementary School's home-school adviser.


It should be noticed that in North Carolina the public school system has no authority or control over homeschooling. Under the non-public education statute, Article 39 Chapter 115C, a home school is defined as

a nonpublic school in which one or more children of not more than two families or households receive academic instruction from parents or legal guardians, or a member of either household. (G.S. 115C‑563(a))

and their contact with the state is through the Division of Non-Public Education, not the Department of Public Instruction.

The tendency of some public school systems to create a "home-school advisor" or similar position which does not refer to home education but the school systems' interaction with their own students' families and home life, just creates unnecessary confusion.

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