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U.S. Home Schooling Laws
In the U.S., home schooling is legal in all 50 states. In some states home schooling parents are occasionally
faced with prosecution under truancy laws. The U.S. Supreme Court has never ruled on home schooling specifically,
but in Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972) it supported the rights of Amish parents to keep their children out
of public schools for religious reasons. Many other court rulings have established or supported the right of
parents to provide home education if they so choose.
Every state has some form of a compulsory attendance law that requires children in a certain age range to spend
a specific amount of time being educated. Only a short time after compulsory attendance laws became common in the
United States, Oregon adopted a statute outlawing private schools which the U.S. Supreme Court subsequently struck
down as unconstitutional in its 1925 ruling in Pierce v. Society of Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary,
268 U.S. 510 (1925).
The Court held that a state may not prohibit a parent from satisfying a compulsory attendance requirement by
sending their children to private school. This case has frequently been cited by other courts in support of the
proposition that parents have a right to satisfy compulsory attendance requirements though home instruction.
Parents' right to home school their children has clearly been established through subsequent court decisions to
such an extent that any statute attempting to forbid it entirely would certainly be struck down on constitutional
or other ground
Home schooling laws can be divided into three categories:
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In some states, homeschooling requirements are based on its treatment as a type of private school
(California, Indiana, Texas, for example) In those states, homeschools are generally required to comply
with the same laws that apply to other (usually non-accredited) schools.
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In other states, homeschool requirements are based on the unique wording of the state's compulsory
attendance statute without any specific reference to "homeschooling" (New Jersey, Maryland, for example).
In those states, the requirements for homeschooling are set by the particular parameters of the compulsory
attendance statute.
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In other states (Maine, New Hampshire, Iowa, for example) homeschool requirements are based on a statute
or group of statutes that specifically applies to homeschooling, although these statutes often refer to
homeschooling using other nomenclature (in Virginia, for example, the statutory nomenclature is "home
instruction"; in South Dakota, it is "alternative instruction"; in Iowa, it is "competent private
instruction"). In these states, the requirements for homeschooling are set out in the relevant
statutes.
While every state has some requirements, there is great diversity in the type, number, and level of burden
imposed. No two states treat homeschooling in exactly the same way. Generally, the burden is less in states in
category 1, above. Furthermore, many states offer more than one option for homeschooling, with different
requirements applying to each option
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