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MS Homeschooling
Laws:
Compulsory Attendance Ages: “age of 6 on or before
September 1 ... and has not attained the age
of 17 on or before September 1...and shall include any child
who
has attained or will attain the age of five (5) years on or
before
September 1 and has enrolled in a full day public school
kindergarten program. A parent or guardian may disenroll a
child
from the kindergarten program once, and the child shall not
be
compulsory attendance age until age six.” Mississippi
Code
Annotated § 37-13-91.
Required Days of Instruction: 180 days. “except that the
‘nonpublic’ school term shall be the
number of days that each school shall require for promotion
from
grade to grade.” Home instruction programs are included in
the
definition of “nonpublic school.”) §
37-13-91(2)(e).
Required Subjects: Repealed July 1, 1984.
Home School Statute: Miss. Code Ann. § 37-13-91(3)(c).
A home school parent is required to comply with the
following:
1. The parent, guardian, or custodian of the children must file a
“certificate of enrollment” including
names, address, and telephone number of parents and children,
dates of birth of children, and a
“simple description of the type of education the children
are receiving.” The certificate must be
submitted by September 15 of each school year to the school
attendance officer where the child
resides.
“Any parent, guardian, or custodian found by the school
attendance officer to be in noncompliance
with this section shall, after written notice of such
noncompliance by the school attendance officer,
comply with this subsection within 10 days after such notice or
be in violation of this section.”
2. A parent who has enrolled his child in the public school may,
after Sept. 15, still enroll the child in a
“legitimate home instruction program and send the
certificate of enrollment to the school attendance
officer” even though he missed the deadline.
3. A child must be educated in a “legitimate home
instruction program” which is one that is not
operated
for the “purpose of avoiding or circumventing the
compulsory attendance law.”
4. “It is not the intention of this section to impair the
primary right and the obligation of the parents ... to
choose the proper education and training” for their
children, “and nothing in this section shall be
construed to grant the State of Mississippi ... authority to
control, manage or supervise” the private
education of children. “And this section shall never be
construed so as to grant, by implication or
otherwise, any right or authority to any state agency or other
entity to control, manage, supervise,
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provide for or affect the operation, management, program,
curriculum, admissions policy or
discipline of any such school or home instruction program.”
Miss. Code Ann. § 37-13-91(9).
Teacher Qualifications: None.
Standardized Tests: None.
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