HSLDA-California

Dear Homeschool Leaders,

Praise God!

He is good! California homeschoolers are back to their previous legal status. See the elert below for an update.

Please pray for the continued work to be done and for the ultimate victory to be achieved.

God bless you all!

Chris Klicka

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From the HSLDA E-lert Service…
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Court of Appeal Grants Petition for Re-hearing

On March 25, the California Court of Appeal granted a motion for
rehearing in the ‘In re Rachel L.’ case–the controversial decision
which purported to ban all homeschooling in that state unless the
parents held a teaching license qualifying them to teach in public
schools.

The automatic effect of granting this motion is that the prior opinion
is vacated and is no longer binding on any one, including the parties
in the case.

The Court of Appeal has solicited a number of public school
establishment organizations to submit amicus briefs including the
California Superintendent of Public Instruction, California Department
of Education, the Los Angeles Unified School District, and three
California teacher unions. The court also granted permission to
Sunland Christian School to file an amicus brief. The order also
indicates that it will consider amicus applications from other groups.

Home School Legal Defense Association will seek permission to file
such an amicus brief and will coordinate efforts with a number of
organizations interesting in filing briefs to support the right of
parents to homeschool their children in California.

“This is a great first step,” said Michael Farris, chairman of HSLDA.
“We are very glad that this case will be reheard and that this opinion
has been vacated, but there is no guarantee as to what the ultimate
outcome will be. This case remains our top priority,” he added.

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The HSLDA E-lert Service is a service of:

Home School Legal Defense Association
P.O. Box 3000
Purcellville, Virginia 20134
Phone: (540) 338-5600
Fax: (540) 338-2733
Email: info@hslda.org
Web: http://www.hslda.org

HSLDA’s Homeschooling Thru High School Web

Although this link is all about the USA some New Zealand families might find this helpful.

From: Chris Klicka
Subject: ***SPAM*** HSLDA’s Homeschooling Thru High School Web–Check it Out!

Dear Home School Leaders,

Please check out our Homeschooling Thru High School web site sponsored by HSLDA. You will find it filled with helpful, informative resources for families with homeschoolers in high school. As a homeschool father of 5 teens and one college student, I can vouch for how valuable this information is!

Web: http://www.hslda.org/highschool

God bless you all!
Chris Klicka
HSLDA ? P.O. Box 3000 ? Purcellville, Virginia 20134-9000
Phone: (540) 338-8600? Fax: (540) 338-2733 ? Email: info@hslda.org

The End of Homeschooling?

From: http://www.firstprinciplesjournal.com/articles.aspx?article=477&theme=home&loc=b
Allan C. Carlson – 03/17/08

California is developing as the site for a perfect judicial and political storm, one threatening both parental rights and educational choice.

The most recent sign was a ruling last week by a state appeals court that essentially declared homeschooling illegal, unless the parents involved held state certification as teachers or hired a certified tutor. The judgment grew out of a child-welfare dispute between the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family and Philip and Mary Long, who homeschool their eight children. Reversing a trial court decision, the Court of Appeal rejected the Longs’ assertion that they had a constitutional right to educate their children at home.

California homeschool leaders vowed to assist the Longs in an appeal to the state’s Supreme Court and urged other homeschooling Californians to remain calm. Surprisingly, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger rallied to their cause, stating that “this outrageous ruling must be overturned by the courts, and if the courts don’t protect parents’ rights then, as elected officials, we will.” According to State Education Secretary David Long, the governor considers “allowing parents without teaching credentials to educate their children” to be “a fundamental right of parental choice.”

The governor’s forthright response, though, comes in the wake of his own contribution to the problem. Only five months ago, he signed into law a measure prohibiting any form of public-school instruction or activity perceived to “promote discriminatory bias” against “gender,” with the latter-term defined to include cross-dressing and sex-change operations as well as “sexual orientation.” Analysts believe that textbooks using words such as “mother and father” or “husband and wife” must now be discarded. The measure clearly allows students to use the restrooms and lockers of the opposite sex—if they identify with that gender. Teachers and students with the temerity to suggest that homosexuality might not be “innate” or that transsexuality is “weird” also now face stiff penalties for harassment.

A third component of the California storm had arrived still earlier—during 2005—in the form of a ruling by the San Francisco–based Court of Appeals for the Ninth Federal Circuit. Ruling in a case involving California’s Palmdale School District, the court unanimously held that parents surrender virtually all rights over their children once they pass “the threshold of the [public] school door.” Dismissing constitutional protections dating from the 1920s, the court held that parents “have no constitutional right . . . to prevent a public school from providing its students with whatever information it wishes to provide, sexual or otherwise, when and as the school determines it is appropriate to do so.”

These latter two developments have led to the formation of a group called Exodus Mandate, composed largely of Christian pastors and lay leaders. The group has urged parents to pull their children out of the California public schools, placing them instead either in private religious or home schools. Of course, last week’s ruling threatens key elements of that escape route, pressing families back again into the state-regulated system. The perfect storm is now nearly consummated, with families forced to submit to the dictates of the state.

Is this conflation of court cases and legislative acts merely the result of coincidence, as Governor Schwarzenegger would seem to believe? Actually, a deep hostility to parental rights and family life lies at the heart of the public-school enterprise, a truth which belies his selective indignation. The Common School Journal, founded by Horace Mann and his Massachusetts colleagues back in 1838, crafted the intellectual rationale for state-mandated education. It made the deconstruction of family life a regular theme. Sample passages include:

  • “the little interests or conveniences of the family” must be subordinated to “the paramount subject” of the school (1841);
  • “[T]hese are . . . illustrations of the folly of a parent, who interferes with and perplexes a teacher while instructing or training his child” (1846);
  • “[T]here are many worthless parents” (1841).

Indeed, a close disciple of Horace Mann named John Swett served as superintendent of the California state schools during the 1860s. He was quite forthright in his assertion that the state must supplant parents. Anticipating our era’s perfect storm, Swett asserted in his 1864 report to the state legislature that “the child should be taught to consider his instructor . . . superior to the parent in point of authority. . . . The vulgar impression that parents have a legal right to dictate to teachers is entirely erroneous. . . . Parents have no remedy as against the teacher.”

A string of U.S. Supreme Court decisions in the twentieth century—Meyer v. Nebraska, Pierce v. Society of Sisters, and Yoder v. Wisconsin—managed to rein in the totalitarian aspirations of the common-school enthusiasts. Alas, recent developments in California indicate that the spirits of Horace Mann and John Swett are once again ascendant.

Home schools are most vulnerable to the myth of “credentials”; in truth, public-school leaders privately despise parent educators for exposing the pretensions of professionalism in elementary-level teaching. Private religious schools are most vulnerable to “anti-discrimination statutes,” especially those mandating enrollment of the young in the sexual revolution. The predictable line of attack here will be on the schools’ tax-exempt status. It is safe to conclude that parents of a traditionalist bent face difficult times ahead.

The situation may be particularly acute for those homeschooling families in states—such as my Illinois—where claims of legality rest on court decisions from fifty or more years ago. Homeschooling in the 1940s was an odd and rare act, usually the consequence of a child’s sickness or disability. Today, the success of home schools driven by religious and cultural choices threatens the entire apparatus of compulsory state education. The modern partisans of the common schools will not rest until these embarrassing upstarts are crushed. Bolder political acts may be necessary to preserve fundamental parental rights.

Michael Farris, founder and chairman of the Home School Legal Defense Association, certainly thinks so. Foreseeing court action of the California sort, he is the leading advocate of a Parental Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This measure would declare that “[t]he liberty of parents to direct the upbringing and education of their children is a fundamental right,” that federal or state governments may not “infringe upon this right” except for reasons “of the highest order,” and that “[n]o treaty nor any source of international law” might interfere with such rights (for more on the Amendment, visit www.parentalrights.org). Fully aware of the difficulties involved in winning passage of such an amendment, Farris nonetheless believes that it is the only realistic option left if basic parental rights are to survive this new century. He may be right.

[Join the discussion]

HSLDA on California

From the HSLDA E-lert Service…
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March 11, 2008

An update to HSLDA Members and Friends on the California Court of Appeal Decision on Homeschooling:

State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell comes to the defense of homeschool families. “The California Department of Education policy will not change in any way as a result of this ruling. Parents still have the right to homeschool in this state,” he said.

After the Court of Appeal for the Second Appellate District in Los Angeles ruled on February 28 that parents had to be credentialed teachers to educate their own children the statement from O’Connell is encouraging news for the homeschool community.

“O’Connell has it right,” said Michael Farris, Chairman of HSLDA. “But the court decision must still be overturned before homeschool freedom can be restored in California.”

The Court of Appeal ruling shocked the homeschool community because in one sweeping decision it effectively outlawed homeschooling.

“We hope the statement from O’Connell puts the brakes on any enforcement action,” said Farris.

HSLDA will be pursuing several legal options, including seeking review by the California Supreme Court and petitioning the same court to depublish the opinion in order to return California to being a state where a family can legally homeschool in California without fear.

“We have just started the legal battle to restore homeschool freedom in California,” said Farris.

To visit HSLDA’s Info page on this court decision, which has the legal status, link to the decision, and info on legal grounds for homeschooling in California, use this link:
http://hslda.org/elink.asp?ID=4890

Ian Slatter
Director of Media Relations
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high. Wouldn’t it be nice to get your lawyer on the phone,
providing you with immediate step-by-step guidance?

More reasons to join HSLDA…
http://www.hslda.org/elink.asp?id=1099

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The HSLDA E-lert Service is a service of:

Home School Legal Defense Association
P.O. Box 3000
Purcellville, Virginia 20134
Phone: (540) 338-5600
Fax: (540) 338-2733
Email: info@hslda.org
Web: http://www.hslda.org

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