Wednesday, February 16, 2011
 
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Parents heated over potential home-school regulations

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[February 16, 2011]  SPRINGFIELD -- Hundreds of concerned parents and children flooded the Capitol on Tuesday to rally against a measure that will require home-schooled students to register with the state Board of Education.

Sen. Edward Maloney, D-Chicago, said that Senate Bill 136 targets students who are "falling through the cracks" of the home-school education system.

"My concern is with those parents who are not committed, not making the effort and (are) not accountable in any way. We have no way of identifying these parents and students," Maloney said. "We don't know if they are learning or if they are truant or what that level of truancy might be."

Janet Hasselbring of Braidwood home-schools her three children and arrived early Tuesday morning to voice her opposition to the proposal.

"The government does not need to put more controls in place," said Hasselbring, who was among a throng of protesters waiting to enter the Capitol. "This bill will add expenditures -- to register this many home-schoolers in the state -- in an already failing budget."

Michael McCreery, executive director of the Illinois Association of Regional Superintendents of Schools, said that most parents who came out on Tuesday were the "cream of the crop," and that he's more worried about the ones who didn't show up.

"We can point to programs. We can point to home schooling. We can point to those areas that are available to them. We can assist. We cannot assist without knowledge of their existence," McCreery said.

Under Illinois law, home schooling is considered private education. Parents are required to teach their children subjects "taught to children of corresponding age and grade in the public schools," including language arts, mathematics, science, social science, fine arts, and physical development and health.

"Please don't say home-schoolers have to do nothing," said Scott Woodruff, a lawyer for the Home School Legal Defense Association. "They have to educate in good faith; instruction has to be adequate; they have to provide education in all the required branches of learning. And they have the burden of proving (all of) that."

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Jasmine Jasper, 16, a home-school student from Mascoutah, said she enjoys the one-on-one attention her parents can provide.

"We know what we need to have a better society. We don't need this," said Jasper.

Twelve states -- Indiana, Michigan, Texas, Missouri, California, Connecticut, Idaho, Oklahoma, Alaska, New Jersey, Kansas and Illinois -- are considered to have minimal home-school regulations, Woodruff said.

A home-schooled transplant from New York said he likes the looser environment.

"We grew up in a pretty restrictive state as far as home schooling is concerned. Here there aren't very many regulations, if any, and we'd like to keep it that way," said David Giove, of Bourbonnais, who grew up in New York.

Giove, 28, expects to educate his four young children at home.

The measure was supposed to be brought up in committee this week, but with the outpouring of criticism from parents, future plans remain on hold.

[Illinois Statehouse News; By MELISSA LEU]

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