Hundreds rally at the Capitol to oppose homeschool bill
[March 07, 2025]
By Beth Hundsdorfer and Molly Parker
Hundreds rallied Thursday at the Capitol in Springfield to voice their
opposition to a bill that would require oversight of families who
homeschool their children, a response to concerns that the state offers
no restrictions on homeschooling families.
The bill, called the Homeschool Act, would require families to notify
their local school districts if they decide to homeschool their
children. Parents could also be required to provide authorities with
teaching materials and completed work to document instruction is taking
place if there is a concern that homeschooled children are not receiving
an education.
Homeschoolers have thwarted previous legislative attempts to regulate
them, using grassroots events such as the annual Illinois Christian Home
Educators’ Cherry Pie Day. This year, in addition to delivering cherry
pies to legislators’ offices, homeschool proponents voiced their
opposition to the bill, rallying on the Capitol lawn.
Tia Noriega, of Chicago, attended the rally to oppose the bill. She’s
homeschooling her children instead of sending them to Chicago Public
Schools.
“I’m from the city. We’re inner city. We’re right in the middle of,
like, some crazy neighborhoods in Chicago,” Noriega said. “It’s hard
enough to raise your family in a big city, but as homeschoolers, there
is a community. We have support because my children are still really
young. I hope to keep that community strong, to be able to raise them
with like-minded people. So, I hope this bill doesn’t get passed.”
The bill would not prevent homeschooling. Rep. Terra Costa Howard, a
Democrat from Glen Ellyn who sponsored the bill, said it would extend
minimal requirements to ensure children are educated and safe. Parents
would only be compelled to show evidence of schooling if educational
authorities received concerns of truancy.
Several Republicans in the Illinois House, however, said it would put
unnecessary and burdensome restrictions on homeschooling families.
“Illinois has plenty of challenges. We all know that. It’s not a secret.
We watch the news, but homeschooling is, frankly, not one of those
challenges. It’s not a problem, it’s a solution. It’s an answer to so
many public-school challenges that Illinois families face,” Rep. Travis
Weaver said during a news conference Thursday. “Over-regulating
homeschool families is bad, but the future of this bill is even worse
because the more we over-regulate homeschooling, the more homeschooling
will slip and look more and more like our struggling public schools.”

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Homeschool advocates rally at the Illinois Statehouse to oppose
legislation that would impose more oversight of parents who school
their children at home. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jade
Aubrey.)

Currently, homeschool parents are not required to register with their
local school districts or any state agency. They are not required to use
any prescribed curriculum, test for progress and proficiency or track
attendance. Homeschooling parents need not have a high school diploma to
instruct their kids at home. Illinois’ rules for homeschoolers are among
the least restrictive in the nation, according to the Home School Legal
Defense Association.
In a news investigation last year, Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica
found that parents can claim homeschooling to avoid any consequences for
truancy. Truancy officers told reporters the lack of regulation made it
more difficult to get truant kids back into school and hold parents
accountable.

While the number of homeschooled children is growing, determining the
number of children who are educated at home is difficult, as
registration is not required. The bill would also require data
collection from each Regional Office of Education across Illinois for
the first time on the number, grade and age of homeschooled children in
their regions.
The number of school-aged children enrolled in public schools has
dropped by 127,000 since 2020, outpacing declines in population,
according to a study by Advance Illinois, an educational policy and
advocacy organization.
Lily Cary at Medill Illinois News Bureau
contributed to this report.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government
coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily
by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick
Foundation. |