And
above all these things put on charity, which is the bond of perfection.
~ Col. 3:14
NOTE:
These regulations have been taken directly from the NYS Dept. of
Education
web site. For more info go to: http://www.emsc.nysed.gov/nonpub/homeinstruction.html
SECTION
100.10 OF REGULATIONS OF THE COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
Pursuant to sections
207,
3204, 3210, 3212 and 3234 of the Education Law
The Regulations of the
Commissioner
of Education are amended, effective July 1, 1988, by the addition of
the
new section 100.10 to read as follows:
100.10. Home
Instruction.
(a) Purpose of section.
The purpose of this section is to establish procedures to assist school
authorities in fulfilling their responsibility under Education Law
sections
3204(2) and 3210(2)(d) and in meeting their responsibility of
determining
the competency of the instructor and substantial equivalence of
instruction
being provided at home to students of compulsory school attendance age,
and to assist parents who exercise their right to provide required
instruction
at home to such students in fulfilling their responsibilities under
Education
Law section 3212(2).
(b) Notice of intention
to instruct at home.
(1) Except as otherwise
provided in paragraphs (2) and (3) of this subdivision, parents or
other
persons in parental relation to a student of compulsory school
attendance
age shall annually provide written notice to the superintendent of
schools
of their school district of residence of their intention to educate
their
child at home by July first of each school year. The school year begins
July first and ends June thirtieth for all purposes within this
section.
In the case of the City School District of the City of New York, the
school
district of residence for students who, if enrolled in the public
schools,
would attend elementary school, intermediate school or junior high
school
in a community school district shall be deemed to be the community
school
district in which the parents reside.
(2) Parents who determine
to commence home instruction after the start of the school year, or who
establish residence in the school district after the start of the
school
year, shall provide written notice of their intention to educate their
child at home within fourteen (14) days following the commencement of
home
instruction within the school district.
(3) For the 1988-89 school
year only, the written notice of intention to instruct at home required
in paragraph (1) of this subdivision shall be due on August 1, 1988.
(c) Procedures for
development
and review of an individualized home instruction plan (IHIP).
(1) Within ten (10)
business
days of the receipt of the notice of intention to instruct at home, the
school district shall send to the parents a copy of section 100.10 of
the
regulations of the Commissioner of Education and a form on which to
submit
an individualized home instruction plan (IHIP) for each child of
compulsory
attendance age who is to be taught at home.
(2) Within four (4) weeks
of the receipt of such materials, or by August fifteenth, or for the
1988-89
school year by September 15, 1988, whichever is later, the parent shall
submit the completed IHIP form to the school district. The district
shall
provide assistance in preparation of the forms, if requested by the
parents.
(3) Within ten (10)
business
days of receipt of the IHIP, or by August thirty-first, or for the
1988-89
school year by September 30, 1988, whichever is later, the school
district
shall either notify the parents that the IHIP complies with the
requirements
of subdivisions (d) and (e) of this section or shall give the parents
written
notice of any deficiency in the IHIP.
(4) Within fifteen (15)
days of receipt of a notice of a deficiency in the IHIP, or by
September
fifteenth, or for the 1988-89 school year by October 15, 1988,
whichever
is later, the parents shall submit a revised IHIP which corrects any
such
deficiencies.
(5) The superintendent of
schools shall review the revised IHIP and shall notify the parents as
to
whether the revised IHIP complies with subdivisions (d) and (e) of this
section within fifteen (15) days of receipt of the revised IHIP or by
September
thirtieth, or for the 1988-89 school year by October 31, 1988,
whichever
is later. If the revised IHIP is determined not to be in compliance
with
subdivisions (d) and (e) of this section, then the parents shall be
notified
in writing of the reasons for such determination. Such notice shall
also
contain the date of the next regularly scheduled meeting of the board
of
education that will be held at least ten (10) days after the date of
mailing
of the notice, and shall indicate that if the parents wish to contest
the
determination of noncompliance, the parents must so notify the board of
education at least three (3) business days prior to such meeting. At
such
board meeting, the parents shall have the right to present proof of
compliance,
and the board of education shall make a final determination of
compliance
or noncompliance.
(6) The parents shall have
the right to appeal any such final school district determination of
noncompliance
to the Commissioner of Education within thirty (30) days after receipt
of such determination.
(7) When administrative
review of a school district determination of noncompliance is
completed,
the parents shall immediately provide for the instruction of their
children
at a public school or elsewhere in compliance with Education Law
sections
3204 and 3210. For purposes of this subdivision, such administrative
review
shall be deemed to be completed when one of the following events have
occurred:
(i) the parents have
failed
to contest a determination of noncompliance by appealing to the board
of
education; or
(ii) the parents have
failed
to appeal a final school district determination of noncompliance to the
Commissioner of Education; or
(iii) the parents have
received
a decision of the Commissioner of Education which upholds a final
school
district determination of noncompliance.
(8) Within ten (10) days
after administrative review of the determination of noncompliance is
completed,
the parents shall furnish the superintendent of schools with written
notice
of the arrangements they have made to provide their children with the
required
instruction, except that such notice shall not be required if the
parents
enroll their children in a public school.
(d) Content of
Individualized
Home Instruction Plan (IHIP). Each child's IHIP shall contain:
(1) the child's name, age,
and grade level,
(2) a list of the syllabi,
curriculum materials, textbooks, or plan of instruction to be used in
each
of the required subjects listed in subdivision (e) of this section;
(3) the dates for
submission
to the school district of the parents' quarterly reports as required in
subdivision (g) of this section. These reports shall be spaced in even
and logical periods; and
(4) the names of the
individuals
providing instruction.
(e) Required courses.
(1) For purposes of this
subdivision, a unit means six thousand four hundred eighty (6,480)
minutes
of instruction per school year.
(2) Instruction in the
following
subjects shall be required:
(i) For grades one through
six: arithmetic, reading, spelling, writing, the English language,
geography,
United States history, science, health education, music, visual arts,
physical
education, bilingual education and/or English as a second language
where
the need is indicated.
(ii) For grades seven and
eight: English (two units); history and geography (two units); science
(two units); mathematics (two units); physical education (on a regular
basis); health education (on a regular basis); art (one-half unit);
music
(one-half unit); practical arts (on a regular basis) and library skills
(on a regular basis). The units required herein are cumulative
requirements
for both grades seven and eight.
(iii) The following
courses
shall be taught at least once during the first eight grades: United
States
history, New York State history, and the Constitution of the United
States
and New York State.
(iv) For grades nine
through
twelve: English (four units); social studies (four units) which
includes
one unit of American history, one-half unit in participation in
government,
and one half unit economics; mathematics (two units); science (two
units);
art and/or music (one unit); health education (one-half unit); physical
education (two units); and three units of electives. The units required
herein are cumulative requirements for grades nine through twelve.
(v) Education Law sections
801, 804, 806, and 808 also require the following subjects to be
covered
during grades kindergarten through twelve:
(a) Patriotism and
citizenship;
(b) health education
regarding
alcohol, drug and tobacco misuse;
(c) highway safety and
traffic
regulation, including bicycle safety; and
(d) fire and arson
prevention
and safety.
(f) Attendance
requirements.
Each child shall attend upon instruction as follows:
(1) the substantial
equivalent
of one hundred eighty (180) days of instruction shall be provided each
school year.
(2) The cumulative hours
of instruction for grades one through six shall be nine hundred (900)
hours
per year. The cumulative hours of instruction for grades seven through
twelve shall be nine hundred ninety (990) hours per year.
(3) Absences shall be
permitted
on the same basis as provided in the policy of the school district for
its own students;
(4) Records of attendance
shall be maintained by the parent and shall be made available to the
school
district upon request;
(5) Instruction provided
at a site other than the primary residence of the parents shall be
provided
in a building which has not been determined to be in violation of the
local
building code.
(g) Quarterly reports. On
or before the dates specified by the parent in the IHIP, a quarterly
report
for each child shall be furnished by the parent to the school district.
The quarterly report shall contain the following:
(1) the number of hours
of instruction during said quarter;
(2) a description of the
material covered in each subject listed in the IHIP;
(3) either a grade for the
child in each subject or a written narrative evaluating the child's
progress;
and
(4) a written explanation
in the event that less than eighty percent of the amount of the course
materials as set forth in the IHIP planned for that quarter has been
covered
in any subject.
(h) Annual assessment. At
the time of filing the fourth quarterly report as specified in the
IHIP,
the parent shall also file an annual assessment in accordance with this
subdivision. The annual assessment shall include the results of a
commercially
published norm-referenced achievement test which meets the requirements
of paragraph (1) of this subdivision or an alternative form of
evaluation
which meets the requirements of paragraph (2) of this subdivision.
(1) Commercially published
norm-referenced achievement tests.
(i) The test shall be
selected
by the parent from one of the following: the Iowa Test of Basic Skills,
the California Achievement Test, the Stanford Achievement test, the
Comprehensive
Test of Basic Skills, the Metropolitan Achievement Test, a State
Education
Department test, or another test approved by the State Education
Department.
(ii) The test shall be
administered
in accordance with one of the following options, to be selected by the
parents:
(a) at the public school,
by its professional staff; or
(b) at a registered
nonpublic
school, by its professional staff, provided that the consent of the
chief
school officer of the nonpublic school is obtained; or
(c) at a nonregistered
nonpublic
school, by its professional staff, provided that the consent of the
superintendent
of schools of the school district and of the chief school officer of
the
nonpublic school is obtained; or
(d) at the parents' home
or at any other reasonable location, by a New York State certified
teacher
or by another qualified person, provided that the superintendent has
consented
to having said certified teacher or other person administer the test;
(iii) The test shall be
scored by the persons administering the test or by other persons who
are
mutually agreeable to the parents and the superintendent of schools.
(iv) The test shall be
provided
by the school district upon request by the parent, provided that the
cost
of any testing facilities, transportation, and/or personnel for testing
conducted at a location other than the public school shall be borne by
the parent.
(v) If a score on a test
is determined to be inadequate, the program shall be placed on
probation
pursuant to subdivision (i) of this section. A student's score shall be
deemed adequate if:
(i) the student has a
composite
score above the thirty-third percentile on national norms; or
(ii) the student's score
reflects one academic year of growth as compared to a test administered
during or subsequent to the prior school year.
(2) Alternative evaluation
methods. An alternative form of evaluation shall be permitted to be
chosen
by the parent only as follows:
(i) for grades one through
three a written narrative prepared by a person specified in
subparagraph
(iii) of this paragraph;
(ii) for grades four
through
eight a written narrative prepared by a person specified in
subparagraph
(iii) of this paragraph. This alternative form of evaluation may be
used
no more often than every other school year for these grades;
(iii) for the purposes of
this paragraph, the person who prepares the written narrative shall be
a New York State certified teacher, a home instruction peer group
review
panel, or other person, who has interviewed the child and reviewed a
portfolio
of the child's work. Such person shall certify either that the child
has
made adequate academic progress or that the child has failed to make
adequate
progress. In the event that such child has failed to make adequate
progress,
the home instruction program shall be placed on probation pursuant to
subdivision
(i) of this section. The certified teacher, peer review panel, or other
person shall be chosen by the parent with the consent of the
superintendent.
Any resulting cost shall be borne by the parent.
(3) If a dispute arises
between the parents and the superintendent of schools, including
disputes
over the administration of the commercially published norm-referenced
achievement
test or the use of alternative evaluation methods, the parents may
appeal
to the board of education. If the parents disagree with the
determination
of the board of education, the parents may appeal to the Commissioner
of
Education within thirty (30) days of receipt of the board's final
determination.
(i) Probation.
(1) If a child's annual
assessment fails to comply with the requirements of subdivision (h) of
this section, the home instruction program shall be placed on probation
for a period of up to two school years. The parent shall be required to
submit a plan of remediation which addresses the deficiencies in the
child's
achievement, and seeks to remedy said deficiencies. The plan shall be
reviewed
by the school district. The school district may require the parents to
make changes in the plan prior to acceptance.
(2) If after the end of
any semester of the probationary period the child progresses to the
level
specified in the remediation plan, then the home instruction program
shall
be removed from probation. If the child does not attain at least
seventy-five
percent of the objectives specified in the remediation plan at the end
of any given semester within the period of probation, or if after two
years
on probation one hundred percent of the objectives of the remediation
plan
have not been satisfied, the superintendent of schools shall provide
the
parents with the notice specified in paragraph (5) of subdivision (c)
of
this section and the board of education shall review the determination
of noncompliance in accordance with such paragraph, except that consent
of the parents to such review shall not be required.
(3) If during the period
of probation the superintendent of schools has reasonable grounds to
believe
that the program of home instruction is in substantial noncompliance
with
these regulations the superintendent may require one or more home
visits.
Such home visit(s) shall be made only after three days' written notice.
The purpose of such visit(s) shall be to ascertain areas of
noncompliance
with these regulations and to determine methods of remediating any such
deficiencies. The home visit(s) shall be conducted by the
superintendent
or by the superintendent's designee. The superintendent may include
members
of a home instruction peer review panel in the home visit team.
Top of
Page