
H. B. 4624

(By Delegates Armstead, Harrison and Calvert)

[Introduced February 23, 2000; referred to the

Committee on Education.]
A BILL to amend and reenact section one, article eight, chapter
eighteen of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine
hundred thirty-one, as amended, relating to home school
instruction; removing the requirement that the person
providing instruction have four years higher formal
education than the most academically advanced child.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section one, article eight, chapter eighteen of the
code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as
amended, be amended and reenacted to read as follows:
ARTICLE 8. COMPULSORY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE.
§18-8-1. Commencement and termination of compulsory school


attendance; exemptions.
Compulsory school attendance shall begin with the school
year in which the sixth birthday is reached prior to the first day of September of such year or upon enrolling in a publicly
supported kindergarten program and continue to the sixteenth
birthday.
Exemption from the foregoing requirements of compulsory
public school attendance shall be made on behalf of any child for
the following causes or conditions, each such cause or condition
being subject to confirmation by the attendance authority of the
county:
Exemption A. Instruction in a private, parochial or other
approved school. -- Such instruction shall be in a school
approved by the county board of education and for a time equal to
the school term of the county for the year. In all such schools
it shall be the duty of the principal or other person in control,
upon the request of the county superintendent of schools, to
furnish to the county board of education such information and
records as may be required with respect to attendance,
instruction and progress of pupils enrolled between the entrance
age and sixteen years;
Exemption B. Instruction in home or other approved place.
-- (a) Such instruction shall be in the home of such child or
children or at some other place approved by the county board of
education and for a time equal to the school term of the county.
If such request for home instruction is denied by the county
board of education, good and reasonable justification for such denial must be furnished in writing to the applicant by the
county board of education. The instruction in such cases shall
be conducted by a person or persons who, in the judgment of the
county superintendent and county board of education, are
qualified to give instruction in subjects required to be taught
in the free elementary schools of the state. It shall be the
duty of the person or persons providing the instruction, upon
request of the county superintendent, to furnish to the county
board of education such information and records as may be
required from time to time with respect to attendance,
instruction and progress of pupils enrolled between the entrance
age and sixteen years receiving such instruction. The state
department of education shall develop guidelines for the home
schooling of special education students including alternative
assessment measures to assure that satisfactory academic progress
is achieved.
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of this
Exemption B, the person or persons providing home instruction
meet the requirements for Exemption B when the conditions of this
subsection are met: Provided, That the county superintendent
shall have the right to seek from the circuit court of the county
an order denying the home instruction, which order may be granted
upon a showing of clear and convincing evidence that the child
will suffer educational neglect or that there are other compelling reasons to deny home instruction.
(1) The person or persons providing home instruction present
to the county superintendent or county board of education a
notice of intent to provide home instruction and the name and
address of any child of compulsory school age to be instructed:
Provided, That if a child is enrolled in a public school, notice
of intent to provide home instruction shall be given at least two
weeks prior to withdrawing such child from public school;
(2) The person or persons providing home instruction submit
satisfactory evidence of (i) A high school diploma or
equivalent; and (ii) formal education at least four years higher
than the most academically advanced child for whom the
instruction will be provided
(3) The person or persons providing home instruction outline
a plan of instruction for the ensuing school year; and
(4) The person or persons providing home instruction shall
annually obtain an academic assessment of the child for the
previous school year. This shall be satisfied in one of the
following ways:
(i) Any child receiving home instruction annually takes a
standardized test, to be administered at a public school in the
county where the child resides, or administered by a licensed
psychologist or other person authorized by the publisher of the
test, or administered by a person authorized by the county superintendent or county board of education. The child shall be
administered a test which has been normed by the test publisher
on that child's age or grade group. In no event may the child's
parent or legal guardian administer the test. Where a test is
administered outside of a public school, the child's parent or
legal guardian shall pay the cost of administering the test. The
public school or other qualified person shall administer to
children of compulsory school age the Comprehensive Test of Basic
Skills, the California Achievement Test, the Stanford Achievement
Test, or the Iowa Tests of Basic Skills, achievement and
proficiency, or an individual standardized achievement test that
is nationally normed and provides statistical results which test
will be selected by the public school, or other person
administering the test, in the subjects of language, reading,
social studies, science and mathematics; and shall be
administered under standardized conditions as set forth by the
published instructions of the selected test. No test shall be
administered if the publication date is more than ten years from
the date of the administration of the test. Each child's test
results shall be reported as a national percentile for each of
the five subjects tested. Each child's test results shall be
made available on or before the thirtieth day of June of the
school year in which the test is to be administered to the person
or persons providing home instruction, the child's parent or legal guardian and the county superintendent. Upon request of a
duly authorized representative of the West Virginia department of
education, each child's test results shall be furnished by the
person or persons providing home instruction, or by the child's
parent or legal guardian, to the state superintendent of schools.
Upon notification of the mean of the child's test results for any
single year has fallen below the fortieth percentile, the county
board of education shall notify the parents or legal guardian of
said child, in writing, of the services available to assist in
the assessment of the child's eligibility for special education
services: Provided, That the identification of a disability
shall not preclude the continuation of home schooling.
If the mean of the child's test results for any single year
for language, reading, social studies, science and mathematics
fall below the fortieth percentile on the selected tests, then
the person or persons providing home instruction shall initiate
a remedial program to foster achievement above that level and the
student shall show improvement. If, after two calendar years,
the mean of the child's test results fall below the fortieth
percentile level, home instruction shall no longer satisfy the
compulsory school attendance requirement exemption; or
(ii) The county superintendent is provided with a written
narrative indicating that a portfolio of samples of the child's
work has been reviewed and that the child's academic progress for the year is in accordance with the child's abilities. This
narrative shall be prepared by a certified teacher or other
person mutually agreed upon by the parent or legal guardian and
the county superintendent. It shall be submitted on or before
the thirtieth day of June of the school year covered by the
portfolio. The parent or legal guardian shall be responsible for
payment of fees charged for the narrative; or
(iii) Evidence of an alternative academic assessment of the
child's proficiency mutually agreed upon by the parent or legal
guardian and the county superintendent is submitted to the county
superintendent by the thirtieth day of June of the school year
being assessed. The parent or legal guardian shall be
responsible for payment of fees charged for the assessment.
The superintendent or a designee shall offer such
assistance, including textbooks, other teaching materials and
available resources, as may assist the person or persons
providing home instruction subject to their availability. Any
child receiving home instruction may, upon approval of the county
board of education, exercise the option to attend any class
offered by the county board of education as the person or persons
providing home instruction may deem appropriate subject to normal
registration and attendance requirements;
Exemption C. Physical or mental incapacity. -- Physical or
mental incapacity shall consist of incapacity for school attendance and the performance of school work. In all cases of
prolonged absence from school due to incapacity of the child to
attend, the written statement of a licensed physician or
authorized school nurse shall be required under the provisions of
this article: Provided, That in all cases incapacity shall be
narrowly defined and in no case shall the provisions of this
article allow for the exclusion of the mentally, physically,
emotionally or behaviorally handicapped child otherwise entitled
to a free appropriate education;
Exemption D. Residence more than two miles from school or
school bus route. -- The distance of residence from a school, or
school bus route providing free transportation, shall be reckoned
by the shortest practicable road or path, which contemplates
travel through fields by right of permission from the landholders
or their agents. It shall be the duty of the county board of
education, subject to written consent of landholders, or their
agents, to provide and maintain safe foot bridges across streams
off the public highways where such are required for the safety
and welfare of pupils whose mode of travel from home to school or
to school bus route must necessarily be other than along the
public highway in order for said road or path to be not over two
miles from home to school or to school bus providing free
transportation;
Exemption E. Hazardous conditions. -- Conditions rendering school attendance impossible or hazardous to the life, health or
safety of the child;
Exemption F. High school graduation. -- Such exemption
shall consist of regular graduation from a standard senior high
school;
Exemption G. Granting work permits. -- The county
superintendent may, after due investigation, grant work permits
to youths under sixteen years of age, subject to state and
federal labor laws and regulations: Provided, That a work permit
may not be granted on behalf of any youth who has not completed
the eighth grade of school;
Exemption H. Serious illness or death in the immediate
family of the pupil. -- It is expected that the county attendance
director will ascertain the facts in all cases of such absences
about which information is inadequate and report same to the
county superintendent of schools;
Exemption I. Destitution in the home. -- Exemption based on
a condition of extreme destitution in the home may be granted
only upon the written recommendation of the county attendance
director to the county superintendent following careful
investigation of the case. A copy of the report confirming such
condition and school exemption shall be placed with the county
director of public assistance. This enactment contemplates every
reasonable effort that may properly be taken on the part of both school and public assistance authorities for the relief of home
conditions officially recognized as being so destitute as to
deprive children of the privilege of school attendance.
Exemption for this cause shall not be allowed when such
destitution is relieved through public or private means;
Exemption J. Church ordinances; observances of regular
church ordinances. -- The county board of education may approve
exemption for religious instruction upon written request of the
person having legal or actual charge of a child or children:
Provided, That such exemption shall be subject to the rules
prescribed by the county superintendent and approved by the
county board of education;
Exemption K. Alternative private, parochial, church or
religious school instruction. -- In lieu of the provisions of
Exemption A herein above, exemption shall be made for any child
attending any private school, parochial school, church school,
school operated by a religious order or other nonpublic school
which elects to comply with the provisions of article
twenty-eight, chapter eighteen of the code of West Virginia.
The completion of the eighth grade shall not exempt any
child under sixteen years of age from the compulsory attendance
provision of this article: Provided, That there is a public high
school or other public school of advanced grades or a school bus
providing free transportation to any such school, the route of which is within two miles of the child's home by the shortest
practicable route or path as hereinbefore specified under
Exemption D of this section.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to remove the requirement
that a person providing home instruction has to have formal
education at least four years higher than the most academically
advanced child for whom instruction is to be provided.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken
from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language
that would be added.