Following are portions of the law that are relevant to homeschoolers.
Connecticut's Judicial Branch Law Libraries can provide you with
additional information regarding laws concerning your children's
education here in Connecticut.
Sec. 10-184. Duties of parents.
School attendance age requirements.
All parents and those who
have the care of children shall bring them up in some lawful and honest
employment and instruct them or cause them to be instructed in reading,
writing, spelling, English grammar, geography, arithmetic and United States
history and in citizenship, including a study of the town, state and federal
governments. Subject to the provisions of this section and section 10-15c,
each parent or other person having control of a child five years of age and
over and under eighteen years of age shall cause such child to attend a
public school regularly during the hours and terms the public school in the
district in which such child resides is in session, unless such child is a
high school graduate or the parent or person having control of such child is
able to show that the child is elsewhere receiving equivalent instruction in
the studies taught in the public schools. The parent or person having
control of a child sixteen or seventeen years of age may consent, as
provided in this section, to such child's withdrawal from school. Such
parent or person shall personally appear at the school district office and
sign a withdrawal form. The school district shall provide such parent or
person with information on the educational options available in the school
system and in the community. The parent or person having control of a child
five years of age shall have the option of not sending the child to school
until the child is six years of age and the parent or person having control
of a child six years of age shall have the option of not sending the child
to school until the child is seven years of age. The parent or person shall
exercise such option by personally appearing at the school district office
and signing an option form. The school district shall provide the parent or
person with information on the educational opportunities available in the
school system.
Sec. 10-184a. Refusal of certain
parents to consent to use of special education programs or services.
The provisions of sections
10-76a to 10-76h, inclusive, shall not be construed to require any local,
regional or state board of education to provide special education programs
or services for any child whose parent or guardian has chosen to educate
such child in a home or private school in accordance with the provisions of
section 10-184 and who refuses to consent to such programs or services.
Sec. 10-184b. Waiver provisions not applicable to equivalent instruction
authority of parents.
Notwithstanding any provision
of the general statutes or public or special act granting the Commissioner
of Education the authority to waive provisions of the general statutes, the
Commissioner of Education shall not limit the authority of parents or
guardians to provide for equivalent instruction pursuant to section 10-184.
Sec. 10-198a. Policies and procedures concerning truants.
(Note: only some pertinent sections of 10-198a have been included.)
(a) For purposes of this
section, "truant" means a child age five to eighteen, inclusive, who is
enrolled in a public or private school and has four unexcused absences from
school in any one month or ten unexcused absences from school in any school
year. (e) The provisions of this section shall not apply to any child
receiving equivalent instruction pursuant to section 10-184.
Sec. 10-249. Enumeration of children of compulsory school age in school
districts and by state departments having jurisdiction over such children.
(a) The board of education of
each local and regional school district shall annually determine by age the
number of children of compulsory school age who reside within the
jurisdiction of such school district as of January first of each year. Such
determination shall be made by
(1) enumeration of each such child individually or
(2) any reasonable means of accounting approved by the
Commissioner of
Education.
(b) If any child of compulsory school age is not attending school within the
jurisdiction of the board of education of a local or regional school
district, the superintendent of schools of the district shall make a
reasonable effort to ascertain the reason for such nonattendance. If such
child is employed at labor, the superintendent of schools shall make a
reasonable effort to ascertain the name and address of such child's employer
or of the establishment where such child is employed. Returns shall be made
to the board of education on or before the fifteenth day of May. Any state,
local or other public agency shall, upon request by the superintendent of
schools, provide such information as may be reasonably required for the
purposes of this section.
(c) Each state department shall report periodically to the Commissioner of
Education at such time and in such manner as he shall prescribe, the name
and address of the most recent residence within the state for each child of
compulsory school age under the jurisdiction of such department. The
commissioner shall provide such information to the superintendent of schools
of the local or regional school district wherein such child is indicated to
have most recently resided.
Sec. 10-250. Report showing number of children.
Annually, not later than June
fifteenth, the superintendent of schools for each local or regional school
district shall file with the Commissioner of Education a report, on a form
prescribed by said commissioner, showing the number of children of
compulsory school age residing within the jurisdiction of such school
district determined in accordance with the provisions of section 10-249 and
such other information as said commissioner requires.
Sec. 10-251. Penalty for refusing to give age of child.
Any person having control of
a child under twenty-one years of age who wilfully refuses to give the name
and age of such child, and such information concerning the school attendance
of such child as this chapter requires, shall be fined not more than
twenty-five dollars.
|