AN EXAMINATION OF
THE AUTHORITY OF PARENTS
TO INSTRUCT THEIR CHILDREN FROM THE INCEPTION
OF THE CONNECTICUT COLONY TO THE PRESENT
The earliest codified law of the state
of
In each of the subsequent revisions of
the code of laws, now known as the Connecticut General Statutes, some changes
or additions were made. However, throughout the changes, one thing remained
constant - the fact that it is the duty of parents to educate their own
children. This basic obligation is outlined today in the first sentence of
Connecticut General Statute 10-184. The title of that statute is, "Duties
of parents." It reads: "All parents and those who have the care of
children shall bring them up in some lawful employment and instruct them or
cause them to be instructed in reading, writing, spelling, English grammar,
geography, arithmetic, and
Throughout the history of this state,
parents retained total control over the type of education they provided during
instruction at home. No state statutes or administrative regulations were
adopted in any way "regulating" home instruction.
In the 1970's, under the direction of
State Commissioner of Education, Mark Shedd, the
State Board of Education adopted a set of "Guidelines" for those who
wished to instruct their children at home. Under the "Shedd
Guidelines", it was suggested that parents bring the curricula they
proposed to teach to the local public school district for "approval"
before they began home instruction. While the "Guidelines" were only
suggested procedures and were never adopted as statutory law, many public
school districts required that parents abide by them as if they were law.
Consequently, rather than enter into a legal argument with a public school
official misinterpreting suggestions as statutory law, many parents refused to
approach the public school district and instead "went underground".
That is, they opted not to follow the "Guidelines" and not to inform
anyone that they were, in fact, home educating for
fear that the school districts would report the children as truant or report
the parents as neglectful.
In the late 1980's, one family did
engage in a legal argument with a public school district. The district then
requested an opinion from the State Department of Education. Then Education
Commissioner Gerald Tirozzi asked the Chief of Legal
Affairs for the State Department of Education, Mark Stapleton, to conduct an
investigation of the issue. Headed by Stapleton, a committee composed of people
who worked within the Department conducted a lengthy review of the history of
parental rights in education culminating in "A Report Concerning the
Findings of the Home Instruction Committee" prepared by Mark Stapleton
dated February 6, 1990.
That report detailed several options
for the State Board of Education to consider adopting including a revised set
of "Guidelines" that would have specified such things as the minimum
qualifications a parent must possess in order to instruct their children,
whether participation in the state mastery exams would be required of children
instructed at home, and steps for the public school districts to take to ensure
parental "compliance" with the "Guidelines."
Parents from across the state became
involved in requesting that these provisions not be adopted. The State Board of
Education decided that an advisory committee, comprised of parents and public
school authorities, would be formed to study ways of revising the "Shedd Guidelines".
In early 1990, that advisory committee
met and discussed a variety of issues. In the course of those discussions, the
"Shedd Guidelines" were abandoned in favor
of adopting provisions contained in a document developed by the National
Association of State Boards of Education (NASBE). The NASBE document called for
even more stringent "regulation" of parental instruction. The
advisory committee was to issue a report on the committee's findings, including
recommendations for new guidelines. However, many parents objected to the
implementation of any new stringent "regulation". It was at that
point that
Supporters picketed the State
Department of Education's offices in
All of this action served to persuade
the State Board of Education to change its plans, to reject the committee's
proposal, and instead to propose an entirely new set of "Guidelines".
The Board invited a select few representatives from the parents' groups
(including Attorney Stevenson) and a select few representatives from the public
school districts to a meeting for their opinion concerning the new
"Guidelines". Each group of representatives commented and made
certain suggested improvements. At the conclusion of those meetings,
Commissioner Tirozzi recommended that the State Board
of Education adopt those "Guidelines." The Board did so. Those
"Guidelines" are still in force. They are now known as the "C-14
Guidelines" because the Commissioner
disseminated them to public school districts in a Circular Letter, number 14.
The C-14 Guidelines were a compromise to appease all of those involved in the
earlier controversies. As such, it is an imperfect document. However, from the
perspective of parents, it is a vastly superior document to the one previously
being proposed. Under the C-14 Guidelines, parents simply file a Notice of
Intent form with the public school superintendent and suggest a date when they
would like to attend a portfolio review at the public school at the end of the
school year. The State Board of Education did not adopt the Guidelines as a
regulation. The Board specifically left them as "suggested
procedures" only. In fact, the Board entitled the Guidelines,
"Suggested Procedures of Home Instruction."
A few public school superintendents
were not satisfied that the Guidelines did not require parents to obtain
approval for home instruction from them or that the Guidelines did not require
other more stringent measures. The superintendents then requested
Representative Anne Dandrow to propose a bill in the
state legislature that would again require parents to revive the more stringent
proposals and give them the full force of statutory law.
Once again, parents joined forces,
engaged in a massive letter wring effort and attended the legislative public
hearing on the bill in force. The bill was killed in committee.
For the next decade, the laws remained
static, and the C-14 Guidelines remained in place. In the spring of 2003, a few
public school superintendents, again, were not satisfied that the Guidelines
did not require parents to obtain their approval for home instruction. They,
again, requested a legislator to propose a bill resurrecting the more stringent
proposals as statutory law. This time, they asked Representative Cameron
Staples. This time, parents again joined forces, engaged in a massive letter
writing effort and attended the legislative public hearing on the bill in force
numbering over a thousand and overflowing not only the hearing room but three
other rooms as well. Again, the bill was killed in committee.
Today,
parents in