The Honorable Jonathan S. Fitch State Senator Rural Route 1, Box 31 Hindsville, AR 72738-9701
Dear Senator Fitch:
This is in response to your request for an opinion concerning the Arkansas "home school" law (A.C.A. §§
You have asked the following questions in this regard:
1. What prerequisites are required of parents who choose to home school their children through the Internet?
2. Do parents that choose to educate their children at home through the Internet by a `private tutoring service' have to comply with the testing requirements per A.C.A. §
6-15-504 ?
RESPONSE
Question 1 — What prerequisites are required of parents who choose tohome school their children through the Internet?
It must be initially noted that the answer to this question may depend upon what is contemplated or meant precisely by the phrase "home school . . . through the Internet." You have provided no specific facts in this regard. It is my opinion as a general matter, however, that parents who choose to provide instruction for their children at home through the Internet must meet the prerequisites under the home school law; that is, they must give the written notice and sign the waiver required under A.C.A. §
The Arkansas compulsory attendance law requires that parents of children age five through seventeen on or before September 1 "shall enroll and send the child to a public, private, or parochial school, or provide a home school for the child, as described in §
The term "home school" is defined in A.C.A. §
Given these alternative school attendance categories, therefore, bearing in mind the above definitions, I believe that instruction at home through the Internet would more than likely be deemed to fall within the "home school" law. Enrollment in courses taught over the Internet does not readily meet the general definition of "private school," which involves selecting and admitting students. The premise under the compulsory attendance law that parents "enroll and send their children to private school (§
It is therefore my opinion that parents must comply with the notice and waiver requirements under A.C.A. §
Question 2 — Do parents that choose to educate their children athome through the Internet by a "private tutoring service" have tocomply with the testing requirements per A.C.A. §
It is my opinion that the answer to this question is "yes," based upon the above discussion.
Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MARK PRYOR Attorney General
MP:EAW/cyh