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We should...be able to see that our interest would be best served not by asking the state to promulgate our values but by forbidding the state to promulgate any values at all. If the state can espouse some value that we love, it can, with equal justice, espouse others we do not love.
~ Richard Mitchell
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Homeschooling in Alabama, at first glance, can appear to be difficult and onerous, given the fact that there is no actual homeschool law and that it is a requirement to enroll in a church school. Gosh, haven't the people here in Alabama heard of separation of church and state? Why do we have to mix religion (church schools) into how we can homeschool? |
It is the very fact that there is no legal definition of homeschooling that protects us from unnecessary state oversight. We enjoy the ability to homeschool through the separation of church and state principle, enabling us to homeschooling pretty much as we please without interference from the State of Alabama.
In Alabama we are legally considered church schoolers, not homeschoolers. We enroll our children in a Church School, sometimes called a church cover school, a covering or an umbrella school. These church schools are not actual bricks and mortar schools, but a service offered to homeschoolers and often thought of as part of a church's mission to its members and/or community. And since there are so few rules set by the State to oversee church schools (both the bricks and mortar type and those offered as a service to homeschoolers), the church schools themselves are free to set their own rules and regulations as they deem necessary. And we are free to pick and choose amongst those church schools to find the one that best suits us. It might be that your family desires a church school that requires testing. Or one that requires its members to be of a particular religion. Or one that does not care at all about your religion (or lack thereof). Or one that requires monthly reporting. Or one that requires yearly reporting. Whatever your family's needs are, likely there is a church school that will work for you.
If you don't find a church school that suits your needs and you belong to a church, you might consider asking your church to begin a church school for homeschoolers. Also, many people decide that since they home church, they will be their own church school. Over the past several years this has been occurring with more frequency. If this is an option that appeals to you, I suggest you ask around on the various Alabama e-mail lists for others who are doing the same and talk with them. Know the Alabama laws governing church schools. Be prepared to defend your belief (in a court of law) that your home is your church. I don't say this to scare you, simply to urge you to be informed and knowledgeable. One never knows when the homeschooling climate might take a sudden change for the worse in Alabama and who might be the first to be a test case in the court systems. My guess is that it'll be the individual family church school rather than the large church-sponsored church schools, but that's only my guess. There is also an e-mail list for individual families who form their own church school for their own family. You can find that list in the E-lists Directory on the Alabama page.
So, take your time. Follow the links here, read the laws, investigate several church schools, ask questions of the directors, ask questions of other homeschoolers to find out what they like and don't like about their particular church school, and then choose. And remember, the church school that fits your needs this year may not fit your needs two years from now and that is fine. It is not difficult to change church schools. And new church schools open all the time - no one site can possibly list them all. So ask around, join e-mail lists (see the e-lists directory), and see what's out there!
Check the Alabama page for homeschool email lists, support groups, message boards, forums and newsletters. Sometimes a state group and/or a local group can be a wonderful place of support in your homeschooling journey.
Link to the State of Alabama Education Code that pertains to church schools.
A list of questions for prospective homeschoolers that can be useful when searching for a church school.
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