Policy Effective Date: July 1
2002
The goals of the public education system have
never been to educate our children. Whether or not a child ever
learns is irrelevant; whether the child has attended enough days to
allow the system to profit from daily attendance proceeds is the only
matter of legal importance or consideration.
Public school policies have become increasingly
arbitrary, ambiguous, and discriminatory. These standards were not
enacted for the mutual benefit of the school and the student/families, but
written solely for the benefit of the school system.
Frequently, the State will have one set of guidelines and the counties
another; the counties one set of rules and each school yet a different
set. As our personal philosophical stands against government
intrusion into the educational arena have increased, we have noticed
greater amounts of energy and time being spent trying to "prove" that home
education is a legitimate way of learning as well as educating officials
of the legality of home education as set forth by Alabama Law.
During my 23 years in Home Education, with 11
of those years being spent as Dayspring Academy's administrator, I have
routinely interacted with State officials, the superintendents of numerous
school boards, school counselors, judges, and truant officers. As I
believe that DSA is a legal church school as defined by the laws of
Alabama as well as my own personal Christian beliefs, I have always tried
to maintain a professional and courteous relationship in any school
interaction. However, recent repetitive events have caused me and
the other members of DSA to reevaluate the morality of continuing to
interact with the public education system other than what is required by
law.
We cannot, in good conscience, be an active
participant in re-enrolling a child in a system that is cruel and
remorseless in the damage that it daily inflicts on people. We
cannot, in faith, accept and ignore such blatant abuse to another human
being, even if it is being perpetrated in the form or name of
"education." Finally, as a point of conviction, DSA will no longer
inquire into and attempt to know the changing, ever-shifting policies
regarding students returning to public school with regard to grade
placement testing, semester testing or requirements for graduation for the
State, all counties, and any individual public schools.
After much prayer and thought, we, Dayspring
Academy, will no longer mediate between the public school system and
parents, beyond that which is ethically and morally compelling, in order
to return any student to a government school. What follows is a
summarization of our educational philosophy regarding public schools and
DSA policy regarding DSA or potential DSA students returning to public
school.
If you think your child will be returning to
the government system at any point, you are still welcome to enroll with
DSA. We support your right to make all decisions regarding the parenting
of your child, including the placement in the government school setting;
however, it has always been the parent's responsibility, not
DSA's, to know the particular requirements of the State, your county of
enrollment, and the school with which you wish to enroll/re-enroll. We
suggest the following if re-enrollment is a possibility:
1. Contact the Alabama State Board of
Education. Ask for a written copy of their policies pertaining to
students enrolling/re-enrolling or transferring from non-accredited
schools to the public schools in Alabama.
2. Go to your local superintendent's
office, as well as to the school in which you intend to re-enroll your
child, and inquire as to whether they follow the state guidelines or if
they have their own policies regarding the same. Get their policy
in writing and signed by someone in authority.
As with all things, we are continually growing
in our beliefs about education, in our commitment to all things that are
good, true, honorable, and that best uphold the family's
responsibilities to their child. We strive to avoid involvement in
anything directly opposing our own convictions that the government has no
place in the education of our children. Though we are not
politically active due to our own personal and spiritual beliefs, we can
and will be active in our daily position and belief regarding the
necessity of the separation of the state and education, which will
be reflected in DSA policies.
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