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Delaware Homeschool Laws and DE State Homeschooling Requirements

 

For anyone considering homeschooling, Delaware would be an excellent state to live in. Delaware statutes embrace homeschooling and place minimal requirements on homeschool families.

Delaware requires all kids from ages 5-16 to attend some type of school, either public, private or homeschool. For homeschool students, state law provides three legal ways to establish and operate a homeschool. This article provides details on the requirements for each of these three options. The good news is that for all three options the requirements are not overly burdensome.

Like most other states, Delaware laws require homeschool parents to notify the Department of Education of their students' enrollment in a homeschool and provide attendance reports. Beyond that, the only other major requirement is the subjects taught must be the same as the subjects taught in public schools. Parents are given the liberty of choosing their own curriculum and materials.

The first homeschooling option is the most popular. Parents can easily establish a single-family homeschool in their home by filing an enrollment statement with the Department of Education each year by the end of September. Under this option, parents are required to keep records of school attendance and file an attendance report by July 31 of each year. Both the enrollment statement and the attendance report must be completed on forms prescribed by the Department of Education. Beyond these limited requirements, Delaware laws make no other requirements regarding teacher qualifications, recordkeeping, or testing are specified under this option.

The second option is to establish a multi-family homeschool. Under this option, the education of the child is provided by the parents or guardians of children in one or more residences in which the children are not all related to each other as siblings. The multi-family homeschool is required to appoint a liaison to report attendance and enrollment information to the Department of Education each year for all families involved. The liason has the exact same requirements as described above for the single-family homeschool filing the same two reports by the same dates. Also like the single-family option, there are no other requirements.

The third option likely has the least appeal to homeschool parents because it requires them to use the same teaching curriculum and materials as the public schools. The problem with this option is it takes away the freedom of homeschooling parents to select their own teaching materials, which is one of the main reasons why many parents are motivated to homeschool their kids. Most homeschool parents do not want their kids to be indoctrinated with the government mandated materials which have removed God and Christian values and replaced them with secular, humanistic doctines. In any case, this option is available and meets the needs of some homeschool parents. Under this option, parents are responsible for educating their own child in their own residence using curriculum approved by the local school superintendent. Beyond that, all other requirements under this option are the same as the first two options.

In summary, Delaware parents who are interested in homeschooling should have no problem meeting the limited requirements and enjoying the freedom they desire to teach their children at home.

See homeschool groups in Delaware
Visit the Delaware Department of Education


Note: This summary of Delaware homeschool law is for information purposes only and not as legal advice.

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