PUBLIC SCHOOL COMPULSORY ATTENDANCE
Joe SpiessEDL291
10/12/13
What Do You Think?TPS – Think, Pair, Share
Should there be a compulsory attendance age?
If so, what should it be? Should there be exceptions?
Defend your opinion!
What does Iowa law say?
Iowa Code – Section 299.1a
1. A child who has reached the age of six and is under sixteen years of age on September 15 is of compulsory attendance age and is deemed to remain of compulsory attendance age even if the child reaches the age of sixteen before the end of the regular school calendar.
Iowa Code – Section 299.1a
2. A child who has reached the age of five by September 15 and who is enrolled in a school district shall be considered to be of compulsory attendance age unless the parent or guardian of the child notifies the school district in writing of the parent’s or guardian’s intent to remove the child from enrollment in the school district.
Iowa Code – Section 299.1a
Explanation: The child’s parent, guardian, or legal or actual custodian is required to cause the child to attend some public school, an accredited nonpublic school, or competent private instruction.
What Does This Mean???
For the vast majority of students, they must attend school from kindergarten through their sophomore year of high school.
The adult in their life is responsible and liable for making this happen.
Consequences299.1b: student shall not receive an intermediate of full driver’s license until age eighteen
299.6: adult required to attend mediation1st violation: up to 10 days imprisonment and/or
$100 fine (simple misdemeanor)2nd violation: up to 20 days imprisonment and/or
$500 fine (serious misdemeanor)3rd violation: up to 30 days imprisonment and/or
$1000 fine (serious misdemeanor)
Alternate ResolutionsThe court may order a convicted adult to perform unpaid community service instead of any fine or imprisonment
The adult may file an affidavit listing the reasonable efforts made by the adult to cause the child’s attendance and the adult shall not be criminally liable for the child’s nonattendance
Iowa Code - Exceptions
1. Already graduated2. Excused by a court or judge3. Attending religious service/receiving
religious instruction4. Attending post-secondary institution5. Shown to be physically/mentally unable
to attend school6. Religious exemption
What does federal law say?
It doesn’t.There is no federal law regarding compulsory attendance
Many laws regulating what happens in public schools, but not that public schools must exist
All states have some type of compulsory attendance law enacted
What does case law say?
Enforcing Attendance for All
Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County (US Supreme Court: 1964) – If a state chooses to provide public education, it must be open and available to all children.
Plyer v. Doe (US Supreme Court: 1982) – Undocumented children cannot be denied a public education.
Enforcing Attendance for All
Johnson v. Charles City Community Schools Board of Education (Iowa Supreme Court: 1985) – “Amish Exception” does not apply to all religions
In re Interest of Rebekah T. (Nebraska Court of Appeals: 2002) – Adults home schooling students can be found neglectful if not providing “proper education”.
ExceptionsState v. Priest (Louisiana Supreme Court: 1946) – A married person is exempt from compulsory attendance.
Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972) – Amish children are exempt from compulsory attendance laws for high school.
Maack v. School District of Lincoln (Nebraska Supreme Court: 1992) – Excluding unimmunized children from school is OK.
Board Policies
Board Policy Review
All that I looked at referenced Iowa Code.Many had identical language to Iowa Code.
Some variety of if minimal number of days was stated, and if so how many.
Expert Opinions
ExpertsRonda Cedillo – attendance officer for North high school
Arin Renaud – social worker for Harding middle school
I couldn’t find contact info for judge who handles DMPS truancy court…
Their ThoughtsSupport moving compulsory attendance age to eighteen
Establish a way for students to be held responsible as well as parents
Implementation and enforcement would be difficult to execute effectively
Other things to consider…
Parens PatriaeFound in common law doctrine
As a parent to all persons, a state has the inherent prerogative to provide for the commonwealth and individual welfare
A state has the authority to protect those who are not legally competent to act in their own behalf
Economics Center for Education and Research
High school diploma recipients make an average of $8,400 more per year than high school dropouts
High school graduates contribute more to a state's economy and require less state assistance than high school dropouts
Dropouts are more likely to be incarcerated
Additional Thoughts???
My Recommendationsfor Positive Change
Recommended Changes
1. Increase compulsory attendance age from sixteen to eighteen
2. Increase options/opportunities for students to satisfy compulsory attendance requirements
3. Eliminate marriage exception
Recommended Changes
4. Create and operate Fully Encompassing Intensive Support Academies (FEISA’s)
Live on-site facility Either court ordered or parent volunteered Minimum enrollment commitment Weekends off campus can be earned with
positive behavior and academic progress Can earn way out or graduate from FEISA
Recommended Changes
Weekday Daily Time Breakdown: 10 hours of schooling 2 hours of labor (combination of difficult
manual and vocational/career oriented) 2 hours of recreation 2 hours of eating 8 hours of sleep
Adult support of all types provided Post-secondary scholarship available to all
who successfully graduate from high school
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