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Lampeter-Strasburg School District

Learning. Listening. Leading. Linking.

Homeschooling

Homeschooling

Children are home-schooled for a variety of reasons and some of these reasons may dictate the type of educational materials selected. For example, a family may be interested in a classical education or perhaps a faith-based curriculum.

If you are considering homeschooling as an educational option, please review the Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) Home Education and Private Tutoring Guide

Compulsory Age:  Age 6 as of September 1 and up to age 18 or graduation. Also, if student has already attended a PA public school, regardless of age, paperwork must be submitted. If you plan on homeschooling and your child(ren) is currently enrolled at L-S, please contact their building guidance office or secretary to withdraw them.

If you plan on homeschooling and your child(ren) is currently enrolled at L-S, please contact their building guidance office or secretary to withdraw them.

The following documentation would need to be submitted upon initial homeschooling decision; then annually thereafter by August 1.:

  1. A notarized Homeschool Affidavit or Unsworn Declaration that includes the age of each student listed.
  2. Educational objectives for each student.
  3. Evidence of immunization or exemption for each student.
  4. For Special Education students, written notification of program approval from an appropriately credentialed evaluator must also be submitted.

Requests for materials can be made in mid-August once we have our final course enrollment numbers. Textbooks would be available once it is established that we have enough for our enrolled students. We cannot provide access to virtual textbooks or subscriptions. If borrowing any materials, they will need to be returned by June 30.

End-of-Year Evaluations are due by June 30. You will need to secure an appropriately credentialed evaluator to review your child(ren) progress; qualifications need to accompany the paperwork. For graduating students, we request that you provide final transcripts and/or a copy of any diploma received.

Letter of Transfers:  If you will be moving into L-S School District from another PA school district and plan to continue to homeschool, please request a “Letter of Transfer” from your current school district administrator to be sent to the address below. Also request that they provide us with a copy of the most recent paperwork that you submitted. If you will be moving from L-S and plan to continue to homeschool in PA, please contact us so we can issue a “Letter of Transfer” on your behalf.

Homeschool paperwork should be addressed to:

BONNIE AUKAMP
LAMPETER-STRASBURG SCHOOL DISTRICT
PO BOX 428
LAMPETER PA 17537-0428

Paperwork can be submitted by US mail or dropping it off at the Administration Building in a sealed envelope or email enclosures via pdf format to bonnie_aukamp@l-spioneers.org.

School Photos
If you are interested in having your child(ren)’s pictures taken by the school photographer at the beginning of the school year, please contact Bonnie Aukamp at bonnie_aukamp@L-Spioneers.org  or  717-358-1842 in mid-August.

Homeschool Information

  • If there is no particular emphasis, a parent may want to use the planned courses, textbooks and other curriculum materials appropriate to the student's age and grade level used by the school district. These are available for borrowing simply by requesting them; there is no fee and the school district is legally required to lend them.

    Other example resources may include the following:

    • Public or private libraries
    • Curriculum that may be purchased from many sources
    • Online or correspondence courses ("umbrella schools")

    There are many sources of instruction that may be used in conjunction with a home education program.

    All that is necessary for home education credit to be allowed for instruction from these sources is to show in the portfolio the evidence of the work completed. It is not necessary for the supervisor of the home education program to deliver all the instruction, only to supervise it.

  • An "umbrella school” is an alternative source of education which oversees the homeschooling of children to fulfill the requirements of a state government. In PA, it includes instruction that is neither a public school nor a "brick-and-mortar" private school. Examples include correspondence courses, online (“cyber”) schools or any type of distance-learning school (e.g., webinar). Anyone using curriculum from such a source must operate as a home education program with all its legal requirements. PDE does not recognize a diploma issued by an umbrella school, although other institutions may. However, a home education program utilizing the umbrella school's curriculum may obtain a PDE-recognized diploma.

  • The home education curriculum requirements are divided into elementary school level (K-6) and secondary school level (7-12). The required courses must be taught at some time during that grade-level interval, with the exception of "regular and continuous instruction in the dangers and prevention of fires," which is mandated as on-going.

    Elementary school level (grades K-6), mandatory courses: English, to include spelling, reading and writing; arithmetic; science; geography; history of the United States and Pennsylvania; civics; safety education, including regular and continuous instruction in the dangers and prevention of fires; health and physiology; physical education; music; and art.

    Secondary school level (grades 7-12), mandatory courses: English, to include language, literature, speech and composition; science; geography; social studies, to include civics, world history, history of the United States and Pennsylvania; mathematics, to include general mathematics, algebra and geometry; art; music; physical education; health; and safety education, including regular and continuous instruction in the dangers and prevention of fires. Such courses of study may include, at the discretion of the supervisor of the home education program, economics; biology; chemistry; foreign languages; trigonometry; or other age-appropriate courses as contained in Chapter 5 (Curriculum Requirements) of the State Board of Education.

    Graduation requirements: The following minimum courses in grades nine through twelve are established as a requirement for graduation in a home education program.

    • Four years of English
    • Three years of mathematics
    • Three years of science
    • Three years of social studies
    • Two years of arts and humanities
  • CHAPTER 4. ACADEMIC STANDARDS AND ASSESSMENT (22 Pa. Code Chapter 4) contains very detailed standards for parents who are interested in comparing normal expectations for students in various grades for curriculum content or for preparing for standardized testing. Additionally, this section contains course suggestions for secondary school students (grades 7-12) listed as the "other age-appropriate
    courses" in the home education law.

    HINT: On the webpage for Chapter 4 and Appendices, rather than using the hyperlinks at the top of the website, scroll down to the bottom of the page where there are assessment rubrics for various grade levels.

    The appendices contain assessment rubrics for: (A) Reading; writing; speaking and listening; characteristics of the English language; research. (B) Science and technology. (C) Civics; government;
    economics; geography; history. (D) Arts and humanities; health; health, safety and physical education; family and consumer services. (E) Career education and work.

    Additionally, the national Common Core standards for English/Language Arts and Math were adopted by the State Board of Education in July, 2010, as an amendment to the existing Chapter 4 regulations
    (Academic Standards and Assessment) with a three-year transition scheduled to reach full implementation by July 1, 2013. You can learn more about the Common Core Standards initiative at theirwebsite. This information may be helpful to homeschool families.

    Assessment Anchors listed for each subject and grade level assessed by the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment (PSSA) are a subset of the state academic standards and define the academic content and skills that are assessed by the PSSA. These may be helpful in planning educational
    objectives.

  • This request must be made every year. Deadline for this request for the next school year is March 1st.

    A school district or private school may allow students that are homeschooled or being privately tutored to attend curricular classes in the district’s schools. Credits that are taken by dual enrollment count both toward secondary school requirements and graduation requirements.

    School districts have written policies on participation of homeschooled students in curricular programs, such as science classes, computer labs, and foreign language courses. Please contact your local school district for this information. Unlike extracurricular activities, the provision of these services is totally dependent on the school district’s policy and not mandated. See 22 Pa Code § 11.41.

    There is no set number of how many classes a homeschooled student may take under a dual enrollment program. See the Home Education section of the website on Dual and Concurrent Enrollment and 22 Pa Code § 11.33.

  • Concurrent enrollment allows a student who is enrolled in a school district, a charter school, an area vocational-technical school, a nonpublic school, a private school or a home education program under 24
    P.S. § 13-1327.1 to take concurrent course through a concurrent enrollment program.

    Concurrent enrollment is a program administered and developed by a school entity and an eligible postsecondary institution that allows students to concurrently enroll in postsecondary courses and to receive both secondary and postsecondary credit for that coursework. The term includes an early college high school program, a gateway to college program or a middle college high school program. See the Dual and Concurrent Enrollment section of this Home Education website and 24 P.S. § 16-1602-B.

  • Students may not enroll fulltime in a private school and simultaneously be homeschooled. A student may take a class or two from a private school, just as they may from a public school. Similarly, a student may not have a private tutor for all their courses and still operate as a home education program; this type of arrangement would fall under the private tutoring laws.

  • Please contact Dr. Michele Westphal, Assistant Superintendent, with questions or concerns.