Under the current rules, young students entering school have to attend at least first grade in a public school to meet the
public school attendance requirement — kindergarten doesn't count.
It is expected that a person would be recommended for income management because the Commission found their child to be at risk of abuse or neglect, or because their child was not enrolled or not
meeting school attendance requirements.
Indeed, by allowing parents to meet the
compulsory school attendance requirement by sending their children to private institutions that espouse the second approach, the State tacitly acknowledges that its «compelling interest» in education is adequately served in such schools.
Affirm that the student is enrolled in a program that meets regular school attendance requirements
The memo described the research showing the impact of too many absences on student achievement and discussed the key components of attendance policies that work: education of caregivers
regarding school attendance requirements; effective policies and practices to monitor attendance; a clear definition of excessive absenteeism; and a two - stage response to excessive absences.
NOTE: With the exception of military families and students in preschool or entering Kindergarten, the ESA program requires that students must meet certain
public school attendance requirements.
In 2013, the program dropped the public -
school attendance requirement.
Early in the session, Kenley and fellow Senate Education Committee member Carlin Yoder, R - Middlebury, publicly debated the so - called «public
school attendance requirement,» as the Evansville Courier & Press «Eric Bradner recalls.
-- Loosen the public
school attendance requirement.
The public
school attendance requirement has been irksome to many parents who have long sent their children to private schools.
Proposed legislation would remove the public
school attendance requirement.
By removing the public
school attendance requirement, HB 1003 would allow students already in private schools to start receiving voucher dollars from the state.
Because House Bill 1003 is more about dropping the public
school attendance requirement, it is not accurate to say that as many as 14,500 additional students would qualify for vouchers.
But House Bill 1003 also drops the «public
school attendance requirement» — the guideline that a student must attend public schools for at least a year to receive a voucher — for students living in attendance zones of schools that received an F grade from the state.