Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Report Focuses On Problems With Virginia's Religious Opt Out of Public Education

Sunday's Washington Post highlighted the experiences of 21-year old Georgetown University student Josh Powell who objects to the poor education he received and his siblings are receiving after their parents opted out of public education on religious grounds under Va. Code Sec. 22.1-254(B)(1). The Post reports:
Powell was taught at home, his parents using a religious exemption that allows families to entirely opt out of public education, a Virginia law that is unlike any other in the country. That means that not only are their children excused from attending school — as those educated under the state’s home-school statute are — but they also are exempt from all government oversight.
School officials don’t ever ask them for transcripts, test scores or proof of education of any kind: Parents have total control.
Powell’s family encapsulates the debate over the long-standing law, with his parents earnestly trying to provide an education that reflects their beliefs and their eldest son objecting that without any structure or official guidance, children are getting shortchanged. Their disagreement, at its core, is about what they think is most essential that children learn — and whether government, or families, should define that.