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Monday, October 18, 2010

Homeschool and the Education Cop

We got an e-mail a couple of weeks ago about truancy officers turning up at the homes of local homeschool families. In the state of Illinois, homeschools are essentially private schools. They have the all the same rights and privileges of any other educational institution. A truancy officer inquiring of a homeschool family is akin to a highway patrolman pulling over motorists for no real reason.

So, with this in mind I decided to compile a short list of suggestions in case the “education cop” comes knocking on your door.

  1. Fight fire with fire.
    Truancy officers are primarily a product and functionary of bureaucracy. Take the officer’s name, title, agency, contact information, shoe size, favorite color, and American Idol pick. Promise to pass this information to the superintendent just as soon as he gets back and tell the officer to expect a call in two to five business days.
  2. Use a prearranged signal to tip the children off.
    Approximately forty-five seconds after answering the door, a child should shriek like a burning cat. Apologize and explain you’ve been studying the Spanish Inquisition and you really need to go take care of that. (Don’t forget to lock the door. This sends the correct message that you don’t need any help.)
  3. Dig a Burmese tiger pit. Don’t forget to warn the mailman.
  4. Try to convert them.
    It is very difficult to talk about why the kids aren’t enrolled in school when someone is adamantly wielding the Sword of the Spirit to the edification of your everlasting soul. Use this to your advantage. If you are not Christian, that’s okay, borrow a bible from a Christian friend or order one from Amazon.
  5. Grill the officer on state and capital names, the American presidents, English grammar, spelling, multiplication tables, etc. For greatest effect keep score and give prizes to the child (or officer) who wins.
  6. Tell them you are in the middle of a class, but your office hours are from four to five, Monday through Friday.
  7. Duct tape the officer to the wall while the kids explain the Law of Gravity and other applicable principles.
  8. Cast the officer as Polonius in the HS Group production of Hamlet.
  9. Ask if the kids may interview them for a report on Government in Action (subtitled Freedom: What makes America great.
  10.  Don’t worry about it because you weren’t home when the officer came by. You were at the lumber yard buying project supplies,
    at the newspaper office, dairy farm, history museum, wildlife refuge center, or police station on a field trip,
    at music lessons, soccer practice, book club, co-op classes, 4-H, or just taking a nice walk in the park because you only need one-hundred eighty days of school a year and you schooled through the summer so you could enjoy  a really beautiful day when one came along.


Please add your suggestion to the list.

3 comments:

  1. Good one~!! What a talented guy you are. Love ya lots. LT

    ReplyDelete
  2. Love it...especially #7 and #9. Thanks for the chuckle. TM

    ReplyDelete
  3. You are a talent my son-in law I laughed so hard I pulled something but at my age thats not difficult love you guys

    ReplyDelete

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