WND.com
Homeschooler's
Neighbor Sparks
Social Services Case
Investigator did 'drive-by,' said
family was planning to flee
By Alyssa Farah
Published:
Jan. 19
A
Colorado homeschooling mother has
won a social-services case sparked by a neighbor’s complaint about the
family
that escalated when a social worker did a “drive-by” and concluded they
were
planning to flee.
A
neighbor of the single mother,
whose identity has been withheld to protect her family’s privacy,
tipped off
social services that the mother had been homeschooling several
children,
according to the Home School Legal Defense Association.
When
an investigator arrived at her
door in the fall of 2011, the mother immediately contacted the HSLDA,
the
nation’s premiere legal defense fund dedicated to parents’ right to
home
educate.
The
mother was instructed by HSLDA
attorney Mike Donnelly to ask the social worker to leave, and the
social worker
complied. But this was only the beginning of the mother’s ordeal.
The
social worker did not close the
case and continued to investigate the mother’s right to homeschool on
the
grounds that some of her children have learning disabilities that
public
schools would be better suited to handle.
Donnelly
argued against social
services’ assertion that a traditional school setting is better
equipped to
meet the needs of special-needs children.
“Many
families homeschool their
children who have learning disabilities because they find that the
children’s
needs are better met in a one-on-one homeschool setting,” Donnelly
said.
“Research shows that this is true. It is intolerable that someone would
question a family’s right to homeschool simply because their children
have a
learning disability...
Read
the rest of the article at
WND.com
|