Resolutions
- 01. WPA and Choice in Education (4/88)
- 02. Wisconsin's Home Schooling Law (4/88)
- 03. State-Mandated Standardized Testing (4/88)
- 04. Home Schooling, Private Education, and the DPI (4/88)
- 05. State Review and Approval of a Home-Based Private Educational Program's Calendar and Curriculum (4/89)
- 06. Teacher Certification of Home Schooling Parents (4/89)
- 07. Entry and Re-entry Into Public Schools (4/90)
- 08. Home Schoolers Taking Courses in Public Schools (4/90)
- 09. Unity Among Home Schoolers (4/90)
- 10. The Primary Role of Parents in Education (4/91)
- 11. Opposition to State Control of Education and the Family (4/91)
- 12. State goals in education (4/92)
- 13. America 2000 and Wisconsin 2000 (4/92)
- 14. Education Vouchers (4/92)
- 15. Outcome-Based Education (4/93)
- 16. Government Collaboration (4/93)
- 17. Maintain the Distinction Between Public and Private Schools (4/93)
- 18. Screening, Evaluating, and Labeling Children (4/94)
- 19. The Federal Government and Homeschooling (4/94)
- 20. Privacy and Homeschooling (4/94)
- 21. The Independence of the Homeschooling Movement (4/95)
- 22. Families First (4/95)
- 23. Homeschooling, Educational Reform, Freedoms, and Money (4/95)
- 24. Maintaining Wisconsin's Homeschooling Law (5/96)
- 25. Maintaining the Fundamental Foundation of Parental Rights and Responsibilities (5/96)
- 26. Attempts by the State to Determine Eligibility to Homeschool (4/97)
- 27. School-To-Work Programs (4/97)
- 28. Day-Time Curfews, Truancy Sweeps, and ID Cards for Homeschoolers (5/98)
- 29. The Real Cost of Tax Credits for Homeschoolers' Educational Expenses (5/98)
- 30. Impact on Homeschooling Freedoms of Homeschoolers' Qualifying for Public School Sports Teams (5/98)
- 31. High Schools' Mock Trial Involving a Homeschooler (5/98)
- 32. Graduation Test (5/99)
- 33. Legislation That Undermines Homeschooling Freedoms (5/99)
- 34. Laws designed to prevent certain families from homeschooling (5/00)
- 35. Survey Research on Homeschooling (5/00)
- 36. Standardized Testing Required by the Federal or State Government (5/01)
- 37. Homeschools Defined by Law as One Family Unit (5/01)
- 38. Public E-Schools (5/02)
- 39. Government Imposed Immunizations (5/02)
- 40. Education Vouchers, Educational Investment Accounts, and Tax Credits and Deductions for Education (5/03)
- 41. Maintaining the Distinction Between Public Schools and Homeschools (and Other Private Schools) (5/03)
- 42. The Media and Homeschooling (5/04)
- 43. Student Identification Database Systems (5/04)
- 44. Mental Health Screening (5/05)
- 45. No Child Left Behind (5/05)
- 46. History of Homeschooling in Wisconsin (5/06)
- 47. Institutionalizing Young Children (5/07)
- 48. Maintaining the Basic Principles of Homeschooling (5/08)
- 49. Importance of Parents to Children’s Development and Learning and a Family’s Well Being (5/09)
- 50. Prevent Further Erosion of the Role of Parents in Children’s Early Years (5/10)
- 51. New Kindergarten Statute and Homeschooling (5/11)
- 52. Encouraging Homeschoolers to File Form PI-1206 Online in Accordance With the Law (5/12)
- 53. Common Core State Standards in Education (5/13)
- 54. Maintain the Distinction Between Homeschooling and Public Virtual Charter Schools (5/14)
- 55. Maintain Parental Rights in Education by Refusing to Sign Public School Withdrawal Forms (5/15)
- 56. Maintaining the Fundamental Foundation of Parental Rights and Responsibilities (5/15)
- 57. Impact on Homeschooling Freedoms of Homeschoolers’ Qualifying for Public School Sports Teams (5/15)
- WHPA
PO Box 2502
Madison, WI 53701
54. Maintain the Distinction Between Homeschooling and Public Virtual Charter Schools (5/14)
Whereas the pioneers of the modern homeschooling movement in Wisconsin worked together despite their differences to ensure that the Wisconsin Legislature passed a reasonable homeschooling law that recognized the right of families to choose for their members an education consistent with their principles and beliefs; and
Whereas homeschoolers have organized themselves as Wisconsin Parents Association (WPA) to watch and protect their parental rights in education, especially homeschooling rights and responsibilities; and
Whereas we cannot assume that freedoms and laws will continue in perpetuity once they are established and recognized, instead they must be continually safeguarded; and
Whereas it is easy for people to be lulled into assuming that their freedoms will continue without any action or effort on their part; and
Whereas maintaining an accurate understanding of how we came to have the homeschooling freedoms we have is essential to informing succeeding generations about the principles and practices essential to their continuance; and
Whereas homeschoolers are a small minority and are opposed by powerful political interest groups and organizations; and
Whereas the distinction between homeschools and public virtual charter schools is essential to the preservation of homeschoolers’ freedom to choose an education consistent with their principles and beliefs since public schools require state standards and testing that determine the curriculum and values and beliefs of students attending public schools even if such schools are located in students’ homes; and
Whereas public virtual charter schools displace the role and authority of parents and families; and
Whereas the distinction between public schools and homeschools is being blurred through the initiatives of public schools to bring homeschoolers into the public schools, especially into public virtual charter schools; and
Whereas persons who choose public virtual charter schools often refer to themselves as homeschoolers and see the public virtual charter school they are enrolled in as a homeschool; and
Whereas many legislators, people in the media, and members of the general public seem not to understand why homeschooling needs to be or should be free of state standards, state curriculum, and state testing; and
Whereas several large homeschool support groups have struggled with whether to include public virtual charter school families in their homeschool support groups; and
Whereas when groups that identify themselves as homeschool groups include public school families in their groups for reasons such as that the public school family shares the same religious or philosophical beliefs or that the family was a member of the group when they homeschooled before or that doing so seems not to be any threat to the freedom to homeschool their children, the group may not have considered the following consequences:
(a) the group is unlikely to be able to have a consistent attitude or position regarding basic homeschooling freedoms such as the family taking direct responsibility for the education of their children or the family being free of state standards and/or the principles and beliefs of the public schools as expressed in the tests that the state mandates that public virtual charter schools must take;
(b) the group will be saying to itself, to homeschoolers, to the larger community including the media, and to legislators that homeschooling can include the practices of having public school officials and certified teachers making decisions about what curriculum a homeschooling family may use, what tests it must take, and whether parents are qualified to educate their children; and
(c) the group being unable to take direct action to stand up for the basic homeschooling freedoms we currently have largely because the group is split on the key issues of what the homeschooling freedoms in Wisconsin are and their importance to a family’s ability to practice their principles and beliefs through homeschooling and because the group did not educate their members on the importance of these key homeschooling freedoms because the group consisted of families who did not share or practice those principles and beliefs; and
Whereas other states in this country that relied on the courts or outside experts to insure homeschooling freedoms have consistently lost basic freedoms in the courts and legislatures; and
Whereas homeschooling freedoms in Wisconsin were won and have been maintained through grassroots work that in turn is highly dependent on homeschool support groups knowing and practicing the rights and responsibilities homeschoolers have under the current homeschooling law;
Be it resolved by members of Wisconsin Parents Association (WPA) that WPA will work to insure that the basic right to choose an education consistent with one’s principles and beliefs is maintained for homeschoolers by informing homeschoolers including homeschool support groups that homeschooling freedoms in Wisconsin are threatened when homeschooling is viewed to include public school principles and practices and when the distinction between homeschools and public virtual charter schools is not maintained. 5/2014