Cynthia Hancox.com
  • Home
    • About >
      • Cynthia's Sites
      • Personal Testimonies
  • Homeschooling
    • Application Reviews
    • Application Writing
    • Phone Consultations
    • Support & Advocacy
    • Government Liaison
    • Feedback
  • Contact
  • Information Index
    • Information
    • Videos
  • Products
    • Exemption Guide
    • Planning Your Programme
    • Topic Plans & Unit Studies
    • Basic Exemption Guide
    • Book of Centuries
  • Donate

Dual Enrolment and the "Part Time Homeschooling" Question

9/6/2017

1 Comment

 
The question is often asked, can homeschoolers be "dual enrolled?" by which most folk are usually meaning, can they be enrolled in school or Te Kura (correspondence school), and homeschool part time? Technically, there is no such thing as "part time homeschooling" under the law, however there are various aspects to consider for full information. 
Picture

Dual Enrolment between School and Te Kura

Under law, a school aged student can only be enrolled with one "enrolment school." That school is responsible for all pastoral care of the student, overseeing their program and so forth. 

However, under certain circumstances, a student may be enrolled both with their local school, and also with Te Kura (the correspondence school) under what is referred to as "dual enrolment." This additional enrolment is for the purposes of providing supplementary curriculum and tution, which is generally broken down into two types of circumstances:

Curriculum adaptation - where the main school is not able to provide needed curriculum adaptation or special programs, such as for a gifted and talented student, one with special education needs, or one who is not progressing as expected. Sometimes dual enrolment is arranged via support from the Regional Health School for a student whose current health situation prevents them from attending school full time; this is usually a temporary arrangement.

Curriculum capability - where a smaller school cannot provide all the subjects for a full and balanced curriculum, and so students are enrolled with Te Kura for the extra subjects - this is often a language or similar. 

The criteria for dual enrolment is laid out in Section 4 of the MoE's enrolment policy HERE. 

Only dual enrolment between a school and Te Kura of a student who fits the criteria is government funded, and this is the normal definition of "dual enrolment."

"Dual enrolment" of a homeschooler with Te Kura

A home educated student between 6 and 15 who has an exemption from enrolment (required to home educate officially) can also be enrolled with Te Kura for any number of courses on a fee-paying basis. This situation is also outlined under Section 4 of the enrolment policy document linked above. (Students 16 and over can enrol free).

The parents, who hold the exemption, remain wholly responsible for directing their child's education. They have simply chosen to purchase the tutition provided by Te Kura in the selected subjects. 

There is no minimum or maximum number of fee paying subjects which homeschoolers can enrol in at Te Kura, and the exemption is not affected. 

"Alternative Tuition" - Principal's Discretion

Under Section 52 of the Education and Training Act 2020 (previously Section 25(2) of the Education Act 1989), Principal's can release a student from school in order to attend suitable alternative tuition elsewhere. This is commonly used for students to do things like attend the Mind Plus workshops and so on. However, some principals use this discretion to allow families to teach their children at home on certain days of the week, or for a period of time. 

The wording of the Act is:
52: Release from tuition for outside tuition...The principal of a State school may,--
(a) if satisfied that the student is to receive outside the school tuition acceptable to the principal, release a student from attendance at the school, for a period or periods agreed with a parent of the student, to receive the tuition (and, as appropriate, travel between the school and the place where the tuition is to be given)
The details are a matter of arrangement between the principal and the family. The ways this has been applied vary.

Any family making such an arrangement with the school would not have an exemption, not be "officially" home educating, and would not recieve the Supervison Allowance. 

The advantages of such an arrangement might include providing some relief to a student who is struggling to cope with the school environment, providing for their education temporarily while a school works to put better support in place, enabling parents to provide extension or tailored learning for the child, having students at home but not truant while the exemption process happens, or allowing parents to "sample" home education. 

However, this would not be the normal or typical situation/process. I include this information so that parents may decide whether to discuss the possibilities with their child's principal if circumstances warrant it.

Summary:

  • "Dual tuition" normally refers to a student enrolled in school but also enrolled in some supplementary Te Kura courses. 
  • Exempted homeschool students can enrol with Te Kura on a fee paying basis.
  • There is no such thing as "part time homeschooling" under the law, as the Act makes enrolment in a school and holding an exemption mutually exclusive - doing one voids the other.
  • Some principals use their discretion to allow parents to provide alternative tuition for their enrolled child part time or for a period of time.​
1 Comment

    Information Blog

    This page is where I will share information on various topics relevant to home education. The Information Index page lists all topics by group, or use the Categories below.

    New to homeschooling?

    Start HERE

    Archives

    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    January 2020
    September 2019
    November 2018
    August 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    July 2016
    May 2016

    Categories

    All
    2023 MoE Review
    5 Year Olds
    ACE
    Advocacy
    Census
    Christmas Period
    COVID 19
    Declarations
    Declined Exemptions
    Disabled Students
    Distance Learning
    Early Childhood
    Early Leaving Exemptions
    Education And Training Bill
    Education & Training Act
    Employment Of Students
    ERO
    Exemptions
    Family Numbers
    Foreign Students And Visitors
    Getting Started
    Governmental Review
    High School Qualifications
    Importing Resources
    In The News
    Irlens
    Jury Duty
    Lapbooks
    Learning Difficulties
    Legal Information
    Media Interviews
    Media Requests
    Ministry Contacts
    Ministry Processes
    More Info Requests
    Multi-Child Applications
    NCEA
    NSNs
    Part Time Homeschooling
    Playcentre
    Private School Operating As
    Schonell & Burt Tests
    School Trials
    Socialisation
    Statistics
    Success Stories
    Supervision Allowance
    Surveys
    Te Kura
    Truancy/Attendance
    Unexpectedly Homeschooling
    Videos

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.