How to Avoid Truancy During Vermont's 10-Day Homeschool Withdrawal Waiting Period
Vermont's AOE takes up to 10 business days to process your homeschool filing. Here's how to manage that window without triggering truancy protocols or a DCF referral.
All articles about Vermont Legal Withdrawal Blueprint.
Vermont's AOE takes up to 10 business days to process your homeschool filing. Here's how to manage that window without triggering truancy protocols or a DCF referral.
If your child's school was closed under Act 46 and the regional alternative isn't working, here's the best resource for legally withdrawing to homeschool in Vermont.
Withdrawing an IEP student from Vermont public school to homeschool? The IPE form, records transfer, and Child Find rights make this more complex than a standard exit.
The Vermont AOE processes your forms but won't coach you through withdrawal. Here are the alternatives — from free advocacy groups to a complete filing guide.
Step-by-step guide to withdrawing your child from a Vermont school legally — avoiding the truancy trap, filing with the AOE, and sending the letter correctly.
Comparing a one-time Vermont withdrawal guide to a $150/year HSLDA membership — what each covers, what each misses, and which makes sense for your situation.
Transferring your home study program to Vermont from another state. Notice of Intent filing, what Vermont law requires, and how previous state records carry over.
What Vermont's 2023 Act 166b update eliminated, what it kept, and how the new attestation system works for Vermont home study families under 16 V.S.A. § 166b.
Everything you need to start homeschooling in Vermont legally — AOE registration, required subjects, 175-day rule, and year-one compliance under Act 66.
Need to pull your child from a Vermont school mid-year? The best resource covers the AOE filing sequence, 10-day waiting period, and truancy avoidance — not just a letter template.
Vermont Virtual Learning Cooperative (VTVLC) is a public school, not home study. How they differ legally, what each requires, and how to choose between them.
UVM homeschool admissions process, transcript requirements, portfolio expectations, and how Vermont home study graduates can strengthen their applications.
Vermont truancy law triggers at 10 unexcused absences. How it intersects with home study, DCF, CHINS, superintendent pushback, and how to protect yourself.
Vermont military family homeschooling under MIC3. How the compact works, NOI filing timelines for PCS moves, and protections for Vermont home study families.
How Vermont's certified teacher assessment option works, what evaluators look for, how to find one, and when it's a better choice than the parent portfolio.
How to withdraw a child with an IEP from Vermont public school to homeschool — revoking consent, the IPE form, 504 plans, and avoiding the truancy trap.
Plan Vermont homeschool field trips with educator rates. Museums, nature centers, historic sites, and how to organize group visits across the state.
Vermont home study high school requirements — credit tracking, dual enrollment at CCV, sports access, graduation, and how to prepare for college admissions.
Vermont does not approve or mandate curriculum. Here's what the MCOS requires, what counts as compliant coverage, and how much freedom you actually have.
How to withdraw your child from a Vermont school over bullying — documenting the pattern, avoiding the truancy trap, and what to preserve before you leave.
Why Vermont's Act 46 school mergers drove rural families to homeschool — what changed, what a Yale study found, and what your options are if consolidation affected your district.
Vermont homeschool socialization options beyond the co-op — sports, 4-H, dual enrollment, arts programs, and building a realistic social calendar.
Home study resources and community by Vermont region — Burlington, South Burlington, Chittenden County, Rutland, and Montpelier-Barre. What's available where.
Vermont compulsory attendance starts at age 6, not 5. What this means for kindergarten home study, how to file your Notice of Intent, and what the law requires.
Find Vermont homeschool groups, co-ops, and support organizations including VHEN and HSLDA. What they offer and how to connect.
Vermont home study curriculum options matched to state requirements. Structured programs, eclectic approaches, and free resources that meet 16 V.S.A. § 906.
Real cost of Vermont home study — curriculum, assessment, and incidentals. Free resources that reduce costs, and the VT529 tax credit for educational expenses.