Judges: MIKE BEEBE, Attorney General
Filed Date: 1/24/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The Honorable Steve Faris State Senator 29476 Highway 67 Malvern, Arkansas 72104
Dear Senator Faris:
I am writing in response to your request for my opinion on the following matter:
Arkansas Code
6-18-201 (Compulsory attendance) provides that students, ages 5-17, must be enrolled in public, private, parochial, or home school. Exceptions are provided, one being enrolled in adult education.In order to enroll in adult education, certain criteria must be met. One is scoring 8.5 or above on the test for adult basic education or scoring of 450 on each section and a minimum composite score of 490 on the General Educational Development Practice Test.
My question specifically concerns ACA
6-18-201 (b)(2)(B) which reads as follows:(B) Provided, however, that the minimum test scores shall not be required of any student who is subject to the attendance requirements of this section but who was not enrolled in any school district during the previous school year;
My question is for clarification to whom does the above law refer to. Would the above law be applicable to a person between the ages of 16 and 17 who was not in compliance with the compulsory attendance requirement because the student did not attend any public, parochial or private school and was not registered as home schooling with any district? For example, a student who withdrew from school and then did not enroll in any system for twelve months. Would he or she then be eligible to enroll in adult education to pursue a GED without making the 8.5 or 450 score on the required test?
RESPONSE
It is my opinion that, under the circumstances you have described, an individual aged 16 or 17 who is not in compliance with the mandatory attendance provisions by virtue of a year-long truancy may be eligible to enroll in adult education classes without making the minimum required scores referenced in A.C.A. §
This question requires me to interpret A.C.A. §
Under the penalty for noncompliance as shall be set by law, every parent, guardian, or other person residing within the State of Arkansas having custody or charge of any child age five (5) through seventeen (17) on or before September 15 of that year shall enroll and send the child to a public, private, or parochial school or provide a home school for the child, as described in §
6-15-501 et seq., with the following exceptions:
* * *
(4)(A) Any child sixteen (16) or above enrolled in an adult education program as provided for in subsection (b) of this section or in the Arkansas National Guard Youth Challenge Program is not subject to the attendance requirement.
A.C.A. §
Subsection (b) details the requirements for a local school district to grant a waiver of the attendance requirements in order for a student to enroll in an adult education program. It provides as follows:
A local school district may grant a waiver of the attendance requirement to any student age sixteen (16) or seventeen (17) to enroll in an adult education program only after all of the following requirements have been met:
* * *
(2)(A) After formal application and prior to any further action on the application, the student shall be administered either a test for adult basic education or a General Educational Development Practice Test under standardized testing conditions by a public school official designated by the school and shall score 8.5 grade level or above on the test for adult basic education or a minimum score of 450 on each section and a minimum composite score of 490 on the General Educational Development Practice Test.
(B) Provided, however, that the minimum test scores shall not be required of any student who is subject to the attendance requirement of this section but who was not enrolled in any school district during the previous school year[.]
A.C.A. §
Students age sixteen (16) or seventeen (17) enrolled in a private, parochial, or home school who desire to enroll in an adult education program shall meet the following requirements:
(1)(A) Students shall apply for enrollment to the adult education program.
(B) A student enrolled in a private or parochial school shall provide a letter from the principal or administrator of the private or parochial school to verify enrollment and shall score 8.5 grade level or above on the test for adult basic education or a minimum score of 450 on each section and a minimum composite score of 490 on the General Educational Development Practice Test.
A.C.A. §
In effect, you are asking whether someone in violation of the attendance requirements of subsection (a) may avail themselves of the exception to testing requirements in subsection (b)(2)(B). It would appear that the answer is "yes."
The cardinal rule of statutory construction is to give effect to the intent of the legislature. Shipley, Inc. v. Long, ___ Ark. ___, S.W.3d ___ (Oct. 21, 2004). A court will first look at the plain and ordinary language of the statute in question. Jones v. Double "D" Properties,
A.C.A. §
There are limited circumstances where someone subject to the compulsory attendance provision would not have been enrolled in a school district for the previous year. Several such reasons include the student may have been enrolled in a private or parochial school, been provided a home school, moved into the state, or, as in your hypothetical, been truant for the entire year. The General Assembly in 2001, however, added the current A.C.A. §
To whom then does A.C.A. §
As noted above, a court will not interpret a statute to an absurd result. Shipley, Inc., Ark. (Oct. 21, 2004). In this situation, it could be argued that the hypothetical student is gaining a benefit, exception from the minimum competency requirements, by being in violation of A.C.A. §
Assistant Attorney General Joel DiPippa prepared the forgoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:JMD/cyh