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Military Recruitment and Enlistment
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Federalization of Homeschooling return to Controversial Topics "Harriet Meiers Day" in the Senate was also "Home School Recruitment Day" Following Thanksgiving, an online friend of mine in Ohio, Mary, sat down at her computer and did a random check of Thomas, the federal website containing "legislative information from the Library of Congress." She was doing her routine look for any mention of 'homeschooling' in pending federal legislation. What she found was a shock. For the third time in two years, again without notice to the national homeschooling community, proposed federal legislation affecting homeschoolers was introduced into Congress. This third time it wasn't announced after-the-fact as was the previous two times. Buried deep in the 700+ pages of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2006, was a section labeled Recruiting and Enlistment of Home Schoolers. Mary forwarded her copying of this section, # 522, to me asking what I thought of it. I asked where she got it. She said she found it at Thomas. When did it get put in to the Congressional Record, I asked. On the 3rd of October. It turns out that was the same day Harriet Meiers was nominated for the Supreme Court. Oh. I guess that would overshadow most legislation. In the time since, we've found out that the Home School Legal Defense Association claimed ownership of the legislation. It took a while for anyone from the organization to own up to it, as no mention was made in any of the Weekly Updates regularly sent out by HSLDA. It wasn't until the 13th of December that HSLDA mentioned homeschool recruitment, and still, Section 522 is conspicuous by its absence. I've written here about what I see as the shortcomings of homeschoolers enlisting in the services without the bureaucratic exposure that seems to provide all recruits with a better chance of completing that first enlistment, and about one or two ways that might help. I've blogged about the NonDiscrimination bill, and about Section 522. I've collected information, and assembled it in timeline-form on this website: Military Homeschool Legislation. It's long, and like reading footnotes. Interested readers can check the links for themselves, and make their own judgments.
HR 3753/SB 1691
History
In September of 2005, events from July 2003 replayed themselves with Rep. Marilyn Musgrave of Colorado introducing into the House of Representatives a bill titled "Home School Non-Discrimination Act," humanizingly given the acronym of HONDA. This was an omnibus bill that was killed in committee in 2003. In its resurrected form it is much the same, but with the inclusion of a new section "Recruitment and Enlistment of Home-schooled Students in the Armed Forces." The new section is nonsense.
Why homeschooled grads are classified as Tier II recruits Homeschooled graduates are already able to enlist in the armed forces, but they are not traditionally granted the same categorization as publicly and privately schooled graduates. Studies have shown that recruits with non-traditional diplomas do not have the same success rate as recruits with public- or private-school diplomas. It's the one area where public-schooling is superior to homeschooling.
Temporary Tier I status for homeschoolers A study was commissioned to determine the enlistment track record of homeschooled graduates. The determining factor of 'success' was completion of the first hitch. Unfortunately, homeschool grads did not have as good a record of 'success' (in context of completing that first hitch) as do publicly-schooled grads. The Tier II label was not discriminatory, merely descriptive. It seems that in conjunction with the study, a five-year pilot program of Tier I status for homeschooled grads was instituted. In reading about the two events they seem to have occurred at the same time, but were not the same event. The Tier I status pilot program was encouraged by HSLDA, but I don't know about the study. Given no references online as to who started what, I'll have to leave it at that. [Note: while compiling related information, I re-read a piece at the MHLA site that states: "Since military recruiters understandably want assurance that people who claim to be homeschooling graduates actually are, a survey was sent to selected homeschool organizations to get help in defining homeschool graduates. The Survey by the Center for Naval Analyses (CNA) included a cover letter from the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA). " HSLDA not only cooperated with the CNA, but worked with Senator Paul Coverdell to write the study into legislation: Home School Court Report, March/April 2002.
Given HSLDA's involvement, it is interesting that since the CNA study was released, HSLDA has not linked to it at their site.]
Why pacifists should care (ans: because they're taxpayers) The phenomenon of public-schooling as the best predictor of success in the military was determined through studies conducted since 1959, and a tier-system was put in place to ensure that the nation's military services accept and pay to train the people with the greatest chance of making full use of that training by completing a first-term enlistment and possibly re-enlisting. By enlisting brick-and-mortar high school graduates (or higher) as the preferred category, the military services make the best use of the taxpayers' money, whether those taxpayers have any intention of supporting the military system or not. I assume that even people who do not support many military operations want those operations to be carried out as inexpensively as possible until the day that peace prevails.
What procedure does DoD see as producing a "High School Graduate?" Homeschooled graduates are not 'second-class citizens' but only people who, if the military is their target, need the tools to realize their dreams. Unfortunately this begins early because the military's definition of 'High School Graduate' is 12 years of graded instruction. The 'grading' is doubly defined because it refers to 'taught subjects' that are graded by the instructor, and that the children progressed from First Grade on up to Twelfth Grade. For school-at-home families, this won't be as much of a problem as it will be for eclectic or unschooling families.
For families who did not use a school-at-home program for all twelve grades, the work-around for the potential recruit is either to attend high school for the 12th grade, or to acquire 15 college credit hours, the equivalent of being a full-time college student for one semester.
Section 10 of HR 3753/S 1691 is longer than the sections from the 2003 version of the bills. Section 10 is longer because it would create a new section of public law: Title 10, Chapter 31, a portion that controls military enlistment. Because of the length, I've used up another portion of my 5MB of member-space on the freebie site of my ISP's server with a separate page for the 'fisking' (a blogger term meaning to examine a piece of writing column inch-by-column inch). To use blogger style, the fisking is here.
HR 2732/SB 1562
On the 15th of July, 2003 Rep.
Marilyn Musgrave of Colorado introduced into the House of Representatives HR
2732 named the "Home School Non-Discrimination Act of 2003." On the 1st of
August the Senate version, S. 1562, was introduced. This legislation is
controversial and stands to affect homeschoolers both in CONUS and overseas.
I wonder about the hashing-out
because of the changes made concerning Combat Related Special Compensation (CRSC)
a program intended to allow military retirees with combat-related disabilities
to draw both their retirement pay and the VA compensation without the
compensation being deducted from the retirement pay. There is a small benefit
even with the deduction from the retirement pay because the compensation is
untaxed. This is, of course, unrelated to homeschooling, but the example of
follow-up on federal action is instructive. Military homeschoolers have enough challenges before them with each PCS to a new state. Will you move to Ft. Drum, NY this time? Minot AFB, ND? Carlisle Barracks, PA? Fat chance of landing NSB New London, CT unless your sponsor is a submariner. Don't let more legal hurdles, as has happened with public education, be placed in your way through federal legislation of homeschooling. Write your Representative or Senator. Email is iffy, letters are delayed, long-distance calls can be expensive. A postcard with a short list of your concerns on it may be the easiest way to communicate your concerns. Search for bill (type HR 2732 into the search box) [note: This applies only to the 2003 legislation. For the 2005 legislation, type in HR 3753, or S 1691] More Federal Legislation on the Docket Dec 2003:
Press release from the
National Home Education Legal Defense (NHELD) opposing
HR 2732/SB 1562 (HoNDA):
H.R.
2732 Should Be Defeated Connecticut Homeschool Network analysis of bill A look at discussions about CRSC by disabled military retirees.
Federalization of Education since 1965 *PDF file. Requires Adobe Reader
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This site was last updated: Friday, 15 February 2008
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