Then why do you mix up the tutoring rules with the private school rules?
It does not clarify but only muddies the waters. Tutors have entirely different standards which homeschoolers do NOT have a requirement to meet. Period.
It does not clarify but only muddies the waters. Tutors have entirely different standards which homeschoolers do NOT have a requirement to meet. Period.
You're ignoring the problem that the terms that you people have been using, "tutor, private school, my kid, your kid, etc." are poorly defined in the poorly written California code. Poorly written California homeschooling code can be thought of as a fire hazard that has now caught on fire as evidenced by the judge's unpopular decision.
The bottom line is that Californian's have made their own bed with homeschooling code that is poorly written, in my opinion, undoubtedly a consequence of not involving themselves sufficiently in their state's legislative process, and they can sleep in it. Cleaning the waters is only a matter of taking responsibility for the situation by exercising their voting power to clean up the code - if they choose to do so.