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Eir
06-07-2009, 03:35 PM
This pearler of an article made page 3 in the weekend edition of our local rag this weekend.
Apparently local talkback (ABC Perth) was running hot on it this morning, but I heard that most of it was really positive :)

http://www.thewest.com.au/default.aspx?MenuId=77&ContentID=152967


A father of six who believes youngsters should be set free from schooling has become the first parent in WA to go to court and face a fine for not sending his children to school.

The Department of Education and Training is prosecuting Hans Meier for breaching the School Education Act by failing to ensure that his two high schoolaged daughters attend the school at which they are enrolled.

He faces a maximum penalty of $2000 — $1000 for each child — when he appears in court next week.

Mr Meier, a disability pensioner from Ellenbrook, said he refused to force his children to go to school. “The reason my children don’t go to school is because they don’t want to,” he said.

Daughters Jemirah, 14, and Alisha, 13, have hardly set foot in a classroom in the past few years.

They tried home schooling but that was abandoned when Mr Meier had a disagreement with an Education Department moderator, their mother said.

Mr Meier’s two oldest sons, aged 17 and 19, also chose not to attend high school. Both still live at home and do not have regular employment.

His third daughter attends primary school because she enjoys it. His youngest son is home schooled.

Mr Meier, who prefers to be known as “One”, said children should be able to spend time outside having fun instead of being locked away in classrooms.

“(At school) they have to wear a hat and put poisons on their skin before being allowed in the sun,” he said. “Children are being denied their freedom by keeping them in schools as batch numbers for society.”

Asked what his children did with their extra time, Mr Meier said they had fun by watching videos, listening to music or drawing and did their own learning.

“There are books galore in my house to do with what they want to do,” he said. “They are not hanging around the streets. They don’t drink, don’t smoke, they stay indoors.”

Mr Meier said he was “blessed” to have been able to spend so much time with his children and was prepared to speak on behalf of other parents who wanted to teach their own beliefs at home.

Letting his children stay home had saved taxpayers an immense amount of money, he said.

Jemirah said she did not enjoy school and hoped to get a job when she turned 15 later this year.

Alisha said she had liked primary school but would rather be with her family than go to high school. She did maths and spelling at home with her sister’s help.

Under the School Education Act, children of compulsory school age have to attend school or training or take part in a home school program run by a registered home educator. Home schooling imposes rigorous expectations on parents and includes regular audits by a moderator to make sure students are making appropriate progress.

Frequent truants are referred to a school attendance panel to develop a plan to improve attendance. If the children still do not attend, the panel may recommend prosecution.

Education Department school support programs executive director David Axworthy said it was the first case to proceed to prosecution and others could follow.

“Parents have a legal obligation to send their children to school and while the department gives them every support, failure to do so may result in prosecution as has happened in this case and may occur in several others,” he said.

“We prefer that parents can see the advantages of their children attending school regularly without the need to resort to such measures.” BETHANY HIATT

Janet
06-07-2009, 08:24 PM
That is a very weird article. I trust journalists about as far as I can spit. They could make any of us look like that in the paper.

bella
07-07-2009, 11:46 AM
Yeh, I agree Janet. I was reading with my eyebrows alternately furrowed and raised, LOL. Hmmmmmmmmm.

Eir
07-07-2009, 12:26 PM
exactly why i had to share it... I thought the insinuation that they're in some kind of crazy cult was particularly ludicrous. I heard that the talkback yesterday included comments from the children's former school teacher who said they were great kids, a lovely family and that if that teacher had their time over again that they'd have homeschooled too :)

Ceres
07-07-2009, 01:23 PM
The story doesn't make it clear if they're homeschooling, or just not going to school, or natural learning. I'm left a bit confuzzled by it all!

~*heket*~
07-07-2009, 05:29 PM
that was a cross between :rofl and :uhh

~*heket*~
08-07-2009, 11:47 AM
Yk, I just had to read that again coz it's sooooo out there.

I really like what he's saying, but ... if you were being prosecuted wouldn't you - I dunno - atleast tell them a little bit of what they wanted to hear? :lol

Ceres
05-02-2010, 07:40 AM
There's a follow-up to this story..

Father fined for truancy (http://www.news.com.au/national/father-fined-over-two-daughters-truancy/story-e6frfkvr-1225826898744)


A PARENT charged for not sending his children to school has been found guilty. <!-- google_ad_section_end(name=story_introduction) --> <!-- // .story-intro --> <!-- google_ad_section_start(name=story_body, weight=high) --> In the first case of its kind in Western Australia, Hans Ulrich Meier, a father of six children was given a conditional release order in Midland Magistrate's Court.


The court heard that two of his daughters, aged 14 and 15 years, missed almost three terms of school.


Mr Meier attracted headlines last year when he claimed children should be allowed to enjoy their time outside rather than being locked up inside a classroom.
He said his children spent their time watching videos, listening to music or drawing and teaching themselves.


Today he told the court that he had never refused to send his children to school but it was their choice.
He broke down when he told the court that his children's fundamental rights had been "taken away".
<!-- google_ad_section_start(name=story_related, weight=medium) -->




<!-- // .story-sidebar --> Outside court, he said he could not guarantee that it would not happen again, despite being warned he would face a $300 fine for each of his daughters if he breached the conditions of his order with a similar offence.


He said his children "feared school" and could learn from Google and the library.


Education Department student support assistant executive director David Price welcomed the outcome, saying it would compel Mr Meier to work with the department to ensure his children attended school.


"On any given day all schools in our state are monitoring the attendance of children," he said.


"Given the nature of this case and the court outcome of course, we will be taking a very particular and close attention to that particular case."


Mr Price said the law acknowledged that "chronic non-attendance" affected a child's prospects in life.


There were also two similar cases involving Perth children before the department at the moment but no one had been charged.

GreenGully
05-02-2010, 07:49 AM
Ugh. That is really screwed up. They've made the father sound like a loony when in reality he's probably not all that different from me.

Janet
05-02-2010, 06:25 PM
The information lacking from the story just makes it so hard to know wtf is happening. Much like my first response. Poor family. :disbelief