Staff Members
Dr. Lauralee Jackson-Federal Programs Supervisor & Pre-K Director
Dr. Kathy Witt-Homeless Liaison
Dr. Lauralee Jackson-Federal Programs Supervisor & Pre-K Director
Dr. Kathy Witt-Homeless Liaison
5 months ago
Overview
For children and youth in foster care, a change in home placement frequently results in a change in school placement. The educational impact of every school change is significant. Each time students enter new schools, they must adjust to different curricula, different expectations, new friends, and new teachers. Keeping children in the same school:
Provides continuity in education;
Maintains important relationships at school;
Provides stability during a traumatic time for the children; and
improves educational and life outcomes.
Virginia revised its joint guidance in 2017 to implement the provisions of the Fostering Connections to Success and Increasing Adoptions Act of 2008 (Fostering Connections) and the Title I, Part A provisions in the Every Student Succeeds Act of 2015 (ESSA) to ensure school stability for students in foster care.
Both acts mandate educational stability for children in out-of-home care and require child welfare agencies (i.e., department of social services, licensed child-placing agencies) to coordinate with local educational agencies (school divisions) to ensure educational stability for every child in foster care.
Any student who is placed through the Virginia Department of Social Services, must follow the provisions mandated in the Fostering Connections guidance. The social worker must contact the school registrar and the Foster Care Liaison prior to the change of placement so that a Best Interest Determination (BID) meeting may be conducted. The completed BID information should be submitted to the school registrar for enrollment.
Once the determination has been decided, the Foster Care social worker and/or foster parent must make an appointment at the local school and present legal documentation and proof of residency in Buchanan County.
If the student is placed through another stat's Department of Social Services, and Interstate Compact Agreement must be arranged.
5 months ago
The McKinney-Vento Act guarantees school enrollment for anyone who, due to a lack of permanent housing, lives in inadequate or temporary settings, such as:
Emergency or transitional shelters
Motels, hotels, or campgrounds
Cars, parks, public places, bus or train stations, abandoned buildings
Doubled up with relatives or friends due to loss of housing or economic hardship
Awaiting foster care placement
In these conditions and is a migratory child or youth
So, if your child is 5-18 years of age, he/she has the right to attend school even if. . .
You live in a shelter, and ….
You don’t have a permanent address.
You share temporary housing with relatives or friends.
You reside in transitional housing.
You live in a car, on the street, or other temporary shelter.
You do not need a permanent address to enroll your child in school.
Your child cannot be denied school enrollment when school records or other enrollment documentation are not immediately available.
Your child may be able to remain in the same school (school of origin) even if you move.
Your child has the right to transportation services to and from the school of origin based on the best interest of the student at the time of the request.
Your child automatically qualifies to participate in free breakfast and lunch programs while living in situations that meet the definition of homeless.
Unaccompanied youth lacking fixed, regular and adequate housing have these same rights.
Talk to the principal, counselor social worker, teacher or school nurse about your housing situation.
Ask about programs that are available to help your child.
Seek information about the school close to where you are living.
When possible, bring birth certificates and school and immunizations records when you enroll your child in school.
Ask where you can get school supplies.
Ask that records be transferred from your child’s previous school.
Let school personnel know if your child has previously received special education services.
Ask which community agencies and resources may be available to help your family.
The National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth (NAEHCY)
Project HOPE - Virginia, the Virginia Education Program for Homeless Children and Youth
Buchanan County School Board policy on Admission of Homeless Children Policy JECA
Virginia Department of Education Title IX, Part A: Homeless Education
Buchanan County Public Schools Homeless Education Liaison
Dr. Kathy Witt