December 3, 2008
House Bill 6674: Raising the Age of Compulsory School Attendance to 18 Years
Author:
Rep. Alma Smith
Summary:
House Bill 6674 would increase the control of the state over your children for another two years. This bill would raise the age of compulsory school attendance in Michigan from 16 to 18 years of age.
Status:
| 11/20/2008 |  | (House) Filed |
HSLDA’s Position:
HSLDA is opposed to this bill.
Action Requested:
None requested at this time.
Background:
Raising the compulsory attendance age will not reduce the dropout rate. In fact, the two states with the highest high school completion rates, Maryland at 94.5% and North Dakota at 94.7%, compel attendance
only to age 16. The state with the lowest completion rate (Oregon: 75.4%) compels attendance to age 18. (Figures are three-year averages, 1996 through 1998.)
Twenty-nine states only require school attendance to age 16. Older children unwilling to learn can cause classroom disruptions and even violence, making learning harder for their classmates who truly want
to learn.
It would restrict parents’ freedom to decide if their 16-year-old is ready for college or the workforce. (Some 16-year-olds who are not academically inclined benefit more from valuable work experience than from being forced to sit in a classroom.
Another significant impact of expanding the compulsory attendance age would be an inevitable tax increase to pay for more classroom space and teachers to accommodate the additional students compelled
to attend public schools. When California raised the age of compulsory attendance, unwilling students were so disruptive that new schools had to be built just to handle them and their behavior
problems, all at the expense of the taxpayer.
For more information on compulsory attendance, please see our issues library entry, Compulsory Attendance Age Legislation.
Other Resources
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Bill Text (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader)
Bill History