Wallingford updates exemption policy after Supreme Court ruling; board clarifies opt-out process and alternative assignments
Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts
SubscribeSummary
Following Mahmoud v. Taylor, the district will let administrators consider parental requests to excuse students from instruction outside the five statutory areas when parents claim a burden on religious upbringing; the committee discussed notification, PowerSchool forms, annual opt-outs, and what counts as an alternative assignment.
District staff presented revisions to the instructional exemption policy designed to align with a recent Supreme Court decision, Mahmoud v. Taylor. The presenter said the court’s ruling requires local school officials to consider requests for excusal from instruction when parents claim that particular instruction burdens their children’s religious upbringing. "While the court's holding is narrow in scope, school officials must consider parent requests for excusal from instruction when they claim that that instruction in certain topics burdens the religious upbringing of their children," the presenter said.
Board members discussed which topics already allow written opt-outs (the five areas identified in state statute), how bilingual education and medical exemptions are handled separately, and the district’s current practice of notifying parents in advance for family-life and HIV instruction. Staff said some opt-ins/opt-outs are handled through PowerSchool (parents click yes or no) and confirmed that written exemption requests for other topics would be required annually.
Members sought and received clarification on alternative assignments: an alternative assignment is a substitute activity or academic work provided when a student is excused from particular instruction, not merely the same instruction in another format. Board members said they would like clearer policy language about definitions, annual requirements, and how parents are notified before instruction. Staff said the revised policy and clarifying edits will go to the March instructional committee agenda and the consent agenda for the full board.
