How each state gives parents the ability to choose a safe and effective school for their children.
School Choice
in America
Summary:
North Dakota offers families very few school choice options. The state does not support private school choice.
Public School Choice:
The Education Commission of the States reports that North Dakota has enacted a voluntary inter-district open enrollment policy. The Center for Education Reform reports that North Dakota is one of only 10 states that have not yet passed a charter school law.
Online Learning:
According to Keeping Pace in K-12 Online Learning, the only substantial online opportunity in North Dakota is a state-led program provided through the North Dakota Center for Distance Education. The supplemental program provides online courses to middle and high school students, and had over 9,000 course registrations in 2007-2008.
Click here for detailed information on North Dakota's public school system and see below for school choice contacts and a history of school choice legislation in North Dakota.
Want to join the fight to improve education in North Dakota through school choice programs? You can:
- Contact your elected officials
- Call talk radio
- Write a letter to the editor
- Support education groups in North Dakota
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North Dakota Home School Association
Gail Biby, Publications Editor 1854 107th St NE Bottineau, ND 58318 Phone: (701) 263-3727 Fax: (701) 223-4081 Website: www.ndhsa.org E-mail: office@ndhsa.org |
North Dakota Policy Council
Curly Haugland P.O. Box 3007 Bismark, ND 58502 Website: www.policynd.org E-mail: curly@recsupply.com |
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State Association of Non-Public Schools
Mr. Thomas Frei, Director of Catholic Schools 5201 Bishops Boulevard Fargo, ND 58104 Phone: (701) 356-7907 E-mail: tfrei@fargodiocese.org |
View Archived History, Pre-2006
In 2002,
In 2003, State Representative C. B. Haas (R-36) introduced H.B. 1361 to amend the state's open enrollment law. The bill would have allowed school districts to deny transfer applications if the applications would change the enrollment of the district by more than 20 percent. It also would have required districts to allow students from the same family to transfer in order to attend school in the same district. The bill was passed in the House but lost in the Senate.[4]
Governor John Hoeven signed H.B. 1086 into law in April 2003. Under this bill, parents may apply to transfer their child to a school in a neighboring district if the child has been the victim of a violent incident, if the superintendent has declared the school unsafe, or if the superintendent has determined that the school requires "program improvement for six consecutive years." The sending district is responsible for transportation.[5]
[1] For more information, see
[2] Education Commission of the States, "Postsecondary Options: Dual/Current Enrollment," July 2001, at www.communitycollegepolicy.org/pdf/ECSDualEnrollStateNote.pdf.
[3] See
[4] See
[5] Ibid.
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