Category: News

  • CHEWV Participants Excel in Recent Fine Arts Festivals

    CHEWV Participants Excel in Recent Fine Arts Festivals

    The 2017 WVCEA Elementary and Junior High Fine Arts Festivals were held on April 21 at Cross Lanes Christian School.  Eight students represented CHEWV in several categories for a total of 24 entries!  It was an exciting event and a valuable learning experience as these students were critiqued on entries that ranged from piano solos to garment construction.

    Elementary participants can be awarded superior and excellent ribbons; junior high students have an additional opportunity to place 1st, 2nd, or 3rd.  CHEWV representatives earned a total of eight superior and seven excellent ratings, as well as five 1st place and one 3rd place. 

    Congratulations are in order for Caleb Adkins, Kitoria Johnson, Ryland Luikart, Shaylin Spargo, Christian Barnhouse, Evie Graves, Aydan Hines, and Sharah Spargo! 

    If your children are interested in participating in this exciting annual event, you can browse our website for information. Questions should be addressed to Kimberly Johnson, Fine Arts Coordinator, at finearts@chewv.org.

    The dates and locations for the 2018 WVCEA Fine Arts Festivals are as follows:

    Senior High                             March 16                         Appalachian Bible College

    Elementary/Junior High     April 20                           Wood County Christian School

    Header picture left to right:  Ryland Luikart, Caleb Adkins, Kitoria Johnson, Shaylin Spargo, and Sharah Spargo

  • Compulsory Age Changes

    Compulsory Age Changes

    Compulsory age is the age when children are required to attend public school unless they meet a legal exemption. For children of compulsory age who are to be homeschooled under WV code 18-8-1(c)(2), a notice of intent must be provided to the home county prior to commencing home education. 

    Current compulsory age begins when a child turns 6 prior to September 1st OR as soon as they are enrolled in a publicly funded kindergarten program. However, as of the 2019-2020 school year, the deadline date will be moved back from September 1st to July 1st. Children being homeschooled in the summer of 2019 will be of compulsory age if they turn 6 prior to July 1st.  Until two years from now, the cutoff date will remain the same – September 1st – for compulsory attendance age.

  • After the 2017 Legislative Session

    After the 2017 Legislative Session

    Where Does Homeschooling Stand Now?

    by John Carey, CHEWV’s Legislative Liaison

    Prior to the 2017 WV Legislative Session, CHEWV decided it was time to step back and to give the legislature a break from homeschool legislation.  We gratefully acknowledged the progress made in the last two regular sessions: the legislature had supported our efforts to advance no fewer than five homeschool bills through both the House and the Senate.

    Our stepping back unexpectedly led to several homeschool-friendly legislators choosing to step up, actively encouraging their colleagues to support homeschool sports and vocational school legislation.  As the session progressed, however, we witnessed the introduction of disturbing legislation designed to challenge our basic civil rights to educate our children and live out our faith.  Needless to say, the CHEWV lobbying team was the one group at the legislature this session that never did get a break.  What follows is my synopsis of the good, the bad, and the deplorable legislation, followed by a look at homeschooling’s future challenges.

    HB 2196 – The Tim Tebow Bill
    From the start, this bill was severely handicapped.  While Senate Education Chair Mann allowed the Tim Tebow bill to advance through his committee, he refused to speak in support of the bill on the floor of the Senate.  As it turned out, the Chair and the Governor gave their support to the Public School Virtual School Bill instead. By vetoing the Tim Tebow Bill, the Governor saw an opportunity to give homeschoolers who want to participate in sports an incentive to stop homeschooling and join the Public Virtual School instead in order to play. 

    HB 2589 – The Vocational School Bill
    The other homeschool bill the Governor decided to veto this session was a bill to ensure that homeschooled and privately schooled students could take advantage of vocational education courses. While most counties allow homeschool students to take these classes, at least one, Raleigh County, does not make room for homeschool students. When seeking admission, the county consistently states that there is not enough room. This bill would have required that they, and all counties, make room for qualifying homeschool and private school students.

    SB 630 – The Virtual School Bill
    The Accessibility and Equity in Public Education Enhancement Act, signed into law by the governor and technically unrelated to homeschooling, may still negatively affect us.  According to the Charleston Gazette-Mail, this bill “would allow county school systems to offer full-time K-12 virtual education and ‘an online pathway for earning a high school diploma,’ while also receiving the full per-pupil state school aid formula funding for each student who participates.”  Kanawha County Schools Superintendent Ron Duerring, who testified in support of the bill, said it would allow participating students, “including homeschooled students,” to participate in sports and other public school activities.  This statement is not accurate, however, because homeschoolers in WV are those who are being educated according to the homeschooling exemptions to compulsory attendance, such as 18-8-1(c)(2), and as such have the freedom to choose their own curriculum, something that will not be allowed if they enroll in the public school virtual school program. This issue will be discussed in greater detail in future articles.

    SB 186 – Change in Compulsory Age

    In a cultural climate that usually pushes compulsory school age younger and younger, this year’s legislature made a surprising move.  SB 186, which makes compulsory age older by two months, was passed by the legislature and signed by Governor Justice. 

    Starting in the 2019-20 school year, children who turn six prior to July 1st will be of compulsory school age.  Students who turn 6 between July 1st and September 1st will not be of compulsory age as they are now.  

    However, children who are enrolled in a publicly supported kindergarten program automatically become of compulsory age regardless of age.

    How does this affect homeschooling? Currently, a notice of intent is required the year that the student reaches compulsory school age, which is six years old prior to September 1st at the latest.  But in 2019, this will only be required for students who turn six prior to July 1st (unless they’ve ever been enrolled in a publicly supported kindergarten program).  

    SB 186 recognizes that many students are not ready to begin formal schooling at young ages.  Because the bill primarily affects preschool and kindergarten public school students, it allows for a bit more maturity before children enter those programs.  It also makes the cut-off age prior to the commencement of the school year.  

    Now for Deplorable Legislation

    SB 528 and HB 2702 – “establishing process to provide student is ineligible for home instruction exemption”*

    HSLDA described SB 528 as “an excessive and unnecessary intrusion into families.
    ….It treats parents who want to homeschool as suspected child abusers who must be investigated.”

    HSLDA continued, “West Virginia Senate Education Chair Kenneth Mann (R-Monroe, 10), has teamed up with Democratic senators Michael Romano and Ron Stollings to propose an alarming law that would effectively prohibit homeschooling and order CPS investigations if parents wanted to homeschool children who had accrued 10 absences without acceptable excuse.”

    Senator Mann and Delegate Westfall, who sponsored HB 2702, an identical bill introduced in the House, publicly expressed their conviction that some parents use homeschooling as a means to avoid prosecution for truancy.  Senator Mann later withdrew his support for SB 528.  While Delegate Westfall also removed his support for this offensive provision in HB 2702, he said in committee that he isn’t finished trying to “address this issue.”  This is no surprise, since Delegate Westfall has in recent years been a leading advocate for increased regulation of homeschooling.

    SB 435 and HB 2650 – The Youth Mental Health Protection Act
    The purpose of SB 435 and HB 2650 is to prevent a parent from providing professional counseling for a child struggling with homosexuality unless that counseling encourages the child to identify as a homosexual. 

    The gay lobby convinced many legislators to sign on to this legislation by telling them that they are simply trying to prevent children who identify as having same sex attraction from being abused in a counseling situation. After meeting with legislators and explaining how these bills would actually prevent a parent from getting the help they know their child needs in such a situation, many began removing their support from these bills, including Senator Boso, Senator Swope, and Senator Trump.

    Thankfully, these bills were opposed by legislators who understand the all-important issues of religious liberty and parental rights, and who worked behind the scenes to prevent them from being placed on a committee agenda and advanced. This was quite an accomplishment since SB 435 was strongly supported by Senate President Mitch Carmichael.

    One of our legislative flyers expressed, “Our primary concern with HB 435 is the attack it represents on parental rights.”

    “The rights of parents to the care, custody and nurture of their children is of such character that it cannot be denied without violating those fundamental principles of liberty and justice which lie at the base of all our civil and political institutions.”

    It’s Time to Look Behind the Curtain

    CHEWV was intimately involved in the shaping of both the Tim Tebow and the Vocational Education bills because once a bill that affects homeschooling begins to advance, we must ensure that it does not turn into legislation that harms homeschooling families. We met with stakeholders, crafted amendments with the help of staff, and testified before committees. We also aggressively opposed the Gay Conversion Therapy bills. We were careful to express our opposition based on our primary concern: the impact these bills would have on parental rights and religious liberty.

    All in all, this was a hideous session as it relates to our basic civil right to homeschool. At one time during the session, nearly 40% of the House and over 40% of the Senate sponsored legislation that attacked either homeschooling, parental rights or religious liberty directly. We worked hard to prevent these bills from advancing. In the end, not one advanced without being amended to remove the offending provision.

    Where Do We Go From Here?

    As we look to the future, it has become clear that we cannot wait until next session to meet legislators and make them aware of our concerns.  Generally speaking, legislators did not support anti-parental rights and anti-religious liberty bills in such large numbers because they opposed those freedoms; they simply didn’t understand the attack these bills represented. As CHEWV continued meeting with legislators, we saw them step away from these bills.  Our efforts need to be sustained throughout the year, but we cannot do it alone.  We need an army of respectful and well-informed homeschool families to meet with legislators in their own districts and clear up the confusion that has persisted at the state legislature for the last two years.  We need to set the record straight, and we need to start now.

    Further, we need to become advocates for parent-directed homeschooling, and we need to educate legislators about why parents choose to homeschool and explain the benefits that result from such involvement in their children’s lives. Legislators must not become confused about the difference between a public virtual school and a parent-directed home school. Those families new to homeschooling need to understand the difference as well.

    The homeschool sports issue and the vocational school issue aren’t going to disappear. State legislators will keep pushing them forward.  We must be there to ensure that homeschooling freedom is protected as legislators continue to consider and advance those issues.

    Unfortunately, we will forever have our detractors like the SSAC, the Public School Administrators, and even legislators like Delegate Steve Westfall who subscribe to the notion that parents homeschool not because they care about their kids but because they want to avoid being prosecuted for truancy.

    Finally, it’s crucial to recognize that several factors are at play in the state, simulataneously, in ways that have never existed before. Well-financed groups have entered our state to override parental rights and religious liberty in the name of preventing discrimination. Homeschoolers in West Virginia now outnumber, for the first time, private school students, and some worry about the impact this will have on public schools. Public school officials are reacting by attempting to create their own version of homeschool, even introducing legislation that allows students to work at different grade levels in different subject areas.  We must seize the challenges these changes represent and do what is needed to protect our freedoms.

    Nevertheless, it is encouraging to see the homeschooling progress that has been made over the years and to remember what God says as we look to the future. In Jeremiah we read, “For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”

    If you’re interested in protecting our freedoms and would like to receive resources to help prepare yourself and others for the 2018 Regular Session, I’d like to hear from you via jcarey@heritagecwv.org.   

    Additional legislation that was related to homeschooling can be reviewed at the Heritage Legislative page.

    *Wording taken from the official WV legislative site.

  • Girls Earn Top Awards

    Girls Earn Top Awards

    The 2017 WVCEA Fine Arts Festival was on March 17th in Beckley, WV.  CHEWV was well-represented by three high school girls who entered in various categories.  While CHEWV had small participation numbers this year, the number of awards is a testimony to the time and effort the girls put into each entry.  As an added honor, Sarah Grace Johnson was asked to perform her Classical Piano selection during the awards ceremony.

    Participation in the festival has proven to be a sound validation for college, technical, and job applications.  Including fine arts on a resume shows that the student has a wide scope of interests and gives a hint to the creativity and initiative it takes to develop a fine arts entry.

    Congratulations to Sarah Grace, Emily, and Katie!

    Sarah Grace Johnson –

    1. Classical Piano Solo          First Place
    2. Female Vocal Solo             First Place
    3. Sacred Piano Solo             Second Place

    Emily Shannon –

    1. Sacred Piano Solo             First Place
    2. Hymnplaying                     Second Place
    3. Classical Piano Solo         Excellent Ribbon

    Katie Mills

    1.  Written Spelling Test     First Place

     

  • Sheppards Retire from CHEWV Board

    Sheppards Retire from CHEWV Board

    After serving on the CHEWV board for 21 years, Dennis and Melody Sheppard are retiring from the board this month.  They are the second-longest serving board couple in the history of CHEWV.  For more than a decade, they directed the annual statewide CHEWV conferences.  They’ve capably filled the roles of Fine Arts Director, webmaster, and media director, serving also as secretary for a time.  Melody, who volunteered hundreds of hours to make the launch of our comprehensive website a reality and brought CHEWV into the dynamic world of social media as well, will remain our Facebook Coordinator.

    The Sheppards’ wisdom and creativity, keen insight
    and tireless hard work, have significantly benefited West Virginia homeschooling families.  They were among those who led the successful legislative effort to allow parents with a high school diploma to homeschool through high school.  With so many issues and options influencing home educators today, Dennis and Melody stand out in their focus on strong Christian and Constitutional values, as well as a remarkable commitment to “keep the main thing the main thing.”

    Fellow board members will miss their lively humor and generous hosting of meetings and retreats.
      The CHEWV community would like to express their appreciation for the years of ministry that the Sheppards have given.  We also thank their children, Michael, Morgan, Sam and Ryan, for their contributions and the sacrifices they have made.  Please enjoy our pictorial tribute to their years of service. 

     

  • Tips For Lobbying State Legislators

    Tips For Lobbying State Legislators

    It’s Simpler Than You Probably Think

    by John Carey, CHEWV’s Legislative Liaison

    Visiting the State Capitol

    When visiting the State Capitol, make sure to drop by your representatives’ offices and introduce yourself and your family. A simple meeting, in and of itself, has value to support homeschooling even if you are not lobbying for a particular issue.

    If your representatives have time, ask them where they live, how long they have been in office and if they enjoy serving. You may find that you have the same friends as well as other things in common. Come prepared to tell them why you chose to homeschool and why you like it.  Be brief, recognizing they may be busy with little time to talk. 

    I like to mention that when we began homeschooling, we decided year to year if we would continue, until one day my ten-year-old daughter Vicki was excitedly telling her friends about the characters in a book that I had read for the first time in college. I was stunned that she and her friends had already read the book – and could see that she was way ahead of me at the same age.

    Making a Difference Back at Home

    We are fortunate to have a citizen legislature. citizen legislature is a legislative chamber made up primarily of citizens who have a full-time occupation outside of being legislator. Those who represent us in Charleston live and work among us most of the year.  Therefore, we not only have the opportunity to meet with legislators in Charleston during the two-month regular session, but also during the remainder of the year when they are living in or near our home towns.  This is our bigger opportunity to make concerns heard and understood, and to put a face on our issues. 

    There is an increased urgency to get to know legislators this year than in the past because there has been such a high percentage of turnover in recent years. At least 20 percent are new to the job of representing constituents, and just about as many are new to homeschooling.  On an encouraging note, more legislators than ever either homeschool themselves or have grandchildren who are homeschooled.

    Lobbying is simply influencing our legislators.  A citizen legislature provides many opportunities to influence both in Charleston and at home.  Let’s make the most of the opportunities that our West Virginia state government provides by coming to the Home School Day at the Capitol this year.  Here is a link to learn more.

  • Why WV Homeschoolers Make Good Lobbyists

    Why WV Homeschoolers Make Good Lobbyists

    by John Carey, CHEWV’s Legislative Liaison

    With an excellent reputation at the Capitol, members of Christian Home Educators of West Virginia have been consistently rated by past state legislators as very effective lobbyists.  The last two elections, however, have created an influx of new legislators, including a significant number who know little about homeschooling. Home School Day at the Capitol is the ideal opportunity to highlight homeschooling accomplishments to these new legislators.  It’s usually possible to schedule lobbying appointments, and as an assembled group we can express our appreciation for past support from those who come to address us at the afternoon rally. 

    While homeschool students can communicate the value of home education, their parents wield impressive influence as well.

    1.  Home educators are committed to the truth.

    Christian parents who educate their children at home are strikingly independent thinkers who seek to draw their conclusions from well-founded facts and principles.  Their tenacious commitment to truth stands in stark contrast to the moral relativism and political correctness of the culture around them.  They care not only what their children are taught but how they are instructed, and they take seriously the responsibility God has given them to educate their children.  Governed more by what God says than what man thinks, they cannot be persuaded to support legislation through emotional arguments.  They must be convinced by clear, substantial facts before taking action, but once an issue is determined to be important, they persevere until their views are heard by those who represent them in Charleston. 

    2.  Homeschooling parents are skilled and talented educators.

    They are problem solvers who are focused on enabling their children to learn and retain information, not simply “finish the book.”  Through homeschooling, parents develop their own skills by nurturing their students’ abilities.  When these parents choose to engage the legislative process, their honed interpretive skills and instructional knowledge often bring an invaluable information resource to the legislative community. Some parents make phone calls while others are willing to meet representatives personally.  Some help teach other home educators or write articles for local newspapers.  Although our opposition has tried to cast us as “that isolated family up a holler,” they could not be further from the truth.

    3.  Home educators put a face on the issues they support.

    Home educators live in every county and attend hundreds of churches throughout West Virginia.  It is true that, when needed, hundreds of homeschooling parents and their children will fill the State Capitol to express their views in person.  But there are many more who contact their legislators from their home district.  They make it clear that the folks back home care about homeschool legislation and are closely following the actions of their representatives.  They also meet with legislators when they are not in session.  These parents become the face of homeschooling everywhere. 

    The Frame family meets with Delegate Brent Boggs at HSDC.

    In conclusion:

    Yes, home educators have been applauded by state leaders for being effective lobbyists.  First and foremost, Christian parents who homeschool are known to tenaciously support what they believe to be true and morally right.  They are not only people of conviction but talented individuals who become increasingly skilled and competent each year.  Finally, these individuals live in the same districts as those who debate and vote on these issues.  Their proximity enables them to put a face on the legislation, something that agents of the state and paid lobbyists can’t do.  What better opportunity than Home School Day at the Capitol to put these skills to use?


    Header photo:  REACH families greet Speaker Tim Armstead at HSDC.

     

  • New Book Has Exciting Possibilities

    New Book Has Exciting Possibilities

    West Virginia State Delegate Mike Azinger recently collaborated with the Providence Foundation to create The Bible: America’s Source of Law and Liberty, an exciting new project with the potential to impact thousands of state legislators and voters.  Inspired by Stephen McDowell, Azinger wanted to share McDowell’s nation-changing ideas with his fellow-legislators, each of whom received a copy of the book at the end of the 2016 session.

    The book was so well received by members of the WV House and Senate that efforts are underway to put it into the hands of every state legislator in the U.S.  In fact, every American citizen who reads it can participate more effectively in choosing good and godly leaders.  Hard copies are available from the Providence Foundation, as well as a Kindle version on Amazon.  Both the Foreword and Introduction are free online.

    CHEWV’s Legislative Liaison, John Carey, urges CHEWV families to not only read the book, but to consider sharing its contents. 

    “With the revisionist view of American history dominating so much of the academic landscape, McDowell’s extensively researched work does an admirable job sorting the wheat from the chaff of historical confusion,” writes Robert Karnes, homeschool dad and CHEWV member, and WV Senator from the 11th District.  “He demonstrates how biblical lessons were incorporated into public thought, resulting in the unique American perspective that embraces God as the source of civil liberty.  From the founding of the colonies, to the drafting of the Declaration of Independence, and finally to the ratification of the U.S. Constitution, there can be no doubt:  American ideals were drawn from biblical principles by godly men.”

    Donna Boley, WV State Senator from the 3rd District, concurs.  “It’s crucial for America to know its history.  How else are we to know who we are and the direction we are to take?  Stephen McDowell’s book is a well-spring of facts answering both of these questions.  He teaches our Christian history in its purest form.  I sincerely hope you will read it!” 

  • Following in Jefferson’s Footsteps

    To Protect our Religious Freedom

    By John Carey, CHEWV’s Legislative Liaison

    In my last article, I discussed the words of Thomas Jefferson that are embedded in the WV Constitution:

    “No man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship, place or ministry whatsoever; nor shall any man be enforced, restrained, molested or burthened, in his body or goods, or otherwise suffer, on account of his religious opinions or belief, but all men shall be free to profess and by argument, to maintain their opinions in matters of religion; and the same shall, in nowise, affect, diminish or enlarge their civil capacities.”

    Jefferson had an undying passion for religious liberty, a passion that I share.  Why?  Because our freedom to do what our conscience dictates forms the underlying liberty Americans have to serve God without state reprisal.  “Freedom of Religion” was so valued by our Forefathers that they embedded it into the Bill of Rights. 

    Religious freedom is also foundational to many of our other freedoms – like Christian homeschooling!  We can teach our children from a Christian worldview because of our religious liberty.  Yet, even Jefferson knew that creating laws and constitutions was insufficient to protect liberty.

    The price of liberty is eternal vigilance.”

    Vigilance is exactly what is needed right now to protect our religious liberties.  The Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) is sorely needed to shore up our religious freedom.  But many of our state legislators have said that no action is needed in West Virginia because of Jefferson’s words in our Constitution. 

    Consider Virginia, the state that West Virginians’ freedoms were drawn from.  Virginia boasts a history of religious liberty tracing back more than 200 years.  Yet in 2007 they still took the step to protect those freedoms by passing the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.  Virginia did not claim that Jefferson’s words were enough when faced with the threats to religious freedom evident across our great nation.  Instead they acted, and Governor Tim Kaine signed the Virginia RFRA into law.

    A proliferation of Sexual Orientation Gender Identity (SOGI) laws have recently emerged in local municipalities across West Virginia.  These laws are being passed by town councils for the noble purpose of preventing discrimination against one select group.  Unfortunately, they have the tragic effect of causing discrimination against another.  What they seek to prevent for one group, they end up causing for another.

    What is needed is for a discussion to occur so that these conflicting needs can be resolved, something the RFRA enables through the “Compelling State Interest Test.”  The SOGI’s seek to validate the notion that gender is a choice to be made by individuals, and that government and businesses are obliged to endorse those choices. It is hoped that local governments will revisit SOGI decisions and realign their thinking with what is expressed in the West Virginia State Constitution – that “all men shall be free to profess…and maintain their opinions in matters of religion.”

    In the face of contentious debate, the West Virginia House of Delegates has passed the RFRA twice in the last four years by overwhelming margins, both when Democrats and Republicans were in control.  Each time, however, the Senate has refused to take up the bill or has gutted it so that it was not worth passing.  How can this happen when it was reported in the last session that 93 percent of West Virginians want the RFRA passed to protect their freedoms?

    While it can be said that vocal proponents on both sides of the issue have encouraged unfair assumptions about the intent of their adversaries in order to inflame the dialogue, excellent testimony in the House and the Senate in support of the RFRA also brought clarity to this issue.  Such testimony, particularly that of Judiciary Chairman John Shott and Senator Ed Gaunch, can serve as a basis of understanding as we seek to move forward.  Let’s earnestly pray that God will enable an HONEST dialogue to make clear to the West Virginia Senate and local governments that the issue is not about hatred, but about embracing the fundamental freedoms for which Jefferson fought.  Simply said, the issue is to ensure that individual rights of conscience are protected – for “all men.”

    It is not yet clear what the Legislature will do regarding RFRA in the 2017 session.  But it is clear that this issue cannot easily be dismissed, for the threats to our religious freedom persist.  WV Christian families should stay informed and prepared for action against any potential threat to our liberty to educate our children as we see fit.  After all, Mountaineers must remain as tenacious and committed to religious liberty as Thomas Jefferson himself!

    If you want to learn more about the RFRA, click here!

  • Time for a New Test Report Sheet!

    Time for a New Test Report Sheet!

    CHEWV is introducing a new Report Sheet option for CHEWV testing families!  This year we are unveiling our new Progress Report in response to recent changes in the law. 

    The revised homeschooling law requires that assessment results be submitted to the county when students are in grades 3, 5, 8 and 11.  For those students, our County Report (formerly called Report to the Superintendent) is appropriate.  But ALL STUDENTS must still be assessed annually and must meet acceptable progress standards.  Our new Progress Report is designed to help parents know if their student has met the requirements for “acceptable progress” in years when the results are not submitted. 

    Both the County Report and the Progress Report are WV-specific.  Both reflect the necessary calculations to determine how the child’s test scores compare with WV law requirements. 

    Just like the previous law, the revised law requires that students annually make acceptable progress – as defined in the law.  If not, remediation is required.  The second consecutive year that acceptable progress is not made, additional evidence of appropriate instruction must be submitted to the county.  This is applicable for ALL STUDENTS IN ALL GRADES, just like before.

    At the time of registration, parents will choose between the two reports.  If their student is in 3rd, 5th, 8th, or 11th grades, they should choose the County Report – which is designed to be turned in to the county by June 30.  If not, they should choose the Progress Report so that they can easily determine if they owe “additional evidence” to their county. 

    In all cases, annual assessment results must be kept on file for three years.  Questions?  Email testing@chewv.org.