How to Withdraw from Detroit Public Schools (DPSCD) to Homeschool Legally
Withdrawing from Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD) to homeschool is legal, and Michigan law is on your side. The short version: under MCL 380.1561, you have two fully legal pathways to homeschool in Michigan — no state registration, no testing, no curriculum approval required. DPSCD's own administrative withdrawal process adds bureaucratic layers that other Michigan districts don't have, but none of those additional requirements override what Michigan law actually says. You can withdraw your child this week.
Here's the specific process for DPSCD families.
Why DPSCD Is Different From Other Michigan Districts
DPSCD is one of the largest urban school districts in the country. It operates its own internal withdrawal bureaucracy — a multi-step administrative process that includes central enrollment offices, district-level forms, and additional documentation requests that most smaller Michigan districts don't use.
The funding reality compounds this: Michigan public schools receive a per-pupil foundation allowance — currently over $9,000 per student per year from the state. When a student withdraws, the school loses that funding. DPSCD schools, operating in a resource-constrained environment, have structural incentives to make the withdrawal process feel complicated. Staff may tell you that you need to complete a district withdrawal packet, schedule an exit interview, or submit forms to multiple offices before the withdrawal can be "processed."
None of those requirements — exit interviews, district withdrawal packets, registration with the state — are legally required under Michigan's homeschool exemptions. They are administrative procedures that benefit the district's enrollment accounting, not legal obligations on your part.
The DPSCD Withdrawal Process: What's Required vs. What's Not
What is legally required from you
Under Exemption 3(f) of MCL 380.1561, you have the right to homeschool your child as a parent-led home education program. The legal step to protect yourself from truancy referrals is to send a withdrawal letter to the district — specifically to the DPSCD central enrollment office and the superintendent — notifying them that your child will be educated at home under MCL 380.1561(3)(f).
This letter should:
- State clearly that you are withdrawing your child from DPSCD enrollment
- Cite MCL 380.1561(3)(f) as the legal basis for your home education program
- Include your child's name, date of birth, and most recent school attended
- Be sent via Certified Mail with Return Receipt Requested (this creates a paper trail that matters if the district claims it wasn't received)
That is the legal requirement. Everything else DPSCD asks for beyond this — the district withdrawal form, exit interviews, curriculum submissions, proof of teaching credentials — is administrative theater.
What DPSCD will likely ask for (and why you don't have to comply)
DPSCD's internal withdrawal process typically includes:
District withdrawal packet: DPSCD has its own multi-page withdrawal form that covers student information, reason for withdrawal, and destination school or program. You are not legally required to complete this form to homeschool legally under Michigan law. Completing it may actually work against you — it asks questions you're not obligated to answer, including curriculum details and your "homeschool program" name.
Exit interview: Some DPSCD schools request or require an in-person meeting before processing a withdrawal. This is not a legal requirement. Under Michigan law, your child's enrollment ends when you notify the district in writing of your intent to homeschool. You are not required to attend a meeting, answer questions about your homeschool plans, or wait for the district to "approve" your withdrawal.
Proof of alternative enrollment: Some DPSCD administrators will ask you to prove where your child is going before they process the withdrawal. For homeschool families, this request has no legal basis. You are not transferring to another school — you are exercising your right under MCL 380.1561(3)(f).
Requests to contact the principal or counselor: These are delay tactics. Your withdrawal is a notification, not a negotiation.
The Specific DPSCD Process to Follow
Step 1: Write your withdrawal letter
Your letter needs three things: your child's information, your legal basis, and clear notice of withdrawal. Keep it brief. Do not volunteer curriculum details, explain your reasons for withdrawing, or respond to open-ended questions in the letter. The Michigan Legal Withdrawal Blueprint includes a DPSCD-specific letter template that's formatted for this exact situation.
Key elements:
- Date
- Child's full name, date of birth, current school, grade level
- Clear statement: "I am notifying you that [child's name] will be educated at home under the exemption provided by MCL 380.1561(3)(f)."
- Your signature as parent or legal guardian
- Nothing else
Step 2: Identify the correct DPSCD office
DPSCD centralizes enrollment through its Office of Student Recruitment, Enrollment, and Retention. Unlike smaller Michigan districts where you send the letter to the school building or the superintendent directly, DPSCD's administrative structure means your letter should go to:
- The DPSCD central enrollment office (for administrative processing)
- Your child's school principal (for attendance coding)
- The DPSCD Superintendent's office (to complete the legal notice under 3(f))
Send to all three. Send all three by Certified Mail.
Step 3: Request records before you leave
Before the withdrawal is complete, request your child's educational records — transcripts, IEP documents if applicable, attendance records, and any evaluation reports. Under FERPA, you're entitled to these records within 45 days of the request. DPSCD cannot withhold records as leverage to keep your child enrolled.
If your child has an IEP or 504 Plan, request the most recent evaluation report, the current IEP document, and the Last Agreed-Upon IEP before withdrawing. These documents become your reference point for replicating accommodations at home and asserting your continuing rights to evaluations through the district if needed.
Step 4: Keep your Certified Mail receipts
The green Return Receipt card (PS Form 3811) is your proof that DPSCD received the withdrawal notice. Keep it. If the district's automated attendance system continues to flag your child for unexcused absences after the notice was received — which happens in DPSCD more often than in smaller districts due to the administrative lag between central office and individual school attendance coding — your Certified Mail receipt proves the notice was delivered.
Step 5: Be prepared for follow-up contact
DPSCD staff may contact you after receiving the letter to ask questions, schedule a meeting, or inform you that your withdrawal "cannot be processed" without completing their district form. The appropriate response is to refer them to your letter and the statute cited in it. Pre-written scripts for these specific conversations — including what to say when a DPSCD administrator insists on an exit interview or demands curriculum details — are included in the Michigan Legal Withdrawal Blueprint.
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Special Consideration: DPSCD and Bilingual Families
DPSCD serves a significant Arabic-speaking population, particularly in the northwest Detroit neighborhoods with the highest concentrations of families from the Dearborn/Detroit Arab American community. Arabic-language support for homeschooling families is available through several Michigan organizations, and bilingual homeschooling is fully legal under both Exemption 3(f) and 3(a) — Michigan has no English-only instructional requirement in homeschool settings. The Blueprint includes resources for bilingual homeschooling families in the Detroit metro area.
What Happens After You Withdraw
Once DPSCD processes the withdrawal, your child is removed from active enrollment. You are now responsible for providing the education. Michigan does not require:
- Proof of ongoing instruction
- Standardized testing at any grade level
- Annual reporting to the district
- Curriculum submissions or approvals
- Teaching credentials
You do need to ensure your child is receiving instruction in Michigan's required subjects: reading, spelling, mathematics, science, history, civics, literature, writing, and English grammar. Beyond that, the structure, schedule, and approach are entirely yours to determine.
Who This Is For
- DPSCD parents who have decided to homeschool and want the specific administrative process for Detroit's school district
- Detroit families who contacted DPSCD and were told they need to complete a district withdrawal packet before anything can be processed
- Parents whose child has an IEP through DPSCD and want to understand what happens to those services after withdrawal
- Families worried about truancy referrals from DPSCD's automated attendance system during the withdrawal transition
- Arabic-speaking families in the Detroit metro looking for bilingual homeschool resources in a secular framework
Who This Is NOT For
- Michigan parents in districts outside of Detroit (other Michigan districts have simpler withdrawal processes; the DPSCD-specific navigation is less relevant)
- Families whose withdrawal is already complete and who are now focused on curriculum and instruction
- Parents who have already received a formal legal notice from DPSCD and need legal representation (contact a Michigan family law attorney or HSLDA at that point)
Frequently Asked Questions
Does DPSCD have the right to require an exit interview before processing a homeschool withdrawal?
No. Under MCL 380.1561(3)(f), your right to homeschool your child is established by written notice to the district — not by the district's approval of your withdrawal. DPSCD cannot condition your child's legal exit from enrollment on your participation in an administrative interview. If DPSCD insists on an exit interview, the appropriate response is a written statement citing MCL 380.1561(3)(f) and declining the interview.
How long does DPSCD take to process a withdrawal?
DPSCD's administrative processing time varies, but the legal withdrawal is effective when you deliver the written notice — not when DPSCD completes their internal paperwork. Your Certified Mail receipt is proof of delivery. If DPSCD continues to flag your child for unexcused absences after documented receipt, the truancy referral is procedurally invalid because the child is no longer enrolled.
What happens to my child's IEP services when I withdraw from DPSCD?
When you withdraw from public school to homeschool, DPSCD is no longer obligated to implement the IEP. Private school and homeschooled students retain some rights under IDEA — specifically the right to be evaluated by the district and potentially receive some services through a dual enrollment arrangement — but the IEP itself does not automatically follow your child. Request all IEP documents before withdrawing, and review your options for continuing services through dual enrollment. The Michigan Legal Withdrawal Blueprint covers this transition in detail.
Can DPSCD send a truancy officer to my home after I withdraw?
A truancy officer can conduct a welfare check, but cannot compel your child to return to school if you have a documented, properly filed homeschool withdrawal. Michigan's truancy enforcement applies to children who are not receiving any education — not to children in a lawfully established home education program under MCL 380.1561(3)(f). Your Certified Mail receipts and a copy of your withdrawal letter are your documentation if a truancy officer makes contact.
My child speaks Arabic at home. Do I have to teach in English?
No. Michigan has no English-only requirement for home education under either Exemption 3(f) or Exemption 3(a). You can instruct in Arabic, in both Arabic and English, or in any language you choose. The required subjects — reading, spelling, mathematics, science, history, civics, literature, writing, and English grammar — must be covered, but the language of instruction is not mandated.
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