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Got a Truancy Letter in West Virginia? Here's What It Means for Homeschoolers

You pulled your child out of West Virginia public school to homeschool them. A few weeks later, a letter arrives from the district — or maybe from the county attendance officer — saying your child is truant or has unexcused absences. It's alarming if you're not expecting it, but it's also one of the most common things that happens when families don't complete the formal withdrawal process before starting homeschool.

The letter doesn't mean you're in legal trouble. It means the school's records still show your child as enrolled, so the attendance system flagged them as missing. The fix is almost always paperwork, not a court appearance — but you need to respond promptly and correctly.

Why Truancy Letters Get Sent to Homeschoolers

West Virginia's compulsory attendance law (§18-8-1) requires all children ages 6–17 to be in school unless they qualify for an exemption. Homeschooling is a legal exemption, but the district only knows about it if you've filed a Notice of Intent (NOI) with the county board of education.

If you pulled your child out without filing the NOI first — or if you filed it and the board hasn't processed it yet — the school's attendance system has no record of any exemption. From the system's perspective, your child is enrolled and absent. Truancy letters are generated automatically in most counties once absences exceed a threshold.

The same thing happens when families assume verbal communication with the principal is enough, or when they send an informal email that doesn't constitute a proper NOI under the statute.

What the Notice of Intent Must Include

Under §18-8-1(c)(2), your NOI needs to include:

  • Your child's name, address, and age
  • A statement that you will provide instruction in reading, language arts, mathematics, science, and social studies
  • Confirmation that you (the parent/guardian) have a high school diploma, GED, or post-secondary degree
  • A commitment to provide annual assessment results

The NOI is a one-time filing per child — you don't re-file every year. But if you never filed one, that's almost always what triggered the truancy letter.

How to Respond to a Truancy Letter

Step 1: Don't ignore it. A truancy letter with no response can escalate to a court summons. Even if you believe you've done everything correctly, respond.

Step 2: File (or confirm) your NOI immediately. Submit your Notice of Intent to the county board of education in writing. Keep a copy for yourself and note the date submitted. If you previously submitted one, call the board office and confirm receipt — ask for it in writing.

Step 3: Write a response letter. Send a brief letter to the attendance officer or whoever signed the truancy notice. State that your child is being homeschooled under the authority of §18-8-1(c)(2), that you have filed (or are enclosing) your Notice of Intent, and that the child is not truant. Do not be combative — a factual, calm letter resolves most of these situations.

Step 4: Document everything. Keep copies of your NOI, your response letter, the truancy notice itself, and any correspondence with the district. If this escalates — which is rare — your paper trail is your defense.

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The County's "Substitute Form" Problem

One thing that catches WV homeschool families off guard: some county boards send families their own forms and insist you use their version instead of writing your own NOI letter. This is legally questionable. The statute does not require you to use a county-provided form. You have the right to submit your own letter as long as it contains the required information.

If a county official insists you must use their form or implies your homeschooling isn't legal without it, that's overreach. Your own properly written NOI is legally sufficient. Organizations like WVHEA (West Virginia Home Educators Association) and CHEWV can provide guidance if you encounter pushback.

What Happens If You Don't Respond

If a truancy notice goes unanswered, the county attendance officer can refer the matter to the prosecutor for educational neglect proceedings under §49-4-601. This is rare for families who are genuinely homeschooling and simply haven't filed paperwork, but it has happened in counties with aggressive enforcement. The outcome in those cases is almost always that the family files the NOI and the matter is closed — but the process is stressful and unnecessary.

Don't let a letter sit on the counter for two weeks. A one-page response and a copy of your NOI is all that's typically required.

After the Religious Exemption

Some WV families homeschool under a claimed religious exemption from the assessment requirements. This is a more legally ambiguous path — West Virginia's statute doesn't explicitly grant a blanket religious exemption from all homeschool obligations, and courts have not uniformly upheld such claims in attendance disputes. If you've been operating under an informal religious exemption without filing any paperwork, a truancy letter is a signal to get proper legal advice before responding.


Getting your withdrawal documentation right from the beginning is what prevents truancy letters from landing in the first place. The West Virginia Legal Withdrawal Blueprint covers how to write a legally sound NOI, how to address it and deliver it, and what to do if the county pushes back — so you're starting your homeschool on solid legal footing rather than spending the first month fixing paperwork problems.

The Short Version

Truancy letters come from incomplete withdrawal paperwork, not from homeschooling being illegal. File your Notice of Intent under §18-8-1(c)(2), respond to the letter in writing, and keep documentation. In most cases, that's the end of it.

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