The following information is provided as a courtesy to NH families who are home educating under RSA 193-A, and is not intended as legal advice. The New Hampshire Homeschooling Coalition strongly urges all parents and legal guardians to read and thoroughly understand the text of the education law applicable to the program they intend to implement prior to beginning that program.
Evaluation
Parents are required to have their child’s educational progress evaluated each year. There is no particular date by which the evaluation must be completed. If your family started homeschooling in the middle of the school year, you would not need to have an evaluation on file until a year from when you started. The child’s progress may be evaluated by any of the following methods:
- The evaluation may be completed by a teacher who either holds a teaching credential issued by the New Hampshire State Board of Education, is licensed in a state which is a party to the interstate contract, or is currently teaching in a nonpublic school. (See our list of Evaluators.)
- National student achievement test, administered by a person who meets the qualifications established by the provider or publisher of the test, OR a state student assessment test used by the resident school district. A composite score at or above the 40th percentile is no longer required.
Any other valid measurement tool mutually agreed upon by the parent and the Commissioner of Education, resident district superintendent, or nonpublic school principal. This could be an agreement to accept grades from an online school program, to have a meeting with a teacher or principal, or to have the child take assessment tests at the school, among other options.
The results of the evaluation, typically no more than one or two pages, do NOT need to be submitted to the participating agency.
The evaluation is kept on hand for the parents records. The child only needs to demonstrate educational progress at a level commensurate with the child’s age, ability, and/or disability. In the case of portfolio evaluation, the evaluation is not considered complete unless it has a parent’s signature, so if you feel your child’s evaluation is not accurate, do not sign it. Here you can see more information on compiling your homeschool portfolio, and evaluators are welcome to use this portfolio evaluation form.
Please see our complete Legal Requirements page for comprehensive information on homeschooling under RSA 193:A.