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[ ] Yes [ ]No

Ars†15-0821 admission of children: required age

All schools shall, unless otherwise provided by law, admit children between the ages of 6 and 21 years who reside in the school district. If a kindergarten is maintained, does the district admit students who are five years of age prior to September 1 of the current school year? If a child is admitted to kindergarten and then readmitted to kindergarten in the following school year, the school district is not eligible to receive basic state aid on behalf of that child.

[ ] Yes [ ]No

If the Governing Board admits children who have not reached the required age because it is determined to be in the best interest of the children, is such determination based upon one or more consultations with the parent(s), guardian(s), the children, the teacher and the school principal, and do such children reach the required age of five for kindergarten and six for first grade by January 1 of the current year?

[ ] Yes [ ]No

NOTE: A child who resides with a family member, other than the parent, while awaiting the outcome of a legal guardianship is deemed to reside in the district upon documentary proof of an attempt to gain guardianship or custody.

Ars†15-0823 admission; residents of other school districts; nonresidents of this state; tuition

The Governing Board may admit children who do not reside in the school district but who reside within this state upon such terms as it prescribes. Except as provided below, children of nonresidents of this state may be admitted upon payment of a reasonable tuition fixed by the Governing Board.

1. Does the Governing Board admit children of nonresident teaching and research faculty of state colleges and universities and children of nonresident graduate or undergraduate students of state colleges or universities whose parent's presence at such state college or university is of international, national, state or local benefit without payment of tuition? Are children admitted in accordance with the provisions of this subsection categorized as resident students for the purposes of determination and apportionment of state aid?

2. Does the Governing Board admit children who are residents of the United States but are nonresidents of this state without payment of tuition if evidence indicates that the child's physical, mental, moral or emotional health is best served by placement with a grandparent, brother, sister, stepbrother, stepsister, aunt or uncle who is a resident within the school district, unless the Governing Board determines that the placement is solely for the purpose of obtaining an education in this state without payment of tuition?

3. Does the Governing Board admit nonresident foreign students who are in exchange programs recognized by the United States Department of State and the State Board of Education without payment of tuition or as it may otherwise prescribe?

4. Does the Governing Board admit children who are residents of the United States without payment of tuition if evidence indicates that because the parents are homeless or the child is abandoned, the child's physical, mental, moral, or emotional health is best served by placement with a person who does not have legal custody of the child and who is a resident within the school district, unless the Governing Board determines that the placement is solely for the purpose of obtaining an education in this state without payment of tuition?

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Source:  OpenStax, Arizona school law review, 2nd edition. OpenStax CNX. Oct 11, 2011 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11365/1.2
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