Birth Certificates

A birth certificate is a vital record that documents the birth of a person. The term "birth certificate" can refer to either the original document certifying the circumstances of the birth or to a certified copy of the ensuing registration of that birth. A birth certificate verifies the child/parent relationship in an effort to assure the student is being enrolled by an individual with legal responsibility for the child. If the person enrolling the child is not identified as a parent of the child on the birth certificate, alternative documentation should be required to verify the individual’s authority to make educational decisions for the child. This process helps to protect against the enrollment or transfer of missing children. 

Sometimes students from a refugee, immigrant, or asylee background may not have a certificate or document related to their birth. In these cases, an I94 form, a document certifying their arrival into the US by the DHS, will suffice as proof of their date of birth. Upon enrollment of a student for the first time in a particular school, that school shall notify in writing in their home language, the person enrolling the student that within 30 days they must provide either a certified copy of the student's birth certificate, or other reliable proof of the student's identity and age, together with an affidavit explaining the inability to produce a copy of the birth certificate.