Republican lawmakers are proposing legislation to reduce conflicts between state homeschooling requirements for military families who move from one state to another. The proposal would exempt military-connected students from having to comply with changing or conflicting state homeschooling laws, provided the families remain in compliance with the homeschooling rules of one designated state. The approach is intended to address difficulties military families face when frequent relocations create uncertainty about whether they must meet new state curriculum, oversight, testing, or approval requirements. Sources report that the measure focuses specifically on interstate moves tied to military service and seeks to create a more predictable framework for continued home education during relocations. The proposal’s central feature is a “one-state” compliance standard, under which families would be allowed to continue homeschooling while moving, without being forced to restart compliance efforts under each new state’s regulations. The reporting does not indicate any change to the underlying homeschooling standards themselves, but rather an adjustment to how those standards apply across state lines for military families.