Kansas Court-Ordered Classes

Court-ordered classes in Kansas have never been more accessible. Our comprehensive online programs provide certified education solutions for all court-mandated requirements, allowing you to complete your obligations conveniently from anywhere in Kansas. Our state-approved curriculum meets every Kansas court system standard while maintaining complete flexibility in your schedule. Join thousands of Kansas residents who have successfully completed their court requirements through our trusted, accredited platform.

Kansas’s court system regularly imposes court-ordered classes as binding conditions across family law, criminal, and protective order proceedings in all counties. These educational mandates carry legal weight and must be satisfied on the court’s terms. Failure to comply can affect custody outcomes, probation standing, and the resolution of protective order proceedings. Court Courses Co delivers fully online, self-paced programs designed to meet Kansas’s court requirements without the burden of in-person scheduling, geographic constraints, or rigid appointment windows.

Kansas Statutes and Court Authority for Ordered Education

Kansas courts impose educational conditions under a comprehensive statutory framework spanning family law, criminal sentencing, and civil protective order proceedings. In custody and family matters, K.S.A. § 23-3203 directs courts to determine custody arrangements based on the best interests of the child—a standard that makes co-parenting education a natural and frequently ordered condition in contested proceedings. The Kansas Supreme Court has reinforced this through administrative guidance applicable across all judicial districts. In criminal proceedings, K.S.A. § 22-3716 grants courts broad authority to attach special conditions to probated sentences, including anger management, domestic violence intervention, and substance use education—conditions that serve rehabilitative goals while satisfying the court’s oversight function. For civil protective orders, K.S.A. § 60-3107 authorizes courts to impose educational compliance requirements on respondents in domestic violence and harassment cases, extending the court’s reach beyond punitive measures into structured behavioral accountability.

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Kansas Court-mandated Program Types

Kansas courts require educational programs across several categories depending on case circumstances:

Co-Parenting Classes: Required in contested divorce and custody proceedings in district courts statewide. The 10th and 18th Judicial District have among the highest volumes of co-parenting class orders in the state, reflecting the population concentration in the Kansas City metro area. These programs address communication skills, conflict reduction, and child-focused co-parenting strategies.

Anger Management Courses: Ordered as probation conditions under K.S.A. § 22-3716 in assault, battery, criminal threat, and domestic battery cases. Kansas district courts typically specify 8 to 26 hours of anger management programming. Our accredited courses meet these hour requirements and provide a certificate formatted for Kansas probation officer submission.

Domestic Violence Awareness Programs: Required in protective order compliance proceedings and as conditions of diversion agreements in domestic violence cases.

Substance Use Education: Required in DUI diversion agreements (Kansas DUI diversion program contexts under K.S.A. § 12-4416a), drug court participation, and general probation conditions in controlled substance cases across all Kansas judicial districts.

Kansas County Directory

Kansas does not operate a universal approved-provider registry for all court-ordered program types; the specific language of your order controls which program satisfies your requirement. Confirm your program title and required hours with your Kansas attorney or probation officer before enrolling. The following county list reflects those that have been approved for online education.

FAQ

Is a judge actually allowed to make me take a class?

Yes. In Kansas, judges have broad authority under K.S.A. § 23-3203
(for family law) and K.S.A. § 22-3716 (for probation) to set “conditions.” Think of these classes as a tool the court uses to resolve your case. If the order says you need a class, the court won’t finalize your paperwork or end your probation until they see that certificate.

Will the court in my specific county accept an online certificate?

Kansas uses a “Unified” court system, but every judge is different. While online classes are the standard for most of the 105 counties, a few local courts might have a preferred list. Pro-tip: Check the specific wording of your court order. If it doesn’t say “in-person only,” our certificate is designed to meet the state’s hourly requirements.

What does my Indiana certificate of completion include and where does it go?

Upon completing your program, you can download a Certificate of Completion documenting your name, program title, total hours, and completion date. The certificate is formatted for submission to the Kansas District Courts.

Are there any classes that must be in-person in Kansas?

Usually, only very specific high-level domestic violence programs (known as BIP or Batterer Intervention Programs) require you to show up in a classroom. For standard co-parenting, anger management, or theft classes, the online format is almost always accepted. If you’re unsure, just ask your lawyer if your “BIP” requirement allows for a digital equivalent.

I’m in a Diversion program—is this what I need?

Often, yes. Many Kansas Prosecutors use educational classes as a condition for “Diversion” (where your charges get dropped after a certain period). If your Diversion agreement mentions “8 hours of Anger Management” or “Co-Parenting,” our courses are built to fulfill those exact time-blocks.

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