New Bill Would Revamp Standardized Testing Requirements For Tennessee Homeschoolers

New Bill Would Revamp Standardized Testing Requirements For Tennessee Homeschoolers

New Bill Would Revamp Standardized Testing Requirements For Tennessee Homeschoolers

Image Credit: capitol.tn.gov

The Tennessee Conservative [By Olivia Lupia] –

A new bill proposal by Rep. William Slater (R-Gallatin-District 35) would tighten homeschool testing requirements, potentially forcing a homeschooled student back into a public school if the state deems they have performed poorly.

HB1729 would alter existing state law which requires homeschooled students to be assessed via “approved secure standardized tests required of public school students” in 5th, 7th, and 9th grades, with the results being shared with the parent-teacher, the local director of schools and the state board of education. A tiered intervention system is then in place for homeschool students who are deemed to be “falling behind” via the test results.

Currently, if a homeschooler is determined to be 3-6 months behind their appropriate grade level, as dictated by their test scores in reading, language arts, math, and science, the parent-teacher is required to consult with the director of schools. 

If a student is deemed to be 6-9 months behind, the parent is required to consult with a licensed teacher to design a remedial course for the child which the parent must submit to the local director of schools. 

Should a home school student, who is not learning disabled per a licensed teacher, fall more than 1 year behind their grade level for two consecutive tests, the director of schools may require the parents to enroll the child in a public, private, or church related school.

HB1729 would shift these metrics so student success is measured in percentiles instead of howm many “months behind” a student may be for their grade level. Therefore, the first tier requiring a consultation with the director of schools would apply if a student fell between the 25th and 50th percentile. 

Homeschool students scoring below the 25th percentile would be required to retake the standardized test within a year and develop remedial coursework with a licensed teacher in the subject in which the student scored poorly.

And if the student scores below the 25th percentile for two consecutive tests, and the child is not learning disabled, the student can be forced to enroll in a public, private, or church related school. 

The bill would also give the Classical Learning Test (CLT) the same legal recognition as the SAT and ACT and make students who take the CLT eligible for state lottery scholarships.

HB1729 has not yet been assigned a House committee for consideration.

About the Author: Olivia Lupia is a political refugee from Colorado who now calls Tennessee home. A proud follower of Christ, she views all political happenings through a Biblical lens and aims to utilize her knowledge and experience to educate and equip others. Olivia is an outspoken conservative who has run for local office, managed campaigns, and been highly involved with state & local GOPs, state legislatures, and other grassroots organizations and movements. Olivia can be reached at olivia@tennesseeconservativenews.com.

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4 Responses

  1. This guy should worry about the failed public schools and not the homes educated student that generally performs much better than a public school student. Home education is a right given to parents. Even the Bible says that parents are who should educate their children. It is none of your business if a parent decides to home educate. Instead of spending good money after bad for the redistribution of wealth voucher program and FIX what is broken in our schools? I think it is because you don’t know how. Well I know a group of us here in TN that could fix it pronto!!! They cannot stand the fact that a home education mom and dad produce a much better product than the public school. Are you really that ignorant that you think taking a child out of home education and into the public school will make the student perform better when you are giving out money so parents can take their children out of the failing public schools???

  2. Why target homeschooling? Public schools pass school children who cannot even spell, halfway do math or read! The one kid graduated high school and has lawsuit due to not being able to read well enough. Teachers have aides and assistants now. They need to work more for that new raise, and not at trying to SA children or indoctrinate. Tennessee will have to give vouchers for private schools for homeschooling students.

  3. So, the people who’ve totally failed to educate public school kids then promote them any way are going to oversee home schoolers?

  4. My son is failing the 6th grade. Not once have the teachers reached out to me, I had to reach out to them. I had to ask for a meeting with everyone. They were accommodating once I requested it, but they basically told me that there wasn’t much they could do and he would just be pushed to the next grade. I told them that if he isn’t passing now, he surely won’t pass as it gets harder, and they said that’s just the way it is. They did offer after school tutoring, which we did go to. It consisted of the teacher providing a worksheet that my son would attempt to complete on his own. That was no help. I am homeschooling next year. The system should not be able to force me to send my son back to the system that’s already failing him, that’s BS!

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