State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Education to play a big role in new legislative session

Perhaps no issue was more impactful in last year’s legislative session than education. The 112th General Assembly ended with the historic passage of the Tennessee Investment in Student Achievement (TISA) Act that completely overhauled the way public schools are funded in Tennessee.The 113th General Assembly that begins at noon today likely won’t pass legislation as sweeping, but that doesn’t mean legislators won’t have an opportunity to make an impact on K-12 education.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Legislator Profile: Representative William Slater brings an extensive background in education to Nashville

When the Tennessee General Assembly returns to Nashville next Tuesday, Representative William Slater will be among 19 new members in the State House.Slater won the Republican primary for House District 35 last August and then ran unopposed in November to represent Trousdale County and part of Sumner County.  He’s succeeding former Representative Jerry Sexton who decided not to seek another term in office.

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Nashville, Shelby County to appeal court’s dismissal of Tennessee school voucher case

Plaintiffs behind two lawsuits challenging Tennessee’s private school voucher law plan to appeal a judicial panel’s dismissal of their remaining legal claims.Metropolitan Nashville and Shelby County governments, which jointly challenged the 2019 law that applies only to their counties, notified the Tennessee Court of Appeals late last month that they will appeal the latest ruling. Attorneys representing parents and taxpayers in a second lawsuit submitted a separate notice of appeal.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Bill would give Tennessee teachers $500 annually for classroom supplies

A Tennessee bill would allow every public school teacher in the state to have $500 to spend on classroom supplies.The bill would be an adjustment on the $200 initially stipulated for each teacher’s use in the new Tennessee Investment in Student Achievement funding formula, set to begin in the 2023-24 school year.

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Local Education, Memphis, State Government Sky Arnold Local Education, Memphis, State Government Sky Arnold

MSCS and Germantown school boards back ‘three G’s’ settlement, ending 10-year dispute

The decade-old dispute between Memphis-Shelby County Schools and the Germantown Municipal School District ended Thursday as the two districts’ school boards signed off on a deal that allows Germantown to take over two schools currently operated by MSCS.The resolution, spurred by a new state law, means that thousands of MSCS students who attend the Germantown Elementary, Middle and High schools — known collectively as the “three G’s” — will be able to remain in those schools as the buildings begin a transition to the Germantown district’s control.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Fewer Tennessee students taking Drivers Ed

A new report by the Tennessee Comptroller’s Office of Research and Education Accountability (OREA) found fewer Tennessee teenagers are taking drivers education classes in high school.According to the report, 60 school districts in Tennessee received state funding to provide more than 12,000 students with driver education classes last school year. That’s a noticeable decline from just four years ago when 65 districts received funding to provide the class to 15,000 students.

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Tennessee Education Savings Account law would expand to Hamilton County under bill

Tennessee’s private school voucher law, which now only affects districts and some students in Memphis and Nashville, would widen to include Hamilton County Schools under new legislation filed this week.Sen. Todd Gardenhire, a Chattanooga Republican, wants the legislature to expand the eligibility criteria for the education savings account program to include students in districts with at least five of the state’s lowest-performing schools, as identified in the last three “priority school” cycles since 2015.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Tennessee private schools could get $60 million in leftover pandemic relief funds

Tennessee is taking steps to ensure that private schools get the opportunity to receive nearly $60 million in unused federal COVID relief funds set aside for them in 2021.But the state is considering loosening some of the strings that the federal government initially attached to those funds. In particular, under several options outlined Monday by Education Commissioner Penny Schwinn, private schools wouldn’t necessarily have to serve a “significant” share of students from low-income families to be eligible for aid, as the Biden administration had required.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Tennessee’s Education Savings Account program wins again in court

A judicial panel sided with the state on Wednesday and dismissed remaining legal claims raised in two lawsuits challenging Tennessee’s private school voucher law.The judges ruled that Metropolitan Nashville and Shelby County governments, along with a group of parents who oppose vouchers, have no legal standing to challenge Tennessee’s 2019 Education Savings Account law, which provides taxpayer money to pay toward private school tuition.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

State Textbook Commission Member Laurie Cardoza-Moore argues for expanding the board’s role

A new state law requires Tennessee’s Textbook and Instructional Materials Quality Commission to “issue guidance” for local school districts to use when reviewing whether books in a school library are appropriate for children.Commission Member Laurie Cardoza-Moore argued the board should go beyond that at last week’s workshop meeting.

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Knoxville House candidate proposes removing public funding from public charter schools in debate

In a televised debate on a wide range of topics, Democratic Tennessee House District 18 Candidate Gregory Kaplan proposed a drastic change that would put the future of every Tennessee public charter school, and their more than 30 thousand students, in question.Following a question about whether Tennessee needs more public charter

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Tennessee recognized for leading the nation in ACT access

Tennessee received national recognition Tuesday for its work to help all students fulfill their requirements for college admission.ACT, Inc. awarded the Tennessee Department of Education (TDOE) with its inaugural ACT State Equity and Access Champion Award, which celebrates the state’s commitment to postsecondary access and its standing leading the nation in ACT access.

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Elections, State Government Sky Arnold Elections, State Government Sky Arnold

Tennessee incumbent Gov. Bill Lee facing Democrat challenger Martin with contrasting views

Incumbent Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee was uncontested in the primary and will be facing Democrat Jason Martin in the Nov. 8 general election.Lee won by a wide margin over Democrat Karl Dean in 2018 and will battle for a second term with Martin, who beat Memphis’ JB Smiley by roughly 1,500 votes for the nomination.

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State Commission sides with charter schools most of the time but isn’t a rubber stamp

This fall a little-known state board could play a huge role in expanding school choice options for parents across the state.The Tennessee Public Charter School Commission will decide the appeals of thirteen potential new public charter schools who all were previously denied by their local school boards.

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State Education, State Government Sky Arnold State Education, State Government Sky Arnold

Report: Tennessee's inflation-adjusted K-12 school spending increases lower than most states

Tennessee’s per-pupil spending on K-12 public school students, amongst the lowest in the country, increased an inflation-adjusted 18% from 2002 to 2020 while its student population grew 13%, according to a new study from the Reason Foundation.The study looked at spending increases across the country, where spending per student increased $3,211 per student, or 25%. In Tennessee, the raw data showed that the 18% increase amounted to $1,704 in inflation-adjusted spending per student.

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