Rome News-Tribune

Bill: Public-school sports, clubs open to home-schoolers in Ga.

♦ The measure also removes discipline from a rating system for Georgia public schools.

- By Beau Evans

Home-school students in Georgia would be allowed to play sports and join clubs at public schools under legislatio­n that cleared the General Assembly Wednesday.

The bill, sponsored by Senate Rules Committee Chairman Jeff Mullis, R-chickamaug­a, lets home-schoolers participat­e in public-school extracurri­cular activities like athletics, band and theater as long as they fulfill certain academic requiremen­ts and reside in the same district as a particular school.

The measure also removes discipline from factoring into a five-star rating system for Georgia public schools and districts that assesses a school’s health, safety and attendance, which was the original intent of Mullis’ bill.

Allowing home-school students to access public-school activities comes after years of false starts in the state House of Representa­tives and aims to “bring the public school and the home school communitie­s together,” said Sen. Bruce Thompson, Rwhite, who pushed for the measure.

The state Senate passed the bill 35-18 nearly along party lines. It now heads to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk after clearing the House on Monday by a 149-13 vote.

The home-school measure was named after the late Dexter Mosely, a Dunwoody resident whose children were home-schooled athletes. It has previously been called the “Tim Tebow Act,” after the former University of Florida football start who was home-schooled.

Opponents warned adding home-school students in the mix with public schools could increase costs for local districts and put school administra­tors in a tough position of picking which home-schoolers to allow for their schools’ activities.

“I urge caution,” said Sen. Lester Jackson, D-savannah. “I think this bill still needs some work to be done.”

Beyond the home-school measure, backers of Mullis’ bill argued removing discipline for school climate ratings would encourage teachers to actually punish bad-acting students rather than shirking that responsibi­lity.

Many schools skip disciplini­ng students to avoid poor scores that could hurt future enrollment, supporters said.

Opponents argued scrapping the -discipline score would hollow out the school-climate rating system, clouding over public reporting on problemati­c schools and gutting a tool intended to hold schools accountabl­e for frequent behavioral issues among students.

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