The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» New rules on ‘learning pods,’ home schools pass muster,

Legislatur­e takes action on wide variety of education issues.

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com

In the final hours of this year’s legislativ­e session, Georgia lawmakers addressed home schooling, charter schools, teacher recruitmen­t and mandatory courses about vaping and human traffickin­g, among other educationa­l issues.

The bills were among the piles of legislativ­e paper pushed across the finish line Wednesday before this year’s General Assembly session came to an end. They go next to Gov. Brian Kemp, who will decide whether they become law.

The voting ended yearslong debate about home-schooled students when lawmakers passed Senate Bill 42. The legislatio­n, similar to bills introduced in prior years, would require such students’ neighborho­od schools to let them try out for the football team, the school musical or other extracurri­cular activities.

In exchange, they would have to take at least one course at the school. Another bill affecting students at home was born of the pandemic: Senate Bill 246, dubbed the “learning pod protection act,” prohibits regulation of homes and other informal places where parents send their kids to work and play together, whether before or after school or to attend classes online.

Other potential laws were meant to avert a teacher shortage as Baby Boomers retire and suc

ceeding generation­s eschew the low-paying profession. House Bill 32 would establish a $3,000 annual tax credit for up to 1,000 teachers who take a job in a low-performing or rural school. Last month, lawmakers approved the Kemp-backed Senate Bill 88, targeting myriad recruitmen­t, retention and training issues.

Charter schools found help in Senate Bill 59, which would give them more state funding while allowing participat­ion in the state health insurance program. Parents who find their children have unmet health-related needs in public school and want to move them to private school also found support earlier in March when lawmakers voted to expand eligibilit­y for the state’s only private school voucher program. For 14 years, it has been restricted to students with federally defined educationa­l disabiliti­es.

At-risk students were also extended a hand. Senate Bill 107 waives tuition and fees at state technical colleges for certain foster and adopted students and provides for in-state tuition at all state public colleges and universiti­es for qualifying homeless students. Senate Bill 204 would create a pilot program allowing high school students to earn a diploma while taking job training courses at a technical college.

Lawmakers also passed House Bill 287, which would require students starting in kindergart­en to learn about the risks of vaping and, starting in sixth grade, about human traffickin­g.

Meanwhile, some legislatio­n that seemed destined for passage fizzled, including an attempt to remove discipline counts from the state report card for schools and changes to the state program allowing tax-credited contributi­ons to a private school tuition subsidy program.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Keeping with a somewhat messy tradition, members of the state House of Representa­tives throw papers in the air after Sine Die, the ancient Latin declaratio­n that the 40-day session of the General Assembly had come to a close.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Keeping with a somewhat messy tradition, members of the state House of Representa­tives throw papers in the air after Sine Die, the ancient Latin declaratio­n that the 40-day session of the General Assembly had come to a close.

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