Texarkana Gazette

DeVos to visit struggling South Carolina schools

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COLUMBIA, S.C.—U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos is visiting a South Carolina area known as the "Corridor of Shame" due to its underperfo­rming schools, making a trip to an area that's been held out as an example of the need to make reforms to the state's schools.

DeVos plans to travel on Thursday to Florence County, one of several dozen districts along Interstate 95 once bestowed the nickname "Corridor of Shame" because of their substandar­d schools.

Along with U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education Mitchell Zais—who headed up South Carolina's schools from 2011 to 2015—Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette and state Superinten­dent of Education Molly Spearman, DeVos will visit Timmonsvil­le Educationa­l Center, as well as the Southeaste­rn Institute of Manufactur­ing & Technology, which focuses on matching up workforce training programs with local industry needs.

They'll also be joined by U.S. Rep. Tom Rice, whose office told The Associated Press on Wednesday he's discussed the importance of technical schools with DeVos in the past and has been working to get her to the district to get a firsthand look at improvemen­ts.

The visit comes amid ongoing debate on how to improve South Carolina's education system, with legislativ­e leaders and the governor saying they're placing a priority on the issue this session. Gov. Henry McMaster, who has asked officials for a study of the decades-old formula that determines how districts are funded, pledged in his State of the State address last month that "the words 'Corridor of Shame' will be a distant memory."

The area was part of a decades-old lawsuit over education funding. In 2014, the state Supreme Court ruled that rural schools had violated the state Constituti­on by failing to provide each student with quality education. Last year, the high court dismissed the suit, voting 3-2 to close a legal case that examined whether the Legislatur­e provides enough money and support for poor and rural schools, ruling that officials had resolved the overarchin­g dispute.

In a 1999 ruling, justices coined the phrase "minimally adequate education," immediatel­y bothering many people who thought South Carolina should aspire to being more than adequate at something as important as public education.

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