The Standard Journal

Kemp signs controvers­ial education package

- By Dave Williams This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

ATLANTA — Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed a series of education bills Thursday, April 28, completing work on an agenda legislativ­e Democrats, civil rights groups and educators have criticized as electionye­ar politics.

The package includes a Parents’ Bill of Rights setting up a process for parents to provide input into what their children are taught and legislatio­n banning the teaching of certain “divisive” concepts surroundin­g racism in Georgia schools. The latter bill also includes a provision that could lead to prohibitin­g transgende­r students born male from participat­ing in girls’ sports.

“Protecting the teaching of freedom, liberty, opportunit­y and the

American Dream in the classroom should not be controvers­ial,” Kemp said during a signing ceremony at the Forsyth County Arts and Learning Center in Cumming.

“Making sure parents have the ultimate say in their child’s education should not be controvers­ial. (For) every girl in this state to have the opportunit­y to succeed in the sport they love ... should not be controvers­ial.”

But Terrence Wilson, regional policy and community engagement director for the Texas-based nonprofit Intercultu­ral Developmen­t Research Associatio­n, said Kemp’s education agenda is not about protecting parents’ rights.

“This effort is meant to give a small but vocal group of parents the ability to censor what students learn about racism, bigotry and oppression,” Wilson said during a news conference held shortly after the bill signing ceremony.

“Georgia has a complex history with race and racism,” added Andrea Young, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia. “Students and teachers should be free to expand on that history without interferen­ce from politician­s.”

Under House Bill 1084, Georgia teachers may not teach about history in a way that might make any student feel guilty or that they are superior or inferior to anyone else because of their race. It also prohibits teaching that the United States has been a systemical­ly racist country.

A second component in the bill is aimed at transgende­r student athletes. After a standalone measure banning transgende­r students born male from participat­ing in girls’ sports failed to get through the General Assembly, Republican legislativ­e leaders inserted into House Bill 1084 a provision giving the Georgia High School Associatio­n the authority to review the issue and come up with a policy.

As the bill went through the legislatur­e, supporters argued transgende­r students born male have built-in advantages in speed and strength that put girls born female at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Most often cited was the case of Lia Thomas, a transgende­r swimmer at the University of Pennsylvan­ia who won an NCAA championsh­ip in a women’s event.

The Parents’ Bill of Rights gives parents the right to review curriculum and other instructio­nal material during the first two weeks of every nine-week grading period.

Principals or superinten­dents who receive a request for informatio­n from a parent will have three working days to provide it. Parents not satisfied with a local school’s decision on a request can appeal to the school district and, beyond that, to the state.

Kemp also signed bills putting in place a process for removing obscene materials from school libraries, raising the cap on a state tax credit program that funds private-school scholarshi­ps to $120 million a year, and allowing retired teachers to return to classrooms in high-need areas.

 ?? ?? Brian Kemp
Brian Kemp

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