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Tennessee
Homeschooling Timeline
This
information is in reverse chronological order.
The following is provided for
educational purposes only. It is raw data, a work in progress and quotes are
gleaned from various sources. If you have additional information you’d like to
see added please forward hard copies of original documents or your own signed
testimony to TnHomeEd, 3929 Ivy Drive, Nashville, TN 37216.
Undated but before 1999:
From Mike Farris:
For some time, violence in schools—usually physical assault
experienced by their own child—has been a strong motivation for parents to
home-school. I defended a family in Tennessee who began home-schooling after the
blouse of the couple’s daughter was ripped open in her home-room class by a
relentless suitor who would not take no for an answer.
http://www.hslda.org/docs/news/washingtontimes/familytimes/199905040.asp
~~~
Teaching Home
April/May 1993 Page center pages
Tennessee/KY1 (page number)
The Teaching Home in Tennessee, Lana Thornton, Editor
House Education K-12 Sub-Committee votes against HB 595
By Claiborne [Thornton]
On March 10, 1993 HB595 failed in the K-12 Education
Subcommittee. It can be reconsidered this year. The voice vote was 4-5 with
Callicott, Tindell, Knight and Pinion voting yes; Winningham, Bell, Davis,
Peroulas and Whitson no: and Owenby not present. Davis spoke for a long time
before the vote, saying that he could not support the bill even if it required a
Masters Degree to home school at the high school level. He did support home
schooling in K-8.
Peroulas, Deberry and Davidson entered the room just before
the vote. This is an ominous sign potentially signaling a stacked deck, because
a committee’s Chairman, the Speaker ProTem and the Speaker are voting members of
each committee and sub-committee. Later Davidson said he would support the bill
in his committee and he asked me to talk with Legal Services evaluating the
conditions for reconsideration of HB595 by the K-12. Because it is a
subcommittee and a voice vote, Sally Sweeny said it can be reconsidered simply
by being placed on notice again by the sponsor. Peroulas said she would
reconsider; possibly vote to let the bill out of committee and vote against it
on the floor. She will talk to Wood this afternoon.
SENATE EDUCATION COMMITTEE VICE CHAIRMAN RECONSIDERS HOME SCHOOLING
By Claiborne
The meeting on March 10, 1993 with Senator Womack went
well. He favorably reviewed the suggestions we generated in response to his
requests and promised to contact me the first of next week with his response. He
had requested using testing in lieu of the request for a waiver and he was
interested in insuring that state funding was sent to the local education
agency. Also he suggested setting up a panel to review the requests for 9-12
waivers with six members, including 3 home schoolers and 3 from the DOE, TN
Higher Education Commission, the State Board of Education or others. This panel
would be empowered to consider and act on the requests for a waiver from the BA
requirement.
MARCH 2, 1993 THEA LOBBYING DAY: The Agony & The Ecstasy
Hundred of diligent & dedicated home school parents &
their lovely children ignored the pour rain & gloominess of Tuesday, March 2nd
& made their way to the Legislative Plaza in Nashville to lobby for our newest
version of legislation to remedy the high school delemma (sic) in TN’s law
regulating home schooling. Many left their homes in the wee hours of the morning
while dawn brought only slightly lighter shades of gray.
~~~
Dec
’92 – Jan ’93
Teaching Home Magazine: Under Legal News: page 29
By Michael Farris, President, Home School Legal Defense Association
Tennessee
Lawsuit Challenges Degree Requirement
HSLDA has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in Tennessee
challenging a state law requirement that home-school parents possess a
baccalaureate degree in order to teach their children who are in grades 9-12.
The lawsuit represents five families from various parts of
Tennessee who have been threatened with prosecution for not having baccalaureate
degrees after the state commissioner of education refused to grant any of them
exemptions of the college degree requirement. The case, Floyd v. Smith,
challenges, the degree requirement and also challenges the refusal by the state
commissioner to grant exemptions from the state law as the law itself allows.
The Crites v. Smith case [826 S W 2nd
____, 466 & 467—according to another source], which HSLDA unsuccessfully
litigated last year, made similar challenges in state court. The Tennessee Court
of Appeals voted 2-1 to uphold the law, and the Tennessee Supreme Court refused
to hear the case. This lack of success in the state courts prompted HSLDA to
file the Floyd lawsuit in federal court.
Please pray that the federal court judge, Thomas Hull,
would rule in favor of the home-school families in this case.
~~~
Dec ’92 – Jan ’93
edition of Teaching Home Magazine: pg. 31
Truancy Charges Stalk Families
Tennessee law requires that parents receive three days
written notice before the superintendent reports a child as truant to the
District Attorney. A school district in Gibson County did not follow this
procedure, and the first notice Gale and Lora Hartstuff received was in the form
of a court summons served by a deputy sheriff.
The Hartstuffs had notified their daughter’s high school
principal that they had decided not to send her to the public school this fall
but were enrolling her in New System School, Inc., a private religious school.
The Hartstuff’s considered the matter settled, and as far as they knew,
everything was fine. Until they were summoned to court, that is.
The Hartstuff immediately called HSLDA. Attorney DeWitt
Black contact the officials on behalf of the family and pointed out that not
only had the school officials failed to comply with the three-day notification
law, but in fact, their daughter was not truant because the New System School,
Inc., should qualify under Tennessee law as a church-related school. With the
assistance of local attorney, Jeff Smith, HSLDA was able to get the truancy
charges dismissed.
The Hartstuff are not alone. Other Tennessee families
face similar difficulties. Please support them with your prayers.
~~~
August 31, 1992:
August 31 — Tennessee:
HSLDA filed a civil rights suit challenging the college degree requirement for
parents home schooling high schoolers in Floyd v. Smith. This case
is still pending. (The name of this case has since been changed to Goggins
v. Smith.)
http://www.hslda.org/about/history/1992.asp
~~~
1985:
This year, home school
statutes or regulations were adopted in Arkansas, Florida, New Mexico, Oregon,
Tennessee, Washington, and Wyoming
http://www.hslda.org/about/history/1985.asp
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