Senate Education committee approves grading policy and other bills
Date Posted: 3/12/2013 | Author: Jennifer Mitchell, CAE
The Senate Education committee, which is meeting today, is currently in recess while the full Senate is in session. The committee will reconvene this afternoon to discuss a new testing-related bill, Senate Bill (SB) 1724, filed by committee Chairman Sen. Dan Patrick (R–Houston). Earlier this morning, the committee took votes on six bills previously heard. The first bill approved unanimously was SB 132 by Sen. Jane Nelson (R–Flower Mound), which clarifies the law giving teachers discretion to assign grades. ATPE strongly supported the bill, which is consistent with ATPE's member-approved ATPE Legislative Program. Also unanimously approved:
- SB 172 by Sen. John Carona (R–Dallas), dealing with diagnostic instruments for reading comprehension among kindergarten students. ATPE supported the bill.
- SB 401 by Sen. Eddie Lucio (D–Brownsville), which requires notification to parents if a counselor is not assigned to a public school campus. ATPE supported the bill.
- SB 715 by Lucio, which cleans up the Texas Education Code's references to school counselors for the sake of consistency. ATPE supported the bill.
- SB 521 by Sen. Ken Paxton (R–McKinney), which places restrictions on sex education instruction.
- SB 573 by Patrick, which permits private schools to join the University Interscholastic League (UIL) for all competitions except football and basketball. ATPE opposes this bill, as it is contrary to our Legislative Program.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
12/12/2025
Dec. 8 filing deadline sets the stage for 2026 elections
Now’s the time to confirm your voter registration and update it if necessary.
12/12/2025
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: Dec. 12, 2025
TEA announces plans to take over Lake Worth, Connally, and Beaumont ISDs. Plus: The ATPE Podcast is back with a refreshed format.
12/12/2025
From The Texas Tribune: Texas Education Agency taking over Lake Worth, Connally and Beaumont school districts
The three interventions come after the state’s education agency announced plans to take over Fort Worth ISD in October.