EducationNewsPolitics

Tennessee’s Lee Signs Amendment to Third-Grade Retention Law

By Jon Styf (The Center Square)

A bill to update Tennessee’s third-grade reading retention law has been signed by Governor Bill Lee.

Starting this year, the bill will update a law originally passed in 2021 where students must show proficiency in order to advance to the fourth grade.

Read about the original third grade retention law here.

A fiscal note on the bill states that 9,000 students will be retained each year that will amount to $12 million in increased tutoring for students in kindergarten through third grade. Of that, $4.5 million will be funded by the Tennessee Investment in Student Achievement, the state’s K-12 school funding formula.

If a student does not score proficient on the Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program test, the student could be retained. Up to one-third of the state’s third-graders might not qualify to advance, though the numbers are not certain until this year’s results are available May 19, 2023.

Senate Bill 300 allows a second state test to be used for students who are not deemed proficient by the TCAP results. If the student is in the 50th percentile or higher on that test, and are rated as “approaching” proficiency on TCAP, the student could advance on that basis.

There are exceptions to the rule for students with disabilities, students who have previously been retained and students with English as a second language. Students can also take a summer reading bridge camp – where they must have 90 percent attendance – and maintain a state-funded tutor during fourth grade to advance. Students can also re-take the TCAP test to advance.


Read more local news by clicking here.

Stay informed on what’s happening in Hardeman County by subscribing to Hatchie Press e-mail updates.

Do you have community news you’d like to share? E-mail us at news@hatchiepress.com.