COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — A small group of lawmakers in South Carolina rekindled debate Tuesday on a bill that would limit how topics like race can be taught in public school K-12 classrooms.
Both the House and Senate passed bills on the topic in 2023. But the different versions sat dormant until a conference committee met to try to work out the differences.
The three House members and three senators adjourned after an hour after making it just four pages into a 16-page handout on the differences between the proposals. There is a deadline. The regular session ends Thursday, although since a version of the bill passed both chambers it could survive into special sessions in June.
The conference committee Tuesday didn’t even get to the biggest differences between the chambers.
The Senate removed a provision requiring teachers to post any changes to their plans on what they will teach and classroom materials three days before the lessons and removed another provision allowing parents to sue any district in the state they think is teaching prohibited concepts even while they follow the school district’s appeal process.
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
Supporting Women As They Play Greater Roles in Scientific, Technological InnovationShen Addresses Opening Ceremony of Third Eurasian Women's ForumShen Yueyue Stresses Fostering Virtue Through Education, Making More Contributions to Nurturing AllACWF Holds a Series of Activities to Promote Good Family Traditions of the RevolutionariesACWF Launches Publicity and Education Campaign for Children to Mark CPC CentenaryACWF Celebrates ChinaCCTF, Sinopec Launch 'Spring Bud Gas Station' in BeijingChina to keep sharing development fruits with global businesses: vice presidentShen Addresses Opening Ceremony of Third Eurasian Women's ForumChina Issues Action Plan to Advance Disability Prevention
3.1433s , 6497.8671875 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by South Carolina lawmakers rekindle bill limiting how topics like race are taught ,Culture Craft news portal