Tennessee Home School Pioneer - by Rob Shearer
Excerpt Fall 2008 issue Home Educating Family Magazine
There are many heroes in the history of the modern homeschooling
movement. There were a number of educators, researchers
and philosophers who were critical of the structural horrors built
into “compulsory government factory schools.” John Holt, Ivan
Illich, and Raymond and Dorothy Moore deserve to be mentioned
prominently. But it was the action of parents who created
the modern homeschooling movement. Beginning in the early
1980s a small group of parents, against overwhelming odds,
created a new educational option for parents across the United
States. It was a national movement, but it was also a state-by-state
fight. In 1980, many states considered homeschooling to
be illegal and prosecuted parents who taught their children at
home under truancy laws. There were frightening arrests and
prosecutions in AL, TX, MI, and even here in TN that made
parents who were considering homeschooling pause to consider
the costs and the risks.
In Tennessee, a group of families organized
the Tennessee Home Education
Association in 1984. In 1985, they were
successful in getting a law through the legislature
(and signed by Governor Lamar
Alexander) that provided a legal means to
homeschool in Tennessee.
During the rest of the 1980s, local chapters
of THEA were established, and workshops,
seminars, and curriculum fairs were
started and the number of families homeschooling
grew quickly. In 1990, THEA
held a statewide Homeschool graduation
ceremony in Nashville – with five graduates.
In 1991, MTHEA held its first graduation
ceremony – with 21 graduates.
After 1984, the legislative battles in Tennessee
focused on families who wanted to
homeschool their students in grades 9-12.
The original homeschooling legislation required
a parent teaching a child in grades
9-12 to have a college degree – unless they
were granted a waiver by the State Commissioner
of Education. By 1994, only
one waiver had been granted – and dozens
of parents had been denied. That year, an
amendment to the homeschooling statute
was passed which allowed church-related
schools to enroll homeschool families in
grades 9-12 and eliminated the requirement
that a parent have a college degree.
During these years, a homeschooling pioneer
in Tennessee, Ron Scarlata, had established
both a church-related school (Family
Christian Academy) and a homeschool
curriculum supply company which served
thousands of families across the state.
But at the same time the passage of the
1994 amendments was granting new freedom
to homeschool students in grades
9-12, a new challenge had also appeared.
The Department of Education, losing its
efforts in the legislature, sought to impose
new requirements on homeschoolers
by pressuring the church-related schools
through their associations. One association
(TANAS) had announced new regulations
for its church-related schools in
1993 which were as onerous and invasive
as the law just amended by the legislature.
The new TANAS regulations would have
required annual testing, annual home visits,
and would have terminated the parents’
right to homeschool if the student
fell more than one grade level behind.
There was another threat to homeschoolers
as well. The Tennessee Department of
Education (and many of the local public
school systems) wanted the names of all
homeschool students in Tennessee. They wanted parents, and schools to be required
to sign up and they wanted umbrella
schools to be required to turn those names
over to the state. Given the history of Department
of Education, and local school
systems’ hostility to homeschoolers, many
homeschool families (and many church-related
schools) were reluctant to turn
over the names of all homeschoolers. The
Department of Education began pressuring
the church-related school associations
to force their member schools to turn over
the names of homeschoolers to the state.
Most associations did as the Department
wanted. A few did not, but the situation
was precarious.
Ron Scarlata, together with homeschooling
dads, Rob Shearer, David Jones, and
Lynn Ray formed the Tennessee Association
of Church Related Schools (TACRS)
to provide a safe haven for homeschoolers
and for church-related schools who were
registering homeschoolers. In 1995, TACRS explained it's founding principals:
Each of the existing organizations sees homeschooling
as somehow an adjunct, and,
if you will, a poor step-sister, to its more
traditional day-school programs. Each of
the existing organizations find itself representing
the interests of traditional private
day-schools, even where those interests diverge
from those of homeschoolers. Our
philosophical differences with each of the
existing organizations looms so large that
we find ourselves in conflict with them
over rules and regulations (however wellmeaning)
which stifl e and straight-jacket
homeschoolers rather than assist and support
them in educating their children.
Founding TACRS wasn’t enough by itself
to protect homeschooling. The organization
still had to be recognized by the State
of Tennessee as a legitimate association of
church-related schools.
It took two years, and numerous meetings
and trips to the legislature to secure
an amendment that recognized TACRS,
but Ron Scarlata never wavered – even though it
cost him personally a great deal of time
and money. In 1995, a bill was approved
in committee, but never made it any further.
Over the summer of 1995, Ron met
with each of the members of the joint
oversight committee on education to explain
TACRS to them and answer their
questions. Lynn Ray was instrumental in
persuading the Chairman of the House
Education Committee to sponsor the bill.
In February of 1996, Senate Bill 605,
sponsored by Sen. Tom Leatherwood
(R-Memphis) and House Bill 29, sponsored by Rep. Gene Davidson (D-Hendersonville) addded
TACRS to the list of organizations listed in statute whose
members are recognized as church-related schools.
The bill passed the House 94-1, and in the Senate on the
“consent calendar” without objection. The bill had passed
the Senate Education Committee on a vote of 9-0, being
supported even by the chairman of the committee, Senator
Andy Womack, who in the past, had been a critic of
homeschooling.
One of the significant consequences of the bill, for
the first time, homeschooling families and schools affiliated
with some non-traditional religious communities had
a way for their schools to be officially recognized by the
Tennessee Department of Education and local education
agencies.
Ron Scarlata was proud (deservedly so) to be able to announce
that “Because we believe that religious education is
a fundamental right of all citizens, we have been especially
concerned to offer associate membership to non-traditional
religious communities such as the Jehovah’s Witnesses and
the Amish and Mennonite communities.”
TACRS was different from the other organizations already
recognized in Tennessee Statutes in several respects. Unlike
the other organizations, whose focus is on traditional
day-school, classroom programs, the member schools
of TACRS have made it their primary mission to offer
“umbrella programs” for families who are educating their
children at home. Also unlike the other organizations, although
TACRS is an explicitly Christian organization, it
is not affiliated with any denomination. The statement of
faith required for membership consists of one sentence:
I/we declare that the leadership of our school is of good
moral character; and subscribes to the historic creeds of the
Christian church (the Apostle’s Creed, the Nicean Creed,
and the Creed of Chalcedon); and recognizes the authority
of the Scriptures in all matters of faith and practice.
The recognition of TACRS was an important milestone
in the fight to secure homeschooling freedoms in Tennessee.
TACRS has, at times, been the lone voice among the
private school community defending the rights of homeschoolers.
And Ron Scarlata, President of TACRS and founder of
Family Christian Academy is the man who made it happen.
Homeschoolers all across Tennessee are grateful to one of
our own pioneers, Ron Scarlata.
© 2008 All Rights Reserved,
Home Educating Family Magazine