A Texas lawmaker has introduced a bill in the Texas House aimed at dismantling the Texas Education Agency (TEA) and ending the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) test.
House Bill 2657, filed by State Representative Andy Hopper, a Republican from Decatur, proposes to abolish the TEA and transfer its responsibilities to other state entities, particularly the State Board of Education.
The proposed legislation represents a significant shift in Texas’s educational system, specifically concerning the TEA’s oversight and the role of standardized testing in the state.
STAAR has been a key assessment tool in Texas, evaluating student performance in core subjects like reading and mathematics, but it has also been criticized for its impact on students and educators.
Critics argue that the test puts undue pressure on both groups and question its effectiveness in measuring educational outcomes.
House Bill 2657 outlines a plan to reassign many of the TEA’s duties to the State Board of Education, a body that would take on a more prominent role in managing Texas’s educational policies.
This proposed restructuring is aimed at decentralizing control and potentially offering local communities more influence in their educational systems.