State Sen. Leising provides information on new laws for back to school

Statewide—Many schools have started the new academic calendar, making this the first school year under the new state budget passed by the Indiana General Assembly. K-12 support was increased by $763 million, including a $20 million increase for school safety grants.

During the 2019 legislative session, lawmakers created measures that would increase school bus safety, expand workforce development opportunities, enhance security procedures in schools and strengthen students’ civics knowledge.

Here are some changes you can expect to see as students return to school.

  • Schools are now required to minimize bus stops that make children cross highways in high-speed areas.
  • High schools can replace standard high school courses with career and technical education and work-based courses, programs or experiences of similar subject matter and equal or greater rigor, helping more students graduate with real-world work experience.
  • Indiana public schools and accredited nonpublic schools must conduct at least one active-shooter drill each year.
  • Public schools will now administer the U.S. citizenship test as part of the required high school curriculum. Students are not required to pass the test, but it’s our hope this will help increase students’ awareness of how our country operates.