Commissioner plans to implement A–F school rating system
Date Posted: 4/02/2013 | Author: Jennifer Mitchell, CAE
Commissioner of Education Michael Williams announced this morning that he does not need the Legislature’s authority to implement an A–F rating system for public schools and that he plans to do just that in the coming weeks. An A–F rating system is included in the broad education reforms of Public Education Committee Chairman Rep. Jimmie Don Aycock’s House Bill (HB) 5. During last week’s debate on the bill, ATPE supported amendments to remove the provision that calls for rating schools using A–F letter grades because we believe labeling struggling schools as “failures” is harmful to students. In fact, it was the only major point of contention in the bill, which ATPE otherwise supports. However, the provision survived and HB 5 was approved almost unanimously. The Senate is considering similar legislation that also calls for grading schools with A-F letter grades. Williams appeared before the Senate Education Committee this morning and said that he will bypass legislative negotiations on the bills and simply order the agency to implement the new rating system, which will go into effect in 2014. Stay tuned for more details as they become available. How do you think an A–F rating would affect your school? Let us know in the comments.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
05/27/2026
2026 Texas primary runoff results
The Texas primary runoffs received low voter turnout, despite several statewide races on the ballot and a high-profile U.S. Senate race in the Republican primary. ATPE’s Teach the Vote breaks down the results.
05/22/2026
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: May 22, 2026
Share your opinions on compensation and special education with ATPE in preparation for the next House Public Education Committee interim hearing.
05/21/2026
SBEC holds special called meeting to discuss educator misconduct
TEA Inspector General Levi Fuller unveiled the new Educator Misconduct Dashboard.