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House committee passes measure to prevent additional skill tests for non-accredited diplomas

Rep. Tim Wesco (R- Osceola) authored HB 1348. He said the measure is necessary because some state employers require prospective employees without accredited diplomas to take skill tests —something their peers who have diplomas from accredited schools don’t have to do.
Rep. Tim Wesco (R- Osceola) authored HB 1348. He said the measure is necessary because some state employers require prospective employees without accredited diplomas to take skill tests —something their peers who have diplomas from accredited schools don’t have to do.

A bill concerning non-accredited, non-public high school diplomas received robust debate in the House Education Committee this week.

HB 1348 says employers and higher education institutions cannot impose additional skill tests on prospective students and employees who were homeschooled or received another form of schooling that resulted in them earning a non-accredited high school diploma.

Rep. Tim Wesco (R- Osceola) is the bill’s author. He said the measure is necessary because some state employers require prospective employees without accredited diplomas to take skill tests —something their peers who have diplomas from accredited schools don’t have to do. Wesco said that is discriminatory.

“If you want someone to prove their high school diploma really has meat to it, then require the same of everyone,” he said.

READ MORE: How do I follow Indiana’s legislative session? Here’s your guide to demystify the process

Democrats opposed the bill. Rep. Ed DeLaney (D-Indianapolis) said homeschool students aren’t required to meet the same standards as students in public schools, so additional skill tests aren’t unreasonable.

“You’re a high school graduate because somebody says you are. That’s really the end of the requirements here. That’s really what we’re down to,” he said. “I would think the homeschools would want to have their students take some kind of a test or some qualification so these doubts go away.”

The bill passed committee along party lines with Republicans in support and Democrats opposing it.

Kirsten is our education reporter. Contact her at  kadair@wfyi.org  or follow her on Twitter at  @kirsten_adair .

Kirsten Adair grew up in Greentown, Indiana and graduated from Butler University's College of Communication with a degree in journalism. Before coming to IPB News, Adair was a news reporter at The Kokomo Perspective and Logansport Pharos-Tribune in north-central Indiana. In her spare time, she enjoys hiking, reading, and cuddling with her two cats.