© 2026. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

New Indiana law expands religious education time, relaxes STEM licensing, shortens bullying alerts

One of the provisions in a new Indiana law will relax STEM teacher licensing requirements.
One of the provisions in a new Indiana law will relax STEM teacher licensing requirements.

High school students will be able to leave school for longer periods to receive religious instruction under legislation passed by Indiana lawmakers.

SEA 255 also creates additional licensing routes for STEM teachers and shortens the window in which schools must notify parents about bullying.

The bill lets high school students leave school for religious instruction each week for an amount of time equal to one elective course. The current cap is 120 minutes a week.

Sen. Spencer Deery (R-West Lafayette) is the bill’s author. He said the change will reduce the amount of class time students miss  for religious instruction.

But the bill’s opponents say increasing the amount of time students can leave school automatically means less instruction time.

The measure also allows anyone who holds a bachelor’s degree in science, technology, engineering or mathematics and has completed at least nine education credits to earn an initial practitioner teaching license if they pass a knowledge test in their specialty.

Additionally, schools must alert parents about bullying investigations by the end of the next school day once they’re aware of the incident.

Read more:  Kids suffer amid Indiana’s flawed system to measure, address school bullying

Stay in touch: sign up for  the Indiana Two-Way  by texting "Indiana" to 765-275-1120.

Tags
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.