Message From Claiborne Thornton, President THEA

THEA CAPITOL HILL RALLY AND RECEPTION DAY

TUESDAY, APRIL 8TH, 2008

by Lana Thornton, THEA



THE PRICE OF LIBERTY IS ETERNAL VIGILANCE

This morning, Tuesday, February 12th, at the request of state Senator Rusty Crowe of NE TN, Claiborne Thornton, President of THEA, testified before a sales tax sub-committee of our state Senate's Finance, Ways & Means Committee about granting tax-exempt status for certain educational materials for home schoolers.

Claiborne also participated in meetings on this topic in '07 with the Commissioner of Revenue at the request of Representatives Mike Bell and Delores Gresham as this issue was being examined from the House side of our state legislature.

WHAT IS THEA?

Founded in 1984, the Tennessee Home Education Association, THEA, like all of the state home school organizations across America, was founded by home educating families as the modern home schooling movement began. The common purpose of these organizations is to protect the rights of home schoolers and to promote and strengthen home education within each state.

As the modern home schooling movement burst on the American scene, a tremendous battle for the control of education and the rights of parents to home school erupted in every state across America. Our family struggled to understand the path we should walk in this turbulent time, so we sought counsel of national home school leaders. Claiborne was personally counseled and encouraged by home school pioneer Dr. Raymond Moore, that we must band together or be picked off one by one.

In every state including Tennessee, the battle for home school freedom was intensely focused on two fronts: the state legislature and the court room. We took Dr. Moore's counsel when he came to speak at the first ever Home School Conference in Tennessee and banded together to form the Tennessee Home Education Association, THEA. We joined together for the purpose of protecting our rights as parents to home educate.

THE BATTLE FOUGHT IN THE COURTS

This time period was in the early to mid 1980's, and there were five home schooling families in Tennessee who were charged with truancy with the parents facing jail time or in two instances, the parents had already spend time incarcerated for their home schooling. In some cases, the home schooling families had also been charged with abuse and neglect, which in Tennessee law can be tied to the truancy charge. With the abuse and neglect conviction, children can be removed from the home and placed in foster care. One of our families in Hamilton County charged with truancy, abuse and neglect sent their children across the state line to Georgia to hide them from the state.

THE BATTLE FOUGHT IN THE LEGISLATURE

With the ruling of two different Judges in these court cases, the legal battle moved from the court rooms of Tennessee to our state legislature. The Judges ruled that the Tennessee Compulsory Attendance Statute, which is the law regulating schooling in Tennessee, was "unconstitutionally vague" because it did not clearly define what constituted a private school. Home educators were quite logically asserting that their home schools were private schools. These rulings mandated that our state legislature rewrite the Compulsory Attendance Statue to clearly define private schools.

Tennessee home schoolers knew this was our God-given opportunity to impact our state lawmakers to include home education in our state law and clearly delineate the rights of parents to home school. The battle was intense. While we still had no home school law in Tennessee, brave families testified before our Senate Education Committee, explaining how they schooled their children, showing them their curriculum, their daily schedules, even test results. We called our legislators, wrote them, and traveled to the Capitol numerous times to meet individually with them. It was intense.

The Tennessee Department of Education and Tennessee Education Association (the teacher's union) did not want Tennessee law to give parents this freedom, so they worked very hard against us to require as much state regulation as possible. The current law was passed in spring of 1985. It is not the best law in America, but in Tennessee, we have freedom to home school within boundaries that are not too burdensome or restrictive and when we are truly home educating, we can do so without prosecution, without charges of truancy, threat of jail or loss of our children to the state.

THEA CAPITOL RALLY & RECEPTION DAY from 1985 to 2008

In March 1985, before the Tennessee home education law passed our state legislature and was signed into law by Gov. Lamar Alexander in May 1985, THEA hosted our first ever Rally Day at the Tennessee state Capitol. Our purpose was to inform our legislators of just what we were about in our home schooling. Claiborne said, "Let's bring the good report of home education to them," because our enemies had launched many terrible rumors about what we were about.

So THEA reserved the cafeteria in the Legislative Plaza for an evening presentation of home education. Families, with some trepidation as our law still did not allow home education, came from across the state to display, on the many tables, their curriculum, their science and 4-H exhibits and other school projects. Support groups provided the food, while home school young ladies served our legislators these home-made treats in a lovely reception. Families met their legislators and explained to them our unique style of education.

“THE RALLY" Don't Miss Tuesday, April 8th

Every year since, THEA has hosted a Day on Capitol Hill for the very same purpose, to inform our legislators of the benefits of home education, to "bring the good report of home education" to them. Now we rent the War Memorial Auditorium, WMA, and gather from all across Tennessee to celebrate home schooling.

This year, we'll gather on Tuesday, April 8th in the WMA on Capitol Hill for our program which begins at 8:45 a.m. and concludes at 11:00 a.m. The THEA Honor Band with student musicians from across the state will perform. Legislators will be honored. Outstanding Students, two from each of the THEA chapters, will be honored. HSLDA's new video explaining the Parental Rights Amendment to our national Constitution will be shown. Special speakers will address us, including the Junior and Senior first place winners of the Sara Lee Harris Worldview Oratory Contest.

PRIVATE APPOINTMENTS WITH YOUR TWO LAWMAKERS

One of the most important parts of our Rally Day is you -- our home school families—scheduling appointments with your state Senator and state Representative. We are still about "bringing the good report of home education to them." Your personal visit with your lawmakers is the best, most effective way to do this. Please do this! Call ahead, call now and make a 10-15 minute appointment with your two lawmakers. Dads and Moms, take your family, take your children. Tell the legislators that you wish to meet them as you'll be on Capitol Hill for Rally Day. Plan to bring them a letter from your children, thanking them for their service to our state. Take your camera and have a picture made with them. They are your representatives. They want to know you, their constituents. Go knowing that you represent home schoolers, knowing that you are continuing to protect our freedoms to home school in Tennessee. Here's a "Find Your Legislator" link; use your voter registration card to check your district number. Go to this link: http://www.legislature.state.tn.us, or call 615 -741-3011, the Legislative Information number.


COOKIE DELIVERY

The West Tennessee Home Education Association, WTHEA, the chapter of THEA between Memphis and Nashville, has for over a decade prepared 180 dozen cookies and sweet treats in our signature Red, White & Blue gift bags with the sticker "A Treat from Home" for you and your family to take to the staff of your lawmakers. Each bag will also have the four-color Rally Day program to be given to your lawmakers to read about our Rally and to see the pictures and bullet point bios of the Outstanding Students from their part of the state. WE NEED YOU to take these with you to the offices of your legislators. Plan to take these when you visit them for your appointments. Pick them up at the COOKIE tables before you go to your appointments. Dads and Moms, bring your children, visit your legislators, represent Tennessee home educators and count this a great civics lesson for your children!

DISPLAY TABLES

Like almost all groups which lobby our state lawmakers, we reserve the hallway space along the walls in the Legislative Plaza for you to bring your student's Science Projects, Sports and Mock Trial trophies, 4-H exhibits, support group tri-folds. All of these give a visual presentation to our lawmakers of the vibrancy and accomplishments of home educators -- they bring the good report of home education!

LEGISLATOR'S LUNCHEON RECEPTION

THEA serves all our legislators and their staff a luncheon on Rally Day. About 500 people go through our Reception line, manned by home school teens serving them a Tennessee lunch of Bar-B-Que, baked beans, potato salad, grasshopper bars (made by Rutherford County home school moms and daughters) and tea. While our legislators and their staff go through the Reception line, our student musicians entertain them with beautiful music. We have featured harp music, flutes, guitar, string players in large groups, solos, trios and quartets. All of these home educators are "bringing the good report of home education" as we join together to present our unique educational endeavors to our lawmakers.

SPEECH & DEBATE HIGHLIGHTED

Once again Rally Day will highlight two Speech and Debate activities sponsored by the Christian Communicators of Tennessee, CCT, THEA's sister organization. See

www.cctennessee.org and www.tnhea.org for more information.

STUDENT CONGRESS TOURNAMENT: The Davy Crockett Statesman's Debate Tournament

The Davy Crockett Statesman's Debate Tournament will begin on Monday, April 7th with two 3 & ½ hour sessions and conclude with the Final Round in the Senate Chamber on Capitol Hill on Tuesday afternoon, April 8th beginning at 1:00 after our Rally in the War Memorial Auditorium. For information about entering this Tournament, go to

www.cctennessee.org

If you are not participating as a student Senator, you are invited to come over to the Senate Chamber and observe the Student Congress from the upstairs gallery. You can come and go, but do so quietly.


SARA LEE HARRIS WORLDVIEW ORATORY CONTEST

Once again, THEA will award cash prizes for the 1st, 2nd & 3rd place winners of the Sara Lee Harris Worldview Oratory Contest in both the Junior and Senior Divisions. In the Junior Division the contest is an Apologetics Competition. The Senior Division is a Mars Hill Competition. For more information on these events, how to enter, details on the guidelines and criteria of these speeches, go to:

www.cctennessee.org and www.tnhea.org.

VOLUNTEER TO HELP

We need You! If you wish to help in some way to make this Day effective and powerful, please give Lana Thornton a call at 615-293-7140. If I can't take your call, please leave me a message with your phone number and I'll be sure to get back to you!

HOME SCHOOLERS OF TENNEESEE

Join together to bring the good report of home education to our lawmakers. By doing so we corporately bring a strong message to those who make our laws that home schooling is thriving in Tennessee, that the rights of parents must be protected and guaranteed by our state laws and we are here to hold our lawmakers accountable!

Make your appointments with your legislators now! See you on Tuesday, April 8th!!

THEA's FOUNDATIONAL PRINCIPLES

THEA is a volunteer organization of home schooling parents, who chose to accept no government funds and desire no government oversight of their teachers or curriculum.
THEA affirms the family is the basic government or institution in society.
THEA affirms the parents have the primary responsibility of educating their children.
THEA Chapters make every effort to bring the educational services as close to each family's home as possible, including curriculum fairs, workshops, training sessions and speakers for support groups.
THEA works to inform the home schooling community of legislative changes.
THEA Chapters use newsletters, E-Mails, faxes, and phone chains to keep you informed about home schooling.
THEA encourages the formation of support groups in geographic areas, around an activity, such as scouting, skating, 4H, etc., among church members, based on a curriculum approach, etc.
THEA encourages coordination among parents to facilitate the teaching of "speciality" subjects such as music, foreign languages, upper level math & sciences, etc.
THEA believes the parents may delegate the education to others while overseeing their children's education.
THEA Chapters across the State hold annual Home School graduation exercises to honor graduates and families.

The content within this site should not be deemed as legal advice. Please consult an attorney or other qualified legal counsel.
 Tennessee Home Education Association