Honorable Hamp Atkinson Chairman Committee on Public Education House of Representatives Austin, Texas
Re: Length of school term as the term is used in section
Dear Chairman Atkinson:
You have requested our opinion regarding the meaning of `current term' as used in section
The board of trustees of any school district may suspend from the privileges of the schools any pupil found guilty of incorrigible conduct, but such suspension shall not extend beyond the current term of the school.
The State Board of Education has defined `school term' for accounting purposes as:
that period of time a school district is scheduled to be in operation including in-service training and classroom instruction. The period begins with the first day of scheduled in-service training as indicated in the school calendar and ends with the beginning of the subsequent school term.
On August 7, 1978, the Commissioner of Education rendered a decision which supports the application of the State Board's definition to section 21.301(a). In that case, Abbey v. Hardin-Jefferson Independent School Dist., Docket No. 77-R124, State Commissioner of Education, August 7, 1978, a student had been suspended in October, 1977, for the remainder of the school year. The student contended, inter alia, that such a suspension contravened the Education Code. The Commissioner, while holding that the particular suspension was improper, nevertheless stated:
The ordinary and usual interpretation by this agency of the word `term', in section
21.301 , Texas Education Code, is school year. The word `term' does not refer to either a semester or a quarter in that context. Id at 4.
Accordingly, the Commissioner held that, under section 21.301, a school district was entitled to suspend a student `for the remainder of the school year.' Id at 4.
It is well established that an administrative construction of an ambiguous statute should be followed unless it is clearly unreasonable. Calvert v. Kadane,
Very truly yours,
Mark White Attorney General of Texas
John W. Fainter, Jr. First Assistant Attorney General
Prepared by Rick Gilpin Assistant Attorney General
