Hillsdale’s American Classical Education officially appeals charter denials in Maury, Madison

A woman wearing a button supporting charter schools linked to Hillsdale College sits in front of a woman holding a sign opposing the schools during a meeting of the Tennessee Public Charter School Commission staff Sept. 14 in Murfreesboro, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)
A woman wearing a button supporting charter schools linked to Hillsdale College sits in front of a woman holding a sign opposing the schools during a meeting of the Tennessee Public Charter School Commission staff Sept. 14 in Murfreesboro, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey)

American Classical Education, a Hillsdale College-affiliated charter school chain, continued its critique of the school systems in Madison and Maury counties in its appeal to the Tennessee Public Charter School Commission.

In letters attached to the appeal applications, American Classical board member Dolores Gresham — a former state senator — called the Maury charter approval process "illegitimate" and criticized the Madison board for a "lack of integrity in the review process."

The appeals were filed last week.

(READ MORE: Hillsdale charter school resubmits applications in 2 Tennessee counties)

Both letters contain similar language and phrasing. There is also a spelling error where American Classical used its Madison County proposed school abbreviation on its Maury school application. On a previous application, American Classical used Montgomery County in places it meant to put Madison County.

The Lookout reached out to representatives from American Classical, but they did not respond by the time of publication.

Gresham's letters follow an escalation in American Classical's rhetoric toward the local charter school approval process. Following denials in July, American Classical's public relations firm, Rotunda Public Affairs, and Gresham sent news releases criticizing each school system's academic testing numbers.

(READ MORE: Hillsdale charter school approved for Rutherford County at restricted meeting)

The nine-member charter commission appointed by Gov. Bill Lee will have to hold at least one public hearing on each school before deciding whether to overturn the local school boards. The charter commission often, but does not always, overturns local denials.

Based on precedent, the charter commission will hold the hearings in September or October and decide later in the year.

Last year, school boards in Madison, Montgomery and Rutherford counties denied American Classical's charter applications. The decisions came after a video surfaced showing Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn saying teachers were trained in the "dumbest parts of the dumbest colleges" while on a stage with Lee.

(READ MORE: Hamilton County school board members sign letter condemning anti-teacher remarks by Hillsdale College president)

Lee linked Hillsdale College and American Classical Education during his 2022 State of State speech when he announced the charter network was coming to Tennessee.

In 2022, American Classical initially appealed the local denials but backed out of the process before the charter commission could make a ruling.

American Classical applied for charters in Madison, Maury, Montgomery, Robertson and Rutherford counties this year. The Rutherford school board was the only county to approve the school at the local level.

American Classical decided not to appeal the denials in Montgomery and Robertson.

Read more at TennesseeLookout.com.

Upcoming Events