South Carolina Department of Education

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South Carolina Department of Education
Seal of the South Carolina Department of Education.jpg
Seal of the South Carolina Department of Education
Department overview
Headquarters1429 Senate Street, Columbia, SC 29201
Annual budget$1,520,245,510[1]
Department executive
Websiteed.sc.gov

The South Carolina Department of Education is the state education agency of South Carolina. It is headquartered in Columbia at the Rutledge Building. The agency is overseen by an elected Superintendent of Education, currently Molly Spearman. Previous Superintendents have included Hugh S. Thompson, Mick Zais, Jim Rex, and Inez Tenenbaum.

Instructional Television[]

The Department of Education's Instructional Television (SCDE ITV) team, part of the South Carolina Office of eLearning,[2] works with South Carolina Educational Television (ETV) to provide resources and services to South Carolina public schools, including instructional television (ITV) for distance learning. ITV is responsible for the selection of video-based resources, the development of local programming to support the state's K–12 curriculum, and the scheduling of approved resources. ETV provides production and technical delivery services to support instructional programming. K-12 and professional development programming are now delivered both by broadcast through the ETV satellite system and online via StreamlineSC.[3] ITV has produced with ETV award-winning[which?] series including Project Discovery and Eye Wonder. South Carolina focused resources including Detective Bonz, the SC History Mystery and Idella Bodie's SC Women Series are utilized to support the curriculum.

Executive Department[]

The state superintendent of education is elected at-large and serves a term of four years.

Executive Department positions[]

  • Molly Spearman, State Superintendent
  • Betsy Carpentier, Deputy, Division of Data, Technology & Agency Operations
  • Cathy Hazelwood, Deputy and General Counsel, Division of Legal Affairs
  • John Payne, Deputy, Division of Federal Programs, Accountability & School Improvement
  • Virgie Chambers, Deputy, Division of District Operations & Support

Board of Education[]

The South Carolina State Board of Education is composed of one representative from each of the sixteen South Carolina Judicial Circuit Courts. County representatives for each circuit are responsible for electing their circuit's board representative whose term ends after four consecutive years. Any person who is a registered elector in the State and who has taken the oath of office as defined by the Constitution of South Carolina is eligible for board membership. [4]

South Carolina State Board of Education Members[5]
Name Area End of Term
Mr. Micheal Brenan Chair Serves at will of the governor
Dr. Kristi V. Woodall Chair-Elect, 16th Circuit (York, Union) December 31, 2022
Jon Butzon 1st Circuit (Calhoun, Dorchester, Orangeburg) December 31, 2021
Crystal F. Stepleton 2nd Circuit (Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell) December 31, 2023
Dr. Shawn Johnson 3rd Circuit (Clarendon, Lee, Sumter, Williamsburg) December 31, 2023
Cathy D. Chapman 4th Circuit (Chesterfield, Darlington, Dillon, Marlboro) December 31, 2022
Dr. Tracy N. West 5th Circuit (Kershaw, Richland) December 31, 2020
Dr. J. R. Green 6th Circuit (Chester, Fairfield, Lancaster) December 31, 2021
Carl S. Hinze 7th Circuit (Spartanburg, Cherokee) December 31, 2022
Dr. Cynthia Downs 8th Circuit (Abbeville, Greenwood, Laurens, Newberry) December 31, 2021
Lawerence Kobrovsky 9th Circuit (Berkeley, Charleston) December 31, 2022
Mrs. Debby A. Howard 10th Circuit (Anderson, Oconee) December 31, 2020
J. Steven English 11th Circuit (Edgefield, Lexington, McCormick, Saluda) December 31, 2022
Jean W. Pearson 12th Circuit (Florence, Marion) December 31, 2021
David F. Whittemore, Jr. 13th Circuit (Greenville, Pickens) December 31, 2019
Valaree C. Smith 14th Circuit (Allendale, Beaufort, Colleton, Hampton, Jasper) December 31, 2020
Alan Walters 15th Circuit (Georgetown, Horry) December 31, 2023

Superintendents[]

Superintendents serve 4-year terms. They used to serve 2-year terms.

  • Molly M. Spearman
  • Mick Zais (2011–2015)
  • Jim Rex (2007–2010)
  • Inez M. Tenenbaum
  • [6]
  • Charlie G. Williams (1979–1991)[7]
  • [8]
  • Jesse T. Anderson
  • James H. Hope
  • (1908–1922)[9]
  • Oscar B. Martin
  • John J. McMahan
  • (1890–1898)
  • (1886–1890)
  • Asbury Coward
  • Hugh S. Thompson (1876 – December 1, 1882)[10]
  • (blocked from taking office after Democrats took control of state government post-Reconstruction)
  • Justus K. Jillson (1868–1876)

References[]

  1. ^ "Fiscal Year 2019 - 2020 Financial Requirements". ed.sc.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
  2. ^ http://ed.sc.gov/agency/standards-and-larning/e-learning/
  3. ^ "South Carolina ETV". South Carolina ETV.
  4. ^ "Code of Laws - Title 59 - Chapter 5 - State Board Of Education". www.scstatehouse.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-25.
  5. ^ "State Board Members Information and Biographies - South Carolina Department of Education - 2/24/20 2:49 PM". ed.sc.gov. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
  6. ^ John E. Swearingen
  7. ^ https://ed.sc.gov/newsroom/former-state-superintendents-of-education/charlie-g-williams/
  8. ^ "Busbee, Cyril B."
  9. ^ https://ed.sc.gov/newsroom/former-state-superintendents-of-education/john-e-swearingen/
  10. ^ https://ed.sc.gov/newsroom/former-state-superintendents-of-education/hugh-s-thompson/

External links[]

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