Lawmakers in Texas have passed a bill that could allow chaplains to work in public schools as soon as the 2023-24 academic year. 

Texas House members passed Senate Bill 763 on Monday which will permit school districts to hire chaplains. Unlike school counselors in the state who must have master’s degrees and two years of classroom teaching experience, the chaplains are not required to be certified by the State Board for Educator Certification.

Chaplains, however, must pass a background check, be endorsed by a religious organization and must have some training to meet the Department of Defense chaplain standards.

A chaplain is a certified clergy member who offers spiritual support typically in non-religious settings outside of a church. A school chaplain may be available to counsel and guide students and staff. A chaplain may even lead a prayer, a service, or even teach classes depending on the school.

The chaplain passage in Texas comes amid an ongoing debate nationwide on the use of religion in public schools. A 2019 Pew Research Center survey said some forms of religious expression are relatively common in public schools.

Student scores sufferingUS history, civics scores drop for nation’s 8th graders. What experts say is to blame.

‘A moment of truth in U.S. education’McCarthy budget would slash 60,000 teachers, ‘undermine education,’ Biden administration says

Concerns about the Texas chaplain school bill raised along political party lines

Many Texas Republican legislators strongly favored the chaplain in schools bill as objecting Democratic lawmakers preferred the measure go to GOP Gov. Greg Abbott, according to the Religion News Service. The vote fell along party lines, with 89 members voting in favor and 58 voting in opposition.