DB8 Speech & Debate Academy
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H.R. 537·Middle School Beginner

A Bill to Require a Music Class Option in Every Middle School

Rep. Bell (D-OH)

Every public middle school must offer at least one music elective.

Sec. 1 — Mandate

Public middle schools shall offer at least one music elective course each semester.

Sec. 2 — Funding

$55 million for instruments and teacher hiring.

Sec. 3 — Enforcement

State arts-education review.

Sec. 4 — Effective Date

Next school year.

Tournament Prep

Mechanical parts, sourced & timed

Use this as your pre-round checklist. Memorize the source citation. Time yourself to the delivery target.

Bill / Number
H.R. 537 — A Bill to Require a Music Class Option in Every Middle School
Funding source
$55M from ED arts education account.
Timeline
Next school year.
Realistic — most middle schools already have music programs.
Enforcing agency
State arts-education review; ED audit.
Yes — Title IV-A.
Penalty for non-compliance
Loss of arts grant share.
Source citation
NAMM Foundation / SAU (2020), 'The Benefits of Music Education' — nammfoundation.org.
Delivery time (read aloud)
50s
Strongest counter-argument

Federal mandates on electives reduce local programming flexibility.

Your pre-emptive answer

Requiring schools to *offer* an elective doesn't mandate enrollment — local flexibility is preserved. Brookings (2019) found music access correlates with 5% higher GPA among middle schoolers across income brackets.