Rep. Matt Woods, R-Jasper, stands in the Alabama House of Representatives on May 8, 2024 at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama. Woods sponsors a bill that would create a nontraditional high school diploma program. It passed the House unanimously on Feb. 25, 2025. (Brian Lyman/Alabama Reflector)
A bill that would create a nontraditional high school diploma program for people who have dropped out passed the Alabama House unanimously on Tuesday.
HB 266, sponsored by Rep. Matt Woods, R-Jasper, allows former students to enroll in a program to earn the equivalent of a high school diploma at 18 years old. Woods said the Restoring Educational Advancement of Completing High School Act expands the options for people who’ve dropped out to get back on track with their education.
“This bill addresses a segment of our population that’s falling between the cracks,” Woods said. “We believe that we can help them pursue their educational pathway.”
There is a nontraditional diploma option for adult education, but Woods said the minimum age is 19. He said his bill lowers the age to 18.
“The idea behind that is that a student who drops out of high school won’t have to wait as long before they can finish their high school diploma,” Woods said.
Although supportive of the bill, Rep. Laura Hall, D-Huntsville, said she wants to look into preventing high school withdrawals.
“At some point we’ve got to challenge those things that cause these young people to be at the point where they are dropping out of school,” Hall said.
Rep. Van Smith, R-Clanton, offered an amendment to allow students to enroll in the REACH program before they withdraw to expand their options.
“It will put in an opportunity for students to enroll in this program that Rep. Woods is presenting to us,” Smith said. “Then that individual will not be counted as a dropout.”
The amendment passed 103-0. The bill goes to the Alabama Senate.