Governor Rick Scott arrived at Millennia Elementary in Orlando amid hugs, hand shakes and high tech students, all showing off what they are learning in class with the help of laptops and smart boards.

The visit was a part of Florida Department of Education Commissioner Pam Stewart's, "Back to School Tour."

The students got a chance to show what they've learned with the help of technology. Gov. Scott told students they could be anything they wanted by focusing on their education.

But while the impromptu lesson was heating up inside, controversy was brewing outside the school.

State Senator Geraldine Thompson, D-Orlando, was outside. She was questioning the governor's use of technology in the Governor's mansion. A Tallahassee attorney is suing the governor, saying staff members and even the governor's wife were using private email accounts and private cell phones to solicit donations for a restoration project at the mansion. Thompson said those emails and phone records should be released, per Florida's Sunshine Law.

"Well we don't know because they have not been made public," Thompson said. "We don't know what people are being offered in exchange for the contribution they are making supposedly for the governor's mansion. And we don't know if it is really for the governor's mansion or if it is for the Scott re-election campaign. So I think to answer those questions and put everyone's mind at ease - those emails should be made public."

The governor said neither he nor his staff have done anything wrong.

"We always comply with the law," Scott said. "This is a trial lawyer who has filed baseless lawsuits in the past around the state and it will be thrown out."