Reps. Stefanik & Foxx: Dems want to control your kid’s education. We’re putting parents in the driver’s seat Democrats are on the side of the school bureaucracy instead of students

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/democrats-kids-education-parents-rep-elise-stefanik-rep-virginia-foxx

When Virginia gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe stated, “I don’t think parents should be telling schools what they should teach,” it wasn’t a mere slip of the tongue during a heated debate.

Just days later, Education Secretary Miguel Cardona refused to accept that parents should be the primary stakeholder in determining educational programing for their children.

And last week, in an unprecedented move, the Department of Justice directed the FBI to investigate and prosecute concerned parents at school board meetings, without citing even one bit of evidence that these alleged “threats” are beyond the capacity of local law enforcement. Nor did the DOJ disclose that Attorney General Garland’s family has a profit interest in marinating the presence of racist theories in schools.

It is a naked ploy to suppress parental dissent.

These actions have made clear that today’s Democrat Party is on the side of the school bureaucracy instead of students and families.

Democrats seem to believe that America’s schools and schoolchildren are better off with parents on the sidelines – a position that is dangerously detached from reality. It also reveals just how far the Left will go in pursuit of government control over every aspect of American life.

The deep frustration we are seeing at school board meetings is the expression of parents’ unsatisfied with the direction of their children’s education, while simultaneously aware that they are left with no other options.

We know that parents are the primary stakeholder in their children’s education. Instead of silencing them or classifying them as “domestic terrorists,” we need to elevate their voices and protect their right to be at the center of their child’s educational decision-making.

The past year and a half have provided parents an unprecedented window into their children’s education. With virtual classrooms in our homes, parents across the country saw the tireless work of many of our nation’s educators striving to keep students on track. They also saw instances when students were left behind or disconnected from their education.

It’s no surprise we’ve seen an uptick in parental engagement. Parents are right to be concerned when they see their kids taught radical ideologies, forced to remain masked and distanced from peers, or exposed to instructional materials they deem inappropriate.

Elected and other school officials should build upon this upswell in awareness and engagement and embrace parents taking a more active role in the education of their children. Decades of research have shown that parental involvement, regardless of socioeconomic status or background, has a strong impact on student achievement and long-term success. Knowing that, good educators will be the first to tell you how skills gained in the classroom need to be reinforced at home, and that learning doesn’t stop when the final bell rings.

And in fact, under the federal law we worked to reform, schools that accept the over $16 billion in annual federal taxpayer assistance through the Title I program are obliged to seek parental feedback and participation.

Section 1116 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act requires schools to have a parent and family engagement policy to continually involve parents in planning and design of the school’s programs. Specifically, schools are to provide parents a description and explanation of the curriculum in use, and opportunities for regular meetings to formulate suggestions and participate in decisions relating to the education of their children.

In short, Mr. McAuliffe, parents have every right to engage with schools about what is taught. And schools must be listening.

This often-overlooked provision could serve as a vital counterweight to misguided efforts to centralize our education system; better implementation of these requirements could refocus schools on actively engaging with their most invested constituency.

Yet we are unable to answer the simple question: are schools effectively providing this base level of parental engagement? More importantly, are parents aware of their rights to know what their children are being taught, and to provide their feedback on what and how their children should be learning?

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