Saturday, August 2, 2014

PAA conference report: Part 1 | Parents Across America

PAA conference report: Part 1 | Parents Across America:



PAA conference report: Part 1



The Parents Across America 2014 Leadership Conference was an exciting, productive meeting. 20 of PAA’s chapter and affiliate leaders from 13 states all over the U.S. attended, discussed the issues, and offered their ideas for PAA action for the coming year.
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PAA leaders from across the U.S.
Early arrivals to the conference were able to spend most of the day Monday meeting with Congressmen and Senators on Capitol Hill, including some of their own representatives and members of the House and Senate education committees.
We focused on three priority issues:
► Reduce High-Stakes Testing
  • Congress should begin that project with comprehensive hearings that examine the experiences of students, parents and teachers, as well as the findings of education scholars.
  • Congress should scale back the number and frequency of standardized tests it requires and provide resources to expand high-quality alternative assessments.
►Strengthen Student Privacy Protections:
  • Congress should hold hearings on student privacy.
  • Congress should reverse changes in FERPA laws that undermine student privacy and parental control, and increase privacy safeguards.
►Replace Charter “Choice” with Real Parental Empowerment:
  • Congress should listen to parents and promote increased resources to all of our schools, a stronger parent voice in education policy, smaller class sizes, pre-K and full-day Kindergarten, experienced, supported teachers, a well-rounded curriculum, and evaluation systems that go beyond test scores.
  • Congress should reconsider its overemphasis on charter expansion and focus on proven strategies that strengthen public schools for all children.
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PAA co-founder Julie Woestehoff visits Congressman Bobby Scott’s office.
Tuesday morning, those who made Capitol Hill visits reported on the response of our elected officials to these issues.
We were met with opposition in some cases and in others we simply got “Thank you for your input,” but some Members were receptive of our ideas. We will continue to reach out to Congress and build on these meetings to strengthen our voices. We were very enthusiastic (and somewhat envious) of an issue notebook that members of our new Massachusetts affiliate, QUEST, had put together for their local
- See more at: http://parentsacrossamerica.org/paa-conference-report-part-1/