Worthy bills were filed this session--bills that that would get rid of the third-grade reading test (IREAD), increase charter transparency and accountability, and increase teacher pay. Those bills did not get heard by committee. However, in response to the Red for Ed activism, legislators are moving to decouple teacher evaluations from test scores and to hold schools and districts harmless from the harm imposed on them by a poorly made state standardized test, ILEARN. Our lobbyist Joel Hand explains: Starting on Monday, most bills that are still alive will switch from their chamber of origin to the opposite chamber (House to Senate or Senate to House). All bills get assigned to a committee in the second chamber and go through the full committee hearing process just as they did in their chamber of origin. Please contact education committee members (contact info is given at the bottom of this post) as well as your own state senator or representative about the following bills. If you don't know who they are, you can find your reps here. This is not a comprehensive list; there are other bills to be concerned about. But it's a place to start. OPPOSE House Bill 1003 (to be heard by the Senate Education Committee on Feb. 12), among other things, would let a school or group of schools apply to the State Board to waive compliance with certain statutes or rules, including on restraint and seclusion, bullying prevention, suicide awareness, discipline policy, and training on child abuse and neglect. We oppose this part of the bill. Message: Let the study committee established by the bill do its work and make recommendations about how to reduce the administrative burden on schools. Statutes should apply equally to all. It’s not transparent to have exceptions to the rules for some. That undermines the whole idea of a system of common schools. Please amend House Bill 1003 to remove the part that would enable a school or group of schools to apply for a waiver to some state statutes. Address to: Senate Education Committee and/or your state senator ------------ OPPOSE House Bill 1066 (to be heard by the Senate Education Committee on Feb. 12). We oppose the part of this bill that would extend voucher eligibility to foster children. Message: We spent $161 million on the voucher program last year. This program is draining funds from the public schools that most foster children attend. Also, most foster children already are eligible for vouchers through income guidelines. We are losing public school teachers, and enrollment in Indiana’s teacher training programs dropped by 55% between 2010 and 2018. Don’t add another path toward a voucher. Eight paths is enough. Please remove the vouchers-for-foster-children provision in House Bill 1066. Address to: Senate Education Committee and/or your state senator ------------ OPPOSE House Bill 1153. Provides that the governor’s workforce cabinet shall make a strategic plan to align education policy with workforce training and employer needs. Message: While we all want students to be prepared for jobs, education should be much more than job training. Education should develop our kids’ potential in many directions--including as citizens, scientists, and artists. It should be designed by people who are knowledgeable about child development--educators. The needs of Indiana’s employers should not dictate the education of our children. Vote no on House Bill 1153. Address to: Senate Education Committee and/or your state senator and Governor Holcomb ------------ SUPPORT HB 1002. Removes the requirement that teacher evaluations be based in part on student test scores. Message: Across all school types, test scores reflect family income. Evaluating teachers and schools according to test scores punishes those who serve students in poverty. It also pressures teachers to teach to the test, narrowing the curriculum and discouraging creative and innovative educators from persisting in the profession. Vote yes on House Bill 1002--and don’t stop there. Next year, get rid of the punitive, test-score-based A-F system for grading schools. Address to: Senate Education Committee and/or your state senator and Governor Holcomb ------------ Senate Committee on Education and Career Development members: Chair: Senator Raatz, 317-233-0930, [email protected], Crane, 317-232-0084, [email protected], Buchanan, 317-234-9426, [email protected] Donato, 317-234-9488, [email protected] Freeman, 317-232-9400, [email protected] Kruse, 800-382-9467, [email protected] Leising, 317-232-9493, [email protected] Rogers, 317-234-9443, [email protected] Spartz, 317-232-9400, [email protected] Melton, 317-232-9491, [email protected] Mrvan, 317-232-9847, [email protected] Niezgodski, 317-232-9491, [email protected] Stoops, 317-232-9532, [email protected] House Committee on Education members: Chair: Representative Behning, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Cook, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Burton, 800-382-9841 [email protected] Clere, 800-382-9841, [email protected] DeVon, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Goodrich, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Jordan, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Lucas, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Thompson, 800-382-9841, [email protected] Smith, 800-382-9842, [email protected]; DeLaney, 800-382-9842, [email protected] Klinker, 800-382-9842, [email protected] Pfaff, 800-382-9842, [email protected] Mailing address for Governor Holcomb and state senators and representatives: Indiana Statehouse 200 W. Washington Street Indianapolis, IN 46204-2786 Thank you for your attention to education bills in this fast-paced short session! --Jenny Robinson and Keri Miksza Comments are closed.
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