Families, communities, and nations are stronger when parents are involved in the education of their children. However, many school districts seek to keep parents unaware of the school curriculum, budgets, and other materials used in teaching the children.
The
U.S. House of Representatives is attempting to give more rights to parents. On
Friday, the House passed the Parents Bill of Rights Act. The bill will most
likely go no where in the Senate or being signed by President Joe Biden. However,
it does show that Republicans want to help parents and children. The bill was
approved in the House by a vote of 213 to 208 after several amendment votes and
floor debate from both Democrats and Republicans.
Before
the November 2022 mid-term election, current Speaker of the House Kevin
McCarthy (R-California) and other House members made the commitment to support
the rights of parents in education, and the House vote showed that they were
serious. Joshua Lee explained why the Republicans passed the bill and what
would happen if the bill became law.
Republicans engaged on the issue of
parental involvement in schools after controversies erupted over the past few
years across the country over what children are taught in school. Democrats have
criticized the GOP over the issue, saying that they are turning classrooms into
political battlefields.
If the Parents Bill of Rights Act becomes
law, it would require schools to publicly post their curriculum, and would also
require a list of all books and other supplementary reading material in school
libraries to be made public.
School boards would be required to listen
to parents’ concerns and schools would need to facilitate a minimum of two
parent-teacher meetings a year. Additionally, schools would need to disclose
their expenses and revenues as well as alert parents to any violence at school
events, among other mandates.
A
few Republicans did not vote for the bill, claiming that they supported the
goal of the bill but not the means of bringing it about. They support giving
parents more control over the education of their children, but they support the
constitutional principle of separation of powers between the federal government
and state governments.
Even
though parents have a “God-given right to be involved in their children’s
education” as Representative Burgess Owens (R-Utah) said, giving more power to
the federal government is not according to the Constitution. In fact, anyone who
knows the Constitution knows that education is not mentioned in it. They also
know that the Constitution gives a limited list of powers to the federal
government and leaves everything else to the states or to the people
themselves.
Education
decisions should be made in the local school districts rather than by the
federal government. It is in the local area that parents can have the most
influence in the debate about education. If the local school boards are not
listening to the parents, then parents should band together to elect someone
who will listen to them. Parents should be involved in the education of their
children, and they can strengthen their family, community, and nation by doing
so.
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