Our state campaigns across the country are prioritizing getting information on student progress and learning loss into the hands of parents and ensuring that families have as many educational options as possible for an unprecedented school year.
As mentioned above, the
CarolinaCAN team
earned a major victory last week when the state legislature passed a sweeping Covid-19 relief package that vastly expands school choice options for students and parents--especially special needs and low-income students--in the boldest move yet that we've seen to
#FundEverything.
In Colorado, the
TEN team is leveraging their
180 Days of Learning web portal to provide parents with information on what students for each grade level are expected to know by the end of the year, allowing them to determine the extent to which their children are receiving appropriate instruction.
Other states campaigns, including
GeorgiaCAN,
HawaiiKidsCAN and
TennesseeCAN, are focused on ensuring that diagnostics are provided as students are welcomed back into school. In
Hawaii, executive director David Miyashiro testified before the board on the importance of early assessment. The team at
HawaiiKidsCAN also started a petition--
one that received local press coverage--for the state to provide $10 million in direct support for families with school-age children.
In
Tennessee, the team achieved an important victory when the governor included
diagnostics in the Schoolnet school assessment system, something the team
advocated for over the summer. Meanwhile in
Georgia, the team scored a big win when the Georgia Department of Education announced a plan to make
assessments available for all students this fall with immediate results to help inform instruction.
The
NewMexicoKidsCAN team is pushing both for fall assessments and for a requirement that schools meet with parents. They surveyed families, created an email
template for families to help reach out to their schools and provided families with the top
five questions to ask in those meetings.
The
GeorgiaCAN team worked with 450 parent advocates across the state to call on the governor to provide microgrants to students with special needs to ensure they have an appropriate learning environment. As one Cobb County mother who is part of
GeorgiaCAN’s parent advocacy group wrote in the
Atlanta Journal Constitution: “We don’t have time to waste — kids are falling through the cracks.”