Bacon's Rebellion

Coming: Public Schools as Family Services Agencies

by James C. Sherlock

I have just reviewed the Return to School Planning Equity Audit published by the VDOE – Office of Equity & Community Engagement #EdEquityVA .  

I confess amazement.  

I simply had no idea how far the missions and functions of Virginia public schools have been stretched.  The Equity Audit shows that public schools are suffering from very rapid and severe mission creep.  

The Virginia Department of Education is very quickly working to turn the public school system into an integrated family social services organization.  No word on the reaction of the nine state agencies already tasked with such services.

Yet I find no evidence that anyone has identified the authorization for such a transition, the cost of the new missions, the conflict with the missions of other state agencies or whether the resources are available to accomplish the directives. 

That would be a great task for the Virginia Inspector General. And we know that won’t happen. The Governor would consider such a review “political,” like the parole board investigation. The IG would be fired.

But the view from the corridors of the VDOE appears utterly unconstrained by anything, including clarity or objective measurements of the outcomes they demand. The goals are open ended, subjective, vague and daunting.

The School Planning Equity Audit checklist has the following major components. I will provide samples only of the checklist items with each:

  1. Plan Development
  1. Cultural Competence – Does our plan
  1. Meeting Student Needs – Does our plan
  1. Student and Family Engagement – Does our plan
  1. Communications and Community Engagement – Does our plan
  1. Instruction – Does our plan
  1. Resource Allocation – Does our plan

As an aside, I cannot but be amused that they ask the plan to address teacher retention. That is easily my personal favorite. 

But I present the partial list above not to critique the value of any of these objectives but question why the Virginia Department of Education feels it has the authority, or even that it is a good idea, to extend the expanded social services missions to the schools.  

No voter has ever been presented that proposition, much less been asked to vote on it. I am unable to find a single instance of a legislator or Governor who ran on such a platform.  

Rather, the Governor has appointed a Board of Education and a Superintendent of Public Instruction who have decided, apparently on their own, that the public school system should be something else. And they have decided it must be reinvented with 30,000 fewer white teachers, with no concept of whence might come the minority teachers to replace them. 

They define what the schools should be as it occurs to them. I guess the Governor and General Assembly’s jobs are is to watch VDOE do it.

Is it too much to ask for the citizens to be advised when they are done?

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