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School boards have been in the news more this past year than ever before. More and more of the decisions impacting our world are in the hands of school board members, but the reality is this: Our nation’s school boards are in crisis. Some might go so far as to state that school boards are broken, but the truth is they are operating exactly as they were designed.
School boards were never set up to oversee school systems that adequately serve all students, and that fact is finally becoming glaringly obvious. The good news is that better school board governance is possible. The question is, will we do anything about it, or will we let local school boards become as dysfunctional as national politics and watch our kids suffer because of it?
School Board Partners is a national network of 53 diverse school board members from 41 cities representing over 3.9M students. We want things to change and know that they can.
For nearly 100 years, school boards have been an integral feature of the U.S. public education system. Arguably, [pullquote]school board members have more impact on the daily lives of students and their families than any other elected officials, yet we are the least professionalized.[/pullquote] School boards select and manage the superintendent and determine the goals and priorities of the district. We allocate resources and approve the budget, quite literally deciding which neighborhoods, which students, and which programs get more or less funding, altering lives with our decisions. We approve curriculum, and therefore decide matters such as whether students are taught the accurate history of our country and whether districts use a reading curriculum that actually works.
And now we are fighting a culture war and making front-line health and safety decisions in the midst of the worst international pandemic in 100 years.
But despite playing such an outsized role in people’s lives, school boards operate with fewer resources than any other elected position, on average. Compared to members of the city council, county commissioners, and state and federal representatives, school board members are paid the least (often nothing), have the smallest number of staff (usually zero), and receive almost no training or support once elected (other than how to maintain the status quo and not be sued).
One result is that school boards don’t reflect the students they serve. In fact, school boards are substantially whiter, older, wealthier, and more male than the constituents they serve. While about half of public school students are white, 78% of school board members are white, followed by a mere 10% African American/Black and 3% Hispanic or Latino.
Another result is that [pullquote]school boards typically lack the knowledge and skills to expertly govern institutions that are one of the largest employers, transportation companies, purchasers, and real estate owners in a community.[/pullquote] And now we are being co-opted to fight cultural and political wars that are distracting us from our primary job: ensuring that every student under our care receives a free, equal, and high-quality education that prepares them to be a thriving member of our communities and country — especially those students who depend on public schools the most.
So what is the answer? We believe it is fourfold.
All of this would cost just a tiny fraction of the funding currently spent on public education, which is failing millions of children and families a year.
There is no shortage of issues, arguments, or sides when it comes to our education system, and that's not likely to change. But most parents can agree on one thing — they want their children to receive an excellent education. Let’s not only demand but equip our local school board members to lead that so that one day, our country can finally deliver its promise of the American dream to all.
Carrie Douglass is co-founder and co-CEO of School Board Partners. She began her teaching career with the Jesuit Volunteer Corps as a volunteer teacher in a school serving one of the largest housing projects on the East Coast. She then helped transform an existing Boston high school into a Cristo Rey model as a teacher leader and was the Executive Director of an early childhood learning center. These years focused on students who have been traditionally underserved cemented her commitment to ensuring that every child, regardless of background or ZIP code, has the opportunity to attend a public school that will prepare them for college or a career. After completing her MBA, Carrie joined the Broad Residency in Urban Education and led the HR and talent departments at Aspire Public Schools for five years, during a period of growth from 16 to 34 schools. She then served as the Senior Director of Strategy and Innovation at the Rogers Family Foundation in Oakland where she developed one of the nation’s leading personalized learning pilots and managed $5 million in annual giving towards a high-quality seats plan. Carrie was a Managing Partner at Education Cities for five years, splitting her time between leading internal organizational strategy, operations and finance, and external leadership of areas including convening design, innovative schools, and data and accountability. In May 2017, Carrie was elected to the School Board for Bend-La Pine Schools in Oregon, where she currently serves as Board Chair. Carrie believes that the focus on charters vs. districts is a harmful distraction to the real problem of inequitable and low-quality schools. As a former unionized teacher who was backed by her local union during two campaigns and beyond, and who has also led a charter school network, Carrie knows that kids, parents and educators want the same thing – high-quality schools where all students and teachers can thrive. Carrie is also the co-founder and co-owner of two local companies – The Haven, a coworking space and business accelerator focused on entrepreneurs and small business owners who are underrepresented, and an industry-leading running race management company called Cascade Relays. Carrie graduated with a bachelor's in education from the University of Portland and holds a master's of business administration from Boston University. In addition to School Board, Carrie currently sits on the boards of Oregon RAIN, Cascade Relays Foundation, and TEDxBend.
The fight for educational equity has never been just about schools. The real North Star for this work is providing opportunities for each child to thrive into adulthood. This means that our advocacy...
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