Raise Your Hand Texas has a front-row seat to the Capitol. From our vantage point, public education policy issues have never been more important, and this is why we must make every session a public education session.
Tell the House to rein in STAAR
There is still time to let your House member know that our kids are more than one test on one day and encourage them to support accountability reform in HB 4402! If you have already participated in our call to action, post it on social media and text it to five friends.
1. HB 4402, the A-F Accountability Bill, to be Discussed Monday in House
HB 4402 was postponed until Monday, May 8. It was pulled from the agenda late Thursday night and not debated.
So far, HB 4402 has received over 9,000 messages of support from Raise Your Hand Texas advocates, showcasing the support for improving our state’s A-F campus and district A-F school accountability rating system.
The bill will accomplish the following:
Raise Your Hand Texas continues to believe our schools and our students are so much more than ONE TEST on ONE DAY. So this legislative session, let’s reimagine how we capture and assess performance in Texas schools beyond STAAR.
2. SB 1474 by Sen. Bettencourt Passes Senate with Special Education Voucher Provision
SB 1474, a $1.5 billion bill related to special education funding by Sen. Bettencourt, passed the Senate this week. It includes numerous provisions related to special education funding, including a voucher program for students participating in special education programs or those who are covered by a 504 plan.
Raise Your Hand believes voucher programs only fund a fraction of the actual cost to educate our special education students and will leave families without the federal protections that are required in public schools.
3. Instructional Materials and Curriculum Bill Passes House
The $730 million statewide curriculum and instructional materials bill passed the full House this week. The 55-page bill, HB 1605 by Rep. Buckley, details how parent portals for instructional materials, parent curriculum reviews, and the funding for state-approved instructional material would be implemented.
4. Upcoming Legislative Deadlines
With 25 days remaining in the 88th Legislative Session, there are specific deadlines fast approaching, including:
5. Upcoming Committee Meetings
The House Public Education Committee is scheduled to meet at 8:00 am on Tuesday, May 9 to hear numerous bills, including SB 9 (teacher workforce) by Sen. Creighton.
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