Why are parents so mad in one of America鈥檚 best school districts?
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| Falls Church, Va.
If you鈥檇 asked Bonnie Myshrall a year ago who her school board representative was, she probably wouldn鈥檛 have been able to tell you. In the voting booth, she never thought twice about board candidates 鈥 she鈥檇 just follow her party鈥檚 sample ballot.听
鈥淵et here I am, firing off emails and starting a Facebook group,鈥 says Ms. Myshrall, a lawyer with a middle-school daughter enrolled in Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS), a district in northern Virginia.听
Last summer, as it became apparent that her daughter鈥檚 school would remain online-only due to the pandemic, Ms. Myshrall founded the 鈥淥penFCPS鈥 group to lobby for a return to in-person learning. While she and other parents agreed virtual learning made sense at first, they grew increasingly frustrated by what they saw as the district鈥檚 lack of urgency around getting kids back into classrooms, with board meetings often focused on things like renaming schools or implementing an electric school bus fleet.听
Why We Wrote This
Parents have long been a coveted political demographic. But the upheaval of the past year has turned many into passionate local activists, who say they will keep advocating long after the pandemic subsides.
鈥淭he Titanic is sinking, and they are rearranging the deck chairs,鈥 says Ms. Myshrall. The group is now gathering signatures to recall three board members. None of the three members responded to requests to be interviewed by the Monitor.
After the upheaval of the academic year, it鈥檚 perhaps not surprising that school boards across the country have become lightning rods for political debate. As Zoom classes dragged on through the fall and winter 鈥 and with many public schools, including those in Fairfax, even now not fully open 鈥 heated battles erupted over how to balance the safety of teachers and students against other concerns such as learning loss and mental health.
The clashes haven鈥檛 been confined to questions of reopening, either. Increasingly intense debates have opened up over educational content 鈥 particularly the anti-racist curricula that many schools implemented in the wake of last summer鈥檚 Black Lives Matter protests, emphasizing systemic racism and white privilege. A number of conservative states are passing measures banning the teaching of 鈥渃ritical race theory.鈥 Other states, like Virginia, are embroiled in fights over achievement and equity, including reevaluating gifted and talented programs and accelerated math tracks.
鈥淭he priorities are messed up,鈥 says Bethany Wagner, another Fairfax parent. 鈥淲hen your kids are learning from home, and you鈥檙e seeing issues and trying to reach out to the superintendent and school board members 鈥 and you鈥檙e not getting feedback, or the feedback is shallow 鈥 it makes you want to pay attention.鈥
And while it may be school boards in the crossfire now, history suggests the political impact could extend well beyond. Events that give rise to grassroots activism 鈥撀爌articularly when driven by strong emotion, as in the case of parents who feel their children are being negatively impacted 鈥 often generate broader, and more permanent, movements.
鈥淚f [people] get involved in one form of politics, it often spills over and they will be engaged in other forms of political activity,鈥 says David Campbell, an expert on civic engagement at Notre Dame University. The debate surrounding school segregation in the 1950s, he notes, primed many Americans for broader activism in the 1960s.听
鈥淭his is not the first time we have seen issues around public schools be flash points for controversy,鈥 says Professor Campbell. 鈥淵ou can think of school board politics as the gateway drug to greater involvement across the board.鈥
At Luther Jackson Middle School
At last week鈥檚 bi-monthly school board meeting at Fairfax鈥檚 Luther Jackson Middle School, hundreds of people showed up hours early with handmade signs concerning various issues. Some were demanding a full reopening of schools. Others were focused on the Biden administration鈥檚 American History and Civics Education , which has become caught up in a controversy over schools鈥 use of The New York Times鈥檚 1619 Project. Still others were upset about a made by one of the Fairfax board members, a young Muslim woman, about Israel鈥檚 鈥渃olonization鈥 of the Holy Land.听聽
Ironically, many Fairfax parents say they moved to the area because of the schools. Fairfax, the 11th largest school district in the country, is considered .听
鈥淢y husband was military, and at the end of our service we could have lived anywhere,鈥 says Saundra Davis, who has two sons in Fairfax schools. 鈥淚 live in a smaller house than we could have elsewhere so my kids can go to school in this district.鈥
That made it particularly upsetting for many parents to watch their children struggle this year with online learning.
鈥淗e was an early reader; he loves reading about history and science. But I see now that his writing has suffered,鈥 says Ashley, whose son is enrolled in a Fairfax district school, and who requested her last name not be used for fear of retribution from teachers. 鈥淪itting in his room all day disconnected was just so hard. ... His behavior has changed.鈥澛
Fairfax was also slower than other districts to reopen. Not until late April did the district begin offering four days of in-person learning a week, and for select students only. The move, parents noted, came months after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had concluded that .
FCPS has promised a return to five-day in-person instruction in the fall, and Megan McLaughlin, one of the school board鈥檚 longest-serving members, says she feels confident things will return to normal.
Still, she says she鈥檚 never seen anything like the level of parental involvement over the past few months. During her decade-plus of service, the board has wrestled with other hot-button issues, such as how to teach sex education. But never before has the debate at hand involved such a broad swath of parents or directly affected school employees.
鈥淭his was universal,鈥 says Ms. McLaughlin, who is not one of the members being targeted by the recall effort. 鈥淒ecisions at school board level suddenly become a key focal point of what鈥檚 going to happen with your child鈥檚 day to day [life].鈥
The impact is already showing up in more competitive school board elections. According to Ballotpedia鈥檚 analysis of the country鈥檚 , more than one-third of school board seats went unopposed, with an average of 1.9 candidates per seat. This year, almost two dozen of the country鈥檚 in five states have already had school board elections, and according to a Monitor analysis, these elections had an average of 2.9 candidates per seat. No seat went unopposed.听
Additionally, there have been 24 school board recall efforts against 64 board members thus far in 鈥 including the current effort in Fairfax.
That kind of engagement may very well make its way up the political food chain, says Professor Campbell.听
鈥淏ecause school board elections are low-profile races with low turnout, and the number of voters compared to a congressional district is small, it means a small group of dedicated activists can make a big difference 鈥 and that鈥檚 part of the appeal,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not uncommon for people running for Congress to describe how they first got involved in school board politics.鈥澛
Miranda Turner, a Democratic lawyer with young children, says she never would have considered running for the Arlington School Board in Virginia before this past year. But frustration over how her area prioritized opening businesses like shops and restaurants before schools led her to throw her hat into the ring.
鈥淲e are right outside D.C., and everyone here is so focused on national politics 鈥 but it鈥檚 the local elections that really have a much bigger impact on your daily life,鈥 she says.
Ms. Turner ended her bid this week after losing her party鈥檚 online caucus, but she has vowed to stay active, tweeting: 鈥淢y advocacy work doesn鈥檛 stop here.鈥
Fairfax County Parents Association
While education wars often play out along partisan lines at the national level, many at the local level insist they don鈥檛 see the issues as partisan at all.
The OpenFCPS group is officially nonpartisan and is chaired by one Republican and one Democrat. Along with the satisfaction that comes from feeling like they are advocating for their children, many members say the most rewarding part of their involvement has been working toward the same goal with parents who have different political beliefs.听
鈥淲hat I like about this group is that people share their thoughts, and I don鈥檛 agree with all of them, but I don鈥檛 feel pressure to 鈥榗ancel鈥 anyone,鈥 says Ms. Wagner. 鈥淚 like that we have a shared purpose.鈥
Many parents, such as Ms. Wagner and Ms. Davis, say they agree that racism is a problem in America, but they believe there is room for debate over how the issue should be taught, and what approaches are developmentally appropriate for young children. More to the point, they say public education faces more immediate problems 鈥 such as still-empty classrooms.
Ms. Myshrall says the OpenFCPS group 鈥減lans on staying around,鈥 at least until the board is up for reelection in 2023. They plan to rename themselves the Fairfax County Parents Association.
Anna LaNave is a mother of four, with two Fairfax County graduates and two still enrolled in the district, who describes herself as a pro-teacher, pro-union Democrat. She鈥檚 going to vote a 鈥渟traight education ticket鈥 this year.
鈥淧eople are realizing that we haven鈥檛 been paying attention and it鈥檚 coming back to bite us,鈥 says Ms. LaNave. 鈥淚 think this will affect how people vote in local elections for years to come.鈥澛