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Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: September 24, 2012
Sen. David Holt
Senator David Holt to Introduce ‘Parent Trigger’
Legislation
Senator David
Holt, R-Oklahoma City, announced that he would file legislation
for the 2013 session that will empower parents to force positive
changes in chronically low-performing schools. This so-called “parent
trigger” law is depicted in “Won’t Back Down”
- a major motion picture opening this Friday, September 28th.
A parent trigger allows parents at chronically low-performing schools
to gather signatures and demand positive changes. If 51 percent
of parents whose children attend a chronically low-performing school
sign a petition, the parents may demand that the district transform
the school. Those changes could include new leadership or staff
at the school, or a transition into a charter school, which would
provide the flexibility the school needs to improve.
“As a rule, I think local control of education is best, and
there’s nothing more localized than the parents at a neighborhood
school,” Holt said. “The parent trigger model isn’t
going to work in every situation, and it’s only an option
where everything else has probably already failed. But I think there’s
something inspiring about giving parents who care a tool they can
use to fundamentally change the failed school that is attempting
to educate their children.”
The concept of a parent trigger law is depicted in a new major motion
picture – “Won’t Back Down” – to be
released this Friday. The movie stars Maggie Gyllenhaal, Holly Hunter,
Viola Davis, Ving Rhames and Rosie Perez. In the film, the characters
played by Gyllenhaal and Davis fight to get the signatures necessary
to improve the school their children attend. The movie is expected
to be one of the most impactful considerations of modern education
challenges since the 2010 documentary “Waiting for ‘Superman’”.
Like many recent education reforms that empower parents and students,
parent trigger laws have enjoyed nationwide bipartisan support and
have been adopted in some of the nation’s most conservative
and liberal states, including Texas and California. Holt will spend
the rest of the interim working with interested parties to draft
a parent trigger bill that meets Oklahoma’s needs, and will
file the bill prior to the 2013 legislative session.
“I think everyone in the education system - school board
members, administrators and teachers - want the best for our kids.
But sometimes, we get trapped in the status quo and need a way out,”
Holt said. “A parent trigger law in Oklahoma would provide
a way to break old patterns, and empower the people that are most
invested in success – parents and students – to set
a new tone for their school.”
For more information contact:
Sen. Holt: (405) 521-5636

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