Asking Questions & Sharing Your Voice on the Well-Resourced Schools Plans
Asking Questions & Sharing Your Voice on the Well-Resourced Schools Plans
There are opportunities to ask questions and share your voice about the Well-Resourced Schools Plans. Learn more below:
Individual Action
Contact our local representatives and ask questions, share your concerns, and demand they advocate for your family.
Click here for direct links with pre-populated or quick talking points.
If you’d rather draft your own message, use this contact information to reach leaders, legislators, and decision makers in our region:
- Use SPS’ “Let’s Talk” tool to ask questions or provide comments
- Email our School Board Director, Sarah Clark: sdclark@seattleschools.org
- Contact Seattle Council PTSA, a collective PTA that spans Seattle schools: https://scptsa.org/new-page
- Contact WA State legislators: Rep. Liz Berry, Senator Noel Frame, Rep. Julia Reed
EXAMPLE LANGUAGE
Introducing Yourself
“As a member of the Whittier Elementary community and D2 family, I want to share…”
Continuing Assignments
- “School board policy provides continuing assignments for all established students. In the Well-Resourced schools FAQs, it appears SPS is suggesting this policy won’t necessarily be followed. Will SPS update the proposals shortly to confirm the structure for continuing assignments for established elementary students? For example, will an individual student’s continuing assignment be made on a case-by-case basis or will there be an applied standard? Will siblings be kept at the same school if only one sibling is allowed a continuing assignment? Will continuing assignment decisions be made using the open enrollment process or an alternate process? Who is part of the decision-making team for changing the established board policy regarding continuing assignments? Will this policy change be voted on during a school board meeting?”
- “Our students have endured incredible uncertainty during and after Covid. It is vital we don’t ask children and families to wait to know whether they’ll be able to continue with their friends and community at their established school.”
- “If families are asked to use the open enrollment process to request continuing assignments, families won’t know their enrollment decision until April or May. Please advocate for an alternative process that will facilitate confirmation for continuing assignments as soon as possible.”
- “SPS stated that continuing assignments are impacted depending on the selected plan. Can’t continuing assignment policies be drafted for Option A and Option B? Isn’t there existing significant enrollment data to support completing this essential part of the Option plans and provide comfort and certainty to area families?”
Middle & High School Boundary Changes
- “Will SPS be providing clarity on how elementary school boundary changes could impact middle and high school boundaries?”
- “Traditionally, elementary schools fed into one middle school and one high school. Will middle and high school boundaries remain unchanged (meaning elementary schools will be split across multiple upper education schools)? Or will families follow the traditional pathway of their newly zoned elementary school?”
- “Our 5th grade families cannot wait until next year to start preparing their children for their transition to middle school. We need clarity now for both Option A and Option B scenarios.”
- “Will current middle school students be asked to change schools if their elementary school school boundary has changed? For example, if a current Whitman 7th grader’s boundary changes from Whittier to West Woodland, will they have to move to Hamilton next year?”
- “If next year’s incoming 5th graders receive a continuing assignment, will they have to attend the middle school that aligns with their revised elementary school boundary? Or will they be guaranteed the opportunity to stay with their community through middle school (the original argument for aligning middle school assignments with elementary schools vs. geozones)?”
After Care, Before Care, and School Break Care Programs
- “With many schools closing, it eliminates the aftercare provided out of those buildings and decreases the already limited aftercare that is available in our city. What is SPS’ plan to confirm childcare options will be available either plan?”
- “Many families do not have the option or flexibility to pick their children up from school. This issue will disproportionally impact more vulnerable families who rely on those services. How is SPS going to ensure their equity analysis addresses the needs of vulnerable, working families?”
- “Many families concerned about these changes have already contacted aftercare providers in their proposed new schools; these providers have confirmed they will not be able to support the immense need they anticipate next year.”
- “SPS informed families last year that they plan to also move the district to three bells next year, with elementary schools shifting to 7:25am or 9:25am start times. Partnering this change with either plan will create an even greater deficit of childcare options. Newly 9:25am start schools will require before care; 7:25am start schools will likely need more after care spots than are needed today as many working families can’t leave work 30 minutes earlier.”
Option-specific Advocacy
- “My family and community feel you need to vote for Option [X] in December, regardless of Superintendent Jones’ recommendation. This option is essential for my family because…”
- “My family and community feel you need to reject Option [X] in December, regardless of Superintendent Jones’ recommendation. This option harms my family because…”
Requests for Info Sessions or Meetings at Whittier
- For all: “I am hoping you’d be interested to meet the families you represent in our neighborhood and get to know our priorities and concerns. Our PTA meetings are on the second Tuesday of each month and can be attended in-person or virtually. Alternatively, you can contact our PTA to schedule a special session or meeting around your availability to facilitate a connection with you.”
- For Sarah Clark: “You are our only voice on the Seattle School Board and we hope your commitment to our school community is as strong as ours is.”
- For Seattle Council PTSA: “Our school community is a part of your membership; getting to know us will mean you can represent us this school year.”
- For SPS: “Please consider a specific information session at Whittier Elementary to allow families to ask questions and get the clarity they so need.”
Please consider including these talking points:
- Commit to continuing assignments for established students
- Clarify middle school boundaries for elementary and middle school families
- Revise plans to specifically account for After Care and School Break programs working families require
Consider including these talking points in your messages:
- Meet with our community and understand our concerns and priorities
- Push back on NW region boundary changes favoring straight lines over student outcomes
- Demand SPS revise Options now to resolve ambiguity about continuing assignments and middle school boundaries
- Require SPS to account for after care and school break programs required by many families in their plans
Contact our community’s WA State District 36 legislators: Representative Liz Berry, Senator Noel Frame, and Representative Julia Reed and request they:
- Make public education a priority and support Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal’s $2.9 billion increase for education in the ‘25-27 state budget and work to return 51% of state spending to education
- Lift the artificial cap on Special Education funds so state funding matches the legally required actual expenses for students
- Pressure SPS to stop its plans to disrupt over 5000 families to:
- At best, potentially save a fraction of its deficit
- At worst, create a greater budget deficit if 28-31% of its most impacted students leave the district
- At best, potentially save a fraction of its deficit
Click here to send a message to Rep. Liz Berry >>
Coordinated Action
There are several area groups putting together a variety of opportunities for advocacy:
- Coordinated letter writing campaigns to Sarah Clark (our school board director) and State Legislature: https://fundsps.com/take-action
- Sign an Open Letter directed to SPS by All Together for Seattle Schools: https://www.alltogetherforseattleschools.org/home/take-action-seattle
- Form letter for State Legislature to increase school funding: https://www.alltogetherforseattleschools.org/home/take-action-washington
- Join the rally being held outside the John Stanford Center before the September 18 school board meeting. Supporters are encouraged to wear red, bring signs, and show up at 3:45pm on the south lawn.
- Share your voice with the Seattle Times
- Share your voice on social media. You can use this toolkit of graphics created by a district-wide advocacy group, All Together for Seattle Schools, if you’d like.
Attend Meetings to Learn More and Share Your Voice
- Attend the September 18 school board meeting to learn more about how families are pushing back.
- Attend SPS’ Well-Resourced Schools meeting on September 24 at 6:30pm over Zoom (Zoom link to be emailed by SPS)
- Attend SPS’ Well-Resourced Schools meeting for NW region schools on October 7th at 6:30pm at James Baldwin Elementary
- Consider signing up for public testimony to share your voice directly to the school board at the October 9th school board meeting (sign-up opens at 8am on October 7th; learn more here)
- Consider signing up for public testimony to share your voice directly to the school board at the November 19th school board meeting (sign-up opens at 8am on November 17th; learn more here)
- Consider signing up for public testimony to share your voice directly to the school board at the December 18th school board meeting (sign-up opens at 8am on December 16th; learn more here)
Do you have an advocacy idea?
Please let us know by emailing advocacy@whittierptaseattle.org.