Feds
abandon 'equal rights' claim to raise your kids, 'Much work to be done before decades of federal overreach is
reversed', by Bob Unruh, 6/20/16, WND
Federal officials have
reversed their claim that they have “equal rights” to children to raise them, a
claim that stirred outrage in many quarters of America when it was
first made a few months back.
The claim originally was included in a draft
policy by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Department
of Education and generously allowed that parents, too, should be allowed to
help raise their own children along with the government, through various
programs.
The document,
the “Draft Policy Statement on Family Engagement From the Early Years to the
Early Grades,” stated at the time: “It
is the position of the departments that all early childhood programs and
schools recognize families as equal partners in improving children’s
development, learning and wellness across all settings, and over the course of
their children’s developmental and educational experiences.”
That one sentence, wrote
William A. Estrada, the director of federal relations policy for the Home
School Legal Defense Association, “unmasks the federal government’s true philosophy behind decades
of federal involvement in welfare, kindergarten through 12th grade education
spending and policies, programs like Head Start, and now the push to create
universal early education for young children from birth through age 5: the
federal government believes that its role is equal with the role of parents.”
The newest
release of the statement,
however, now provides that, “Families are children’s first and most important
teachers, advocates, and nurturers. Strong family engagement in early childhood
systems and programs is central – not supplemental – to promoting children’s
healthy intellectual, physical, and social-emotional development; preparing
children for school; and supporting academic achievement in elementary school
and beyond. Research indicates that families’ involvement in children’s
learning and development impacts lifelong health, developmental, and academic
outcomes.”
The HSLDA had blasted the earlier statement, in
fact, dispatching Estrada to meet with senior officials from the U.S.
Department of Education and “personally” explaining the significant issues with
the draft statement, including opposition from parents to the “bureaucratic
arrogance.”
The change is a very much improved version, the
HSLDA pointed out, making clear that “families have strong and sustained
effects on children’s learning, development, and wellness.”
“Despite this victory,” the group explained.
“there are other problems with the document that remain. The document’s working
definition of ‘family’ still includes not only a child’s parents or legal
guardians, but ‘all adults who interact with early childhood systems in support
of their child, to include biological, adoptive, and foster parents;
grandparents; legal and informal guardians; and adult siblings.'”
HSLDA explained,
“In situations where conflict may exist between a child’s parents and other
family members regarding educational choices, this still quite broad definition
of family is not helpful for clarity
regarding parental rights in education.”
The organization explained, “There is much work
to be done before decades of federal overreach in K-12 education is reversed.”
The document does still include a suggestion
that families and institutions “partner” to give children better results in
school.
WND
reported the original plan by
the government was to “systematically” engage families about their own
children.
“At HSLDA, we believe that these statements
reveal these agencies’ true beliefs: that a child’s God-given family does not
matter. Family is whomever or whatever the government says it is,” Estrada
wrote at the time.
He cited other government agendas, such as
pushing the political correctness in Common Core, “dangerous U.N. treaties,” as
well as suggestions for universal preschool.
http://www.wnd.com/2016/06/feds-abandon-equal-rights-claim-to-raise-your-kids/#!
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