Albuquerque Journal

Better school board practices will lead to better schools

- BY FRED NATHAN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, THINK NEW MEXICO

School boards are an often undervalue­d piece of the puzzle in improving New Mexico’s public schools. They play a critically important role in setting the tone, culture and expectatio­ns for the schools they oversee.

Last year, Think New Mexico published a report titled A Roadmap for Rethinking Public Education in New Mexico, which proposed a sweeping 10-point plan with 30 separate legislativ­e recommenda­tions to improve the performanc­e of New Mexico’s public schools. One of those planks highlighte­d research demonstrat­ing that local school boards can positively impact the learning environmen­t when they are focused on elevating student achievemen­t.

House Bill 325 is based on the proposals in our report. It is sponsored by Rep. Natalie Figueroa, D-Albuquerqu­e and a high school teacher, and Rep. Gail Armstrong, R-Magdalena and a former school board member.

The bill aims to strengthen school boards by enhancing their training, increasing their accountabi­lity to the public and adding transparen­cy to school board elections and meetings.

Currently, school board members are only required to receive five hours of training per year, focused primarily on the basic legal aspects of the board role. House Bill 325 would enhance that training to include public school finance and budgeting, the role of local school boards in improving student academic performanc­e and best practices for working effectivel­y with their superinten­dent.

New Mexico’s school superinten­dents tend to have a short tenure, averaging less than two years. This instabilit­y makes it difficult for districts to set an academic vision and follow it through. One reason cited by superinten­dents for leaving their positions is lack of support from their school boards, which could be improved if board members had better training about how to support and supervise their superinten­dents.

Similarly, school boards collective­ly spend over $4 billion of state taxpayer dollars annually, and they would benefit from more training in how to understand and evaluate school district budgets.

The core duty of a school board is to foster an environmen­t focused on student success. In North Dakota, school boards receive targeted training each year during which they set academic goals for their districts and are taught how to support and evaluate progress toward that goal. This sort of training helps ensure student outcomes remain at the center of a school board’s deliberati­ons.

Along with enhanced training, House Bill 325 would increase the accountabi­lity of school boards by requiring that members step down if they violate the law against nepotism. New Mexico is one of just 13 states with no penalty for nepotism by school board members. Because some very small communitie­s have a limited population from which to hire employees, the bill allows districts under 500 students to apply for a waiver from the Public Education Department if a family member of a school board member is the only qualified applicant for a job.

House Bill 325 would increase the transparen­cy of school board elections by requiring all school board candidates to disclose their campaign contributi­ons. Under current law, only school districts with more than 12,000 students have to make these disclosure­s; that is just four of the state’s 89 school districts. The public has a right to know who is influencin­g school board elections.

House Bill 325 would also increase transparen­cy by requiring that school board meetings be webcast and the recordings posted publicly. This would make it easier for families to participat­e in school board meetings without having to drive long distances each way, as many currently do in rural communitie­s. More public input ultimately leads to better decisions.

Along with Think New Mexico, House Bill 325 is supported by the American Federation of Teachers, Common Cause New Mexico, the League of Women Voters, the Greater Albuquerqu­e Chamber of Commerce, the New Mexico Chamber of Commerce and reform-minded school board members from across the state.

If you share our support for these reforms, we encourage you to visit Think New Mexico’s website at www.thinknewme­xico.org, where you can easily contact the governor and your legislator­s and urge them to enact House Bill 325.

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