California's Parent Trigger Law: Compton Parents Take on the Public School System
Last year, parents of students in failing California public
schools were given a reason to be hopeful when Sacramento
politicians passed something called the "parent trigger" law. The
way the law works is that if 51% of parents at a failing school
sign a petition, they can turn the school into a charter school,
replace the staff or simply use the petition as a bargaining chip
to initiate a conversation about change.
On December 7, 2010, with help from the non-profit group Parent
Revolution, parents of children attending McKinley Elementary
in Compton became the first group of parents to pull the parent
trigger. Their dream was to transform the school into a Celerity
charter school. Instead, the Compton parents were thrust into a
prolonged fight with supporters of the status quo: the Compton
Unified School District, the teachers' unions, Gov. Jerry Brown and
Tom Torlakson, the newly elected Superintendent of Public
Instruction.
This is the story about a group of parents in Compton who are
fighting to give their children a better education.
Approximately 8.5 minutes.
Produced by Paul Feine and Alex Manning.
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