Legislative committee discusses Kentucky’s school councils – Superintendent Randy Poe

Since at least the mid-1990s, Kentucky’s public schools have used a unique method of school governance built around the concept of School Based Decision Making (SBDM). This concept provides an amazing amount of power to a council located at each school to direct many important matters such as selection of curriculum, finally determining how the allocated money will be spent, and selecting school staff.

Cheered by some, reviled by others, the school council concept now has more than a 20-year history in Kentucky, and problems are definitely showing.

For one thing, despite claims that this provides for local control at the school level, the truth is the law explicitly requires teachers to make up the majority of each school council’s membership. Parents are ALWAYS a minority. Since a simple majority rules in all school council votes, it is clear that Kentucky’s parents really don’t have “local control” with school councils. Moreover, local taxpayers and non-parent citizens have no representation at all even though they still pay the taxes that support the school. Even more surprising, locally elected school board members and the local school superintendent are remarkably restricted in their ability to control what happens in schools, raising serious questions about effective oversight.

There also remains considerable confusion about who is in charge of what, and who can do what in schools in Kentucky. Don’t believe us? Just listen to Boone County Superintendent Randy Poe describe his recent woes with the SBDM approach even though he was told he was doing everything right.

Comments from other speakers appearing with Sen. Schickel will appear in subsequent posts.