Life Issues / Family Ethics Political Action Committee of Southwest Washington

Camas School Board Votes
Camas School District Policies Board Agenda And Minutes Camas School Distirct
  CSD Board YouTube Channel  
Equity, Inclusion and Discrimination Policy Vote
Jan 25, 2021

Policies: https://go.boarddocs.com/wa/camas/Board.nsf/Public



From https://go.boarddocs.com/wa/camas/Board.nsf/Public

Meeting Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_8hdH7mmL0

Policy 3211 Gender-Inclusive Schools


The board believes in fostering an educational environment that is safe and free of discrimination for all students, regardless of gender expression, gender identity, sex, or sexual orientation. To that end, the board recognizes the importance of an inclusive approach toward transgender and non-binary, gender-expansive students with regard to key terms, communication and the use of names and pronouns, student records, confidential health and education information, communication, restroom, and locker room use, and accessibility, sports, and physical education, dress codes, and other school activities, in order to provide these students with an equal opportunity for learning and achievement.
 
This policy is a component of the district s responsibility to create and maintain a safe, civil, respectful, and inclusive learning community and will be implemented in conjunction with comprehensive training of staff and volunteers. Specific training requirements are included in the accompanying procedure. The superintendent will appoint a primary contact to receive copies of all formal and informal complaints and ensure policy implementation. The name and contact information for the compliance officer will be communicated throughout the district. The district compliance officer will participate in at least one mandatory training opportunity offered by OSPI.
 
This policy and its procedure will support that effort by facilitating district compliance with local, state, and federal laws concerning harassment, intimidation, bullying, and discrimination. 
 
Legal References:
RCW 28A.642 Discrimination prohibition
20 U.S.C. 1232g, 34 C.F.R., Family Education Rights, and Privacy Part 99 Act
 
Prohibiting Discrimination in Washington Public Schools OSPI Guidelines for school districts to implement Chapters 28A.640 and 28A.642 RCW and 392-190 WAC (February 2012)
 
Cross References:
2145 Suicide Prevention
3210 Nondiscrimination
3207 Prohibition of Harassment, Intimidation or Bullying
3231 Student Records
 
Management Resources:
Policy & Legal News, July 2019
Policy & Legal News, December 2014
Policy & Legal News, December 2013


Policy 3211P Gender-Inclusive Schools Procedures

The principal or building administrator or an appropriate, designated school employee is encouraged to request a meeting with a transgender, non-binary or gender-expansive student upon the student s enrollment in the district, or in response to a currently enrolled student s change of gender expression or identity. Before contacting a student s parents, the school will consult with the student about the student s preferences regarding family involvement.
 
The goals of the meeting are to:
develop an understanding of that student s individual needs with respect to their gender expression or identity, including any accommodations that the student is requesting or that the district will provide according to Policy 3211 and this procedure and under state and federal law; and
 
develop a shared understanding of the student's day-to-day routine within the school so as to foster a relationship and help alleviate any apprehensions the student may have with regard to their attendance at school.
The school may not require the student to attend meetings as a condition of providing them with the protections to which they are entitled under Policy 3211, this procedure, and state and federal law regarding gender expression or identity.
 
Key Definitions/Terms
Assigned sex at birth: The sex a person was designated as at birth, usually based on observable anatomical characteristics or in some instances on anatomy or chromosomes (e.g., male, female, intersex, etc.).
 
Cisgender: A term used to describe people whose assigned sex matches their gender identity and/or gender expression (e.g., someone who was assigned female at birth and whose gender identity and/or gender expression is also female.
 
Gender Expansive: A wider, more flexible range of gender identities or expressions than those typically associated with the binary gender system.
 
Gender Expression: The external ways in which a person expresses their gender to the world, such as through their behavior, emotions, mannerisms, dress, grooming habits, interests, and activities.
 
Gender Identity: A person's internal and deeply-felt sense of being female, male, both, non-binary, gender-expansive, or other regardless of the assigned sex or assigned gender role at birth.
 
Transgender (Trans): An umbrella term often used to describe a person whose gender identity or expression, or both, are different from those traditionally associated with their assigned sex or assigned gender role assigned at birth.
 
Transitioning: The multi-dimensional (social and/or medical) process in which a person transitions from living their life in the gender role they were assigned at birth to living the gender they identify with.
Gender Role: Th binary-only (masculine/feminine) societal stereotypes and expectations
artificially associated with a person’s assigned sex at birth.
 
Communication and Use of Names and Pronouns
 
An appropriate school employee will privately ask known transgender or gender-expansive students how they would like to be addressed in class, in correspondence to the home, and at conferences with the student s parent/guardian. That information will be included in the electronic student record system along with the student s legal name in order to inform teachers and staff of the name and pronoun by which to address the student. However, the student s legal name should be accessible by only necessary staff members it should not be visible to teachers or other staff who have access to the electronic records system.
 
When appropriate or necessary, this information will be communicated directly with staff to facilitate the use of proper names and pronouns. A student is not required to change their official records or obtain a court-ordered name and/or gender change as a prerequisite to being addressed by the name and pronoun that corresponds to their gender identity.
 
When communicating with transgender or gender-expansive students regarding particular issues such as conduct, discipline, grades, attendance, or health, school employees will focus on the conduct or particular issues rather than making assumptions regarding the student s actual or perceived gender identity or gender expression. Before communicating with parents of transgender or gender-expansive students, it's important to ask the student how school employees should refer to the student when talking with their parents and guardians. For families who are supportive, using the student s name and pronoun could be affirming for the student. For parents who are not supportive, or who are not aware of the student s transition at school, referring to their name and pronoun could be very dangerous. The district will not condone the intentional or persistent refusal to respect a student s gender identity or gender expression, or inappropriate release of information regarding a student s transgender or gender-expansive status.
 
Official Records
 
The standardized high school transcript is the only official record that requires a student s legal name. School staff should adopt practices to avoid the inadvertent disclosure of the student s transgender or gender-expansive status. The District will change a student's official records to reflect a change in legal name upon receipt of:
Documentation that the student s legal name or gender has been changed pursuant to a court order or through amendment of state or federally-issued identification; or
 
A written, signed statement explaining that the student has exercised a common-law name change and has changed their name for all intents and purposes and that the change has not been made for fraudulent reasons. 
Schools may change a student's official gender designation upon parent or student request pursuant to the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction s (OSPI s) process found at (https://www.k12.wa.us/sites/default/files/public/cedars/pubdocs/2018-19cedarsreportingguidance.pdf) The process should not be overly cumbersome, and the district may not require verification from a physician.
 
The school must use the name and gender by which the student identifies on all other records, including but not limited to school identification cards, classroom seating charts, athletic rosters, yearbook entries, diplomas, directory information.
 
Confidential Health or Educational Information
 
Information about a student's gender identity, legal name, or assigned sex at birth may constitute confidential medical or educational information. Disclosing this information to other students, their parents or other third parties may violate privacy laws, such as the federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 U.S.C. 1232; 34 C.F.R. Part 99). Therefore, to ensure the safety and well-being of the student, school employees should not disclose a student's transgender or gender-expansive status to others, including the student's parents and/or other school personnel, unless the school is (1) legally required to do so or (2) the student has authorized such disclosure.
 
Restroom Accessibility
 
Students will be allowed to use the restroom that corresponds to the gender identity they assert at school. No student will be required to use a restroom that conflicts with their gender identity. Any student regardless of gender identity who requests greater privacy should be given access to an alternative restroom. However, schools may not require a student to use an alternative restroom because of their transgender or gender-expansive status.
 
Locker Room Accessibility
 
The use of locker rooms by transgender or gender-expansive students will be assessed on a case-by-case basis, with the goal of maximizing transgender or gender-expansive student social integration, providing an equal opportunity to participate in physical education classes and athletic opportunities, and ensuring the student s safety. The district will take an approach that conforms with OSPI s guidelines. In most cases, the district should provide the student access to the locker room that corresponds to the gender identity they assert at school. Reasonable alternatives to locker room conditions for any student who wants additional privacy include, but are not limited to:
Use of a private area (e.g., nearby restroom stall with a door, an area separated by a curtain, an office in the locker room, or a nearby health office restroom);
 
A separate changing schedule (e.g., utilizing the locker room before or after the other students.
The school will provide accommodations needed to allow the student to keep their transgender or gender-expansive status private. No student, however, will be required to use a locker room that conflicts with their gender identity.
 
Sports and Physical Education Classes
 
The District will provide all students, including transgender and gender-expansive students, the opportunity to participate in physical education and athletic programs/opportunities in a manner that is consistent with their gender identity.
A student may seek a review of his or her eligibility for participation in interscholastic athletics by working through the Gender Identity Participation procedure set forth by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association (WIAA).
 
Dress Codes
 
The District will allow students to dress in a manner that is consistent with their gender identity and/or gender expression within the constraints of the dress codes adopted at their school site and within the constraints of the District guidelines for dress as they relate to health and safety issues (e.g., prohibitions on wearing gang-related apparel). School dress codes will be gender-neutral and will not restrict a student's clothing choices on the basis of gender. The district will take an approach that conforms with OSPI s guidelines.
 
Other School Activities
 
In any school activity or other circumstances involving separation by gender (e.g., class discussions, field trips, and overnight trips), students will be permitted to participate in accordance with the gender identity they assert at school. Teachers and other school employees will make every effort to separate students based on factors other than gender where practicable.
 
Training and Professional Development
 
The district will designate one person to be the primary contact regarding this policy and procedure relating to transgender or gender-expansive students. The primary contact must participate in at least one mandatory training opportunity offered by OSPI. When possible, the District will conduct staff training and ongoing professional development in an effort to build the skills of all staff members to prevent, identify, and respond to harassment and discrimination. The content of such professional development should include, but not be limited to:
Terms and concepts related to gender identity, gender expression, and gender diversity in children and adolescents;
 
Appropriate strategies for communicating with students and parents about issues related to gender identity and gender expression, while protecting student privacy;
 
Strategies for preventing and intervening in incidents of harassment and discrimination, including bullying and cyber-bullying;
 
District and staff responsibilities under applicable laws and district policies regarding harassment, discrimination, and gender identity and gender expression issues.
Discrimination and Harassment Complaints
 
Discrimination and harassment on the basis of sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression are prohibited within the district. It is the responsibility of each school, the District, and all staff to ensure that all students, including transgender and gender-expansive students, have a safe school environment. The scope of this responsibility includes ensuring that any incident of discrimination or harassment is given immediate attention and/or reported to the person designated as the primary contact relating to transgender or gender-expansive students. The primary contact will communicate with the district s Civil Rights Compliance Coordinator.
 
Complaints alleging discrimination or harassment based on a person s actual or perceived gender identity or expression are to be taken seriously and handled in the same manner as other discrimination and harassment complaints. This includes investigating the incident and taking age and developmentally-appropriate corrective action. Anyone may file a complaint alleging a violation of this policy using the complaint process outlined in the district s Nondiscrimination Procedure 3210P.

 

2019?

CAMAS SCHOOL DISTRICT
RESOLUTION 19-09
School Board Commitment to Equity and Anti-Racism
 


WHEREAS, the recent incidents of violence against Black Americans highlights the systemic bias and institutional racism in our society that has senselessly and atrociously devastated so many Black lives throughout our country’s history;

WHEREAS, as school board members we are committed to actively interrupting systemic racism and eliminating inequities in our education system and therefore are compelled to speak out;

WHEREAS, this violence, racism, and disregard of human dignity and life reflect and perpetuate a system within which students, families, and staff of color and their families are oppressed and attacked, both through explicit racist actions as well as unconscious bias and microaggressions;

WHEREAS, our community and nation’s future requires that this systemic bias and institutional racism be dismantled, to promote equity, and ensure ALL children and families are able to thrive;

WHEREAS, education is a key lever for creating this more equitable and anti-racist community, nation, and the world;

WHEREAS, our district is committed to promoting equity within and across our schools, in conversation and partnership with students, families, staff, and community stakeholders;

WHEREAS, in moving from planning to action, our district is committed to drawing on the perspective and feedback from the collection of diverse voices as outlined in our equity policy and procedures to identify concrete actions that must be taken to advance this work, and continuing to ensure that these voices are elevated in decision-making processes.

WHEREAS, as a school board and district we value each and every student, family, and staff member and are committed to creating an equitable and anti-racist system that honors and elevates all.

WHEREAS, we recognize that the experiences and outcomes in our district are not consistent for historically underserved and marginalized groups, including people of color; those experiencing poverty, homelessness, or foster/kinship care; students who identify as LGBTQ+; students receiving special education instruction; and students who are linguistically diverse.


NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, by the Board of Directors for Camas School District that:

The Camas School District Board of Directors stands in solidarity with the Black community, in our schools, district, and nation to condemn this violence and the blatant disrespect by some Americans for Black lives - we see it, we hear it, and we are committed to changing the system.

The Camas School District Board of Directors commits to its own work as individuals and our collective work overseeing the district in continuing to become equitable and anti-racist in behaviors, actions, and policies;

The Camas School District Board of Directors calls on and commits to working with our local government agencies to strengthen the collective work of diversity, equity, and inclusion in our community. This specifically includes participation in a multi-discipline inter-agency task force by one or more board member representatives.

LET IT FURTHER BE RESOLVED, that the Camas School District Board of Directors shall take specific action to revise its governance tools - goals, guardrails, procedures, and budget - to reflect this focus on equity and anti-racism:

The Camas School District Board of Directors commits to a full revision of its Board Goals as part of the current strategic planning cycle, holding diversity, equity, and inclusion at the center of this work. These revised goals will allow monitoring and transparency of progress by the Board and stakeholders.

The Camas School District Board of Directors commits to an ongoing review and revision of governance structures to ensure a focus on equity and anti-racism across all Board responsibilities.

The Camas School District Board of Directors and staff commit to a quarterly review and revision of existing policies and procedures and hold diversity, equity, and inclusion at the center of all conversations moving forward.

The Camas School District Board of Directors commits to holding these resolutions at the center when reviewing and approving the district budget to ensure adequate funding to support this work.


BOARD OF DIRECTORS [Malone, Quinn, Hennessey, Cox, McEnry] 


Original Signature on File
Secretary


Original Signature on File
President                                                                


Original Signature on File



Original Signature on File



Original Signature on File
 
 



Equity Policies 3112 and 3112P
Adopted 12/10/2018
Minutes
See also this SW Wash Education Report

Procedure text below highlighted in red express principles that are foundational to Critical Race Theory

Vote From Minutes:

Equity Policy 3112:

The primary responsibility of the Camas School District is to ensure that every student is known by name, strength, and need, and graduates ready for continued learning, career, and citizenship. We believe the entire community benefits when every child succeeds: therefore we have a collective responsibility and require accountability to ensure that children of every race, national origin, language, religion, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, socioeconomic status, socio-emotional well-being, and ability to reach their full potential.
 
The superintendent will develop procedures for building the conditions and capacities to ensure that each student is seen and served. Ultimately, our goal is equity, and we will know we have met that goal when the factors that predict any student's success or opportunity are no longer correlated with any group identity (included but not limited to race, socioeconomic status, ability, and gender). Appropriate evaluations and accountability measures will be enacted to measure effectiveness by bringing disaggregated data to the Board. Staff will provide information on how funding is differentiated based on student need, or how programs or services are being implemented to ensure each student is being served.

Legal References:
Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 Title IX
Educational Amendments of 1972
(IRCA) Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
The American with Disabilities Act of 1990
RCW 49.60.030 Freedom from discrimination
RCW 49.60.400 Discrimination, preferential treatment prohibited
WAC 392-190 Equal Education Opportunity
 
Cross References:
2020 Course Design, Selection and Adoption of Instructional Materials
2140 Guidance and Counseling
2150 Co-Curricular Program
5010 Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
5010P Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
5011 Sexual Harassment of District Staff Prohibited

 

LifePac Commentary: Equity Policies 3112P uses foundational concepts of Marxist inspired Critical Race Theory, including the deconstruction of supposed systemic, institutional racism (culture war), class warfare of oppressors and oppressed, and the correction of injustices by means of rigorous equity practices to produce equal educational outcomes.  The foundational social and political concept of Equality has an opposite meaning as that of Equity, which in sociology, is a welfare related term.

Equity Policy 3112P (P for Procedures)

Purpose
Our data suggest that among student learning outcomes, race, ability, and socioeconomic status continue to be the most persistent predictors of student performance. Consequently, we will prioritize our efforts and resources on strategies that eliminate institutional racism and each and every form of oppression that perpetuates inequities in our system.

District Responsibility
We believe that it is unacceptable for opportunity gaps to continue to exist because of historic and current forms of oppression. Camas School District values diversity in our student body, our staff, and our community.
 
We are committed to facilitating the learning and implementation of the following core practices:

I will identify and disrupt my biases and own my privilege;
 
I know my culture/race/ethnicity and its relationship to and impact on others;
 
I will disrupt deficit oriented language and/or practices toward other persons, groups, etc;
 
I will manage the dynamics of difference;
 
I am proactively learning from, about, and with the communities I serve;
 
I will embrace and leverage the unique differences each learner brings to educate and empower them;
 
I will dismantle practices and policies that perpetuate oppression;
 
I will design experiences and spaces that promote unbounded growth and outcomes for each student.

District Beliefs

To ensure achievement of each student, the following beliefs drive our strategic engagement:

A belief that our equity discourse needs to shift from potentially deficit language and assumptions about students and families. Specifically, we accept the responsibility of the educational debt owed to students we have failed to serve.
 
A belief that equitable access to schools, classrooms, resources, and services provided by the district requires acknowledgment of potentially unequal learning needs.
 
A belief that it is the district's responsibility to evaluate and correct policies and procedures that have resulted in inequitable, negative educational impacts.
 
A belief that the staffing composition of administrators, teachers, and all other personnel that is representative of the diversity in the district is paramount to designing and implementing successful policy and procedure solutions to achieve equity and diversity.
 
A belief that education of exceptional quality for all students includes a greater appreciation of and respect for racial and cultural differences.
 
A belief that all students, staff, parents, and community members have a vested interest in and should work together to correct system inequities.
 
A belief that all students have the potential for academic achievement regardless of circumstances.
 
A belief that our work can and will properly serve each student.

District Commitments

Family, Student and Community Engagement and Partnerships

Camas School District employees will cultivate and implement equitable practices for and with our students, their families, and other community members, including:
Intentionally seeking and including students' multiple perspectives, particularly racial perspectives, in the development and implementation of culturally responsive teaching and learning practices and curriculum;
 
Engaging family and community members with staff and students, district-wide and at school and program sites, in the development and implementation of culturally appropriate and effective partnerships between home and school;
 
Inviting and including community members to bring multiple cultural perspectives to examining and solving issues that arise; and,
 
Ensuring each site is welcoming and inclusive to all members. 

Leadership

Camas School District leaders will ensure that equity guides employee actions and leads to improved academic results by:
Ensuring the student's voices is viewed as critical and incorporated routinely in decision-making.
 
A continuous and comprehensive review of disaggregated district-, school-, and student-level data to identify areas of disproportionally and identify strategies to ensure demographic profile no longer predicts student outcomes.
 
Recruiting, employing, supporting, retaining, and continuously developing a workforce of culturally conscious and responsive administrative, instructional, and support personnel who will bring their unique talents and skills into our school system.
 
Modeling equity in professional practices, including but not limited to, decision-making and resource allocation.
 
Focusing accountability systems and metrics on equitable results with a priority on race, ability, and socioeconomic status.
 
Providing multiple opportunities and varied pathways to success in order to meet the needs of the diverse student body, and actively encouraging, supporting, and expecting high academic achievement for all students.
 
Distributing resources in a way that considers equity in a performance-based budgeting philosophy in order to eliminate or significantly reduce systemic, measurable inequities in achievement.
 
Provide students with equitable access to high-quality curriculum, programs, teachers and administrators, extracurricular activities, and support services, even when this means differentiating resource allocation.

Teaching and Learning

Camas School District employees will work together to increase their individual and collective capacity to effectively teach each student by:
Ensuring a positive and academically rigorous school environment that engages all students and includes multiple pathways for success;
 
Collaborating with all staff, teachers, and administrators to create and implement culturally responsive instructional practices, curriculum and assessments; and,
 
Eliminating practices that lead to the over- or under-representation of any student group compared to peers.

Professional Development

Provide ongoing professional development for all district stakeholders including board, staff, and community members to recognize and eliminate influences of bias and oppression.
 
Train staff to use a race and equity decision-making tool.
 
Support ongoing staff training on the differentiation of instruction and assessment.

Equity in Systems and Operations

Develop and strategically use a race and equity decision-making tool.
 
Collect, analyze, use, and share disaggregated data, as legally allowable, with a race and equity lens.
 
Identify barriers and transform practices, including assessment, which lead to the over-representation of students of color and/or socioeconomic status in areas such as, but not limited to, special education and discipline.
 
Identify barriers and transform practices, including assessment, which lead to the under-representation of students of color, ability, and/or socioeconomic status in programs such as, but not limited to, Highly Capable, Honors, accelerated, and Advanced Placement courses.
 
Recognize and empower under-represented families as essential partners so that all students are successful.
 
Commit to equitable budgetary alignment. 

Workforce Equity

Formally and informally recognize the value of a diverse workforce.
 
Make appropriate efforts within existing legal frameworks to recruit, hire, support, and retain racially and linguistically diverse staff.

Student Outcomes

Raise the achievement of all students while narrowing the gaps between the lowest and highest performing students.
 
Eliminate the racial, ability, and socioeconomic predictability and disproportionally in all aspects of education and its administration.
 
Ensure each student, regardless of race, ability, or class, graduates from the Camas School District ready to succeed in a racially and culturally diverse local, national, and global community.
 
In order to achieve educational equity for our students, the Camas School District will provide each student with equitable access to a high-quality curriculum, support, facilities, and other educational resources, even when this means differentiating resource allocation.

Monitoring and Progress Reporting

The district's strategic plan is the district's primary equity plan, as we will not reach our ambitious goals without ensuring all students are prepared for college, career, and citizenship. The Superintendent is directed to provide regular updates to the Board and school community on the strategic plan objectives and to ensure that an equity lens is used in each update. When relevant and appropriate, this includes evaluating our accountability measures and their effectiveness through bringing disaggregated data to the Board, providing information on how funding is differentiated based on student needs, or how programs or services are being implemented to ensure each student is being served. The district shall review existing policies, programs, professional development, and procedures to ensure the promotion of racial equity, and all applicable new policies, programs, and procedures will be developed using a racial equity analysis tool.
 
Cross References:
5010 Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
5010P Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
 
Legal References:
Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964
RCW 28A.400.310 Law against discrimination applicable to districts employment practices
RCW 49.60.030 Freedom from discrimination
RCW 49.60.180 Unfair practices of employers
RCW 49.60.400 Discrimination, preferential treatment prohibited
WAC 392-190 Equal Education Opportunity
WAC 392-190-0592 Public school employment

 


Policy 3111 Nondiscrimination and Equity
Adopted November 1, 2017


NONDISCRIMINATION

The Camas School District affirms the inherent dignity and the equal rights of every student. It acknowledges the need to provide for every student a quality education that includes appreciation and respect for human individuality, cultural differences, and similarities that contribute to our democratic nation as a whole. Every student deserves a respectful learning environment in which their racial, ethnic, religious, gender, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, or disability diversity is valued and contributes to successful academic outcomes. Learning and work environments are enriched and improved by the contributions, perspectives, and presence of diverse participants. The district is committed to the success of every student in each of our schools.

The district prohibits discrimination and harassment based on race, religion, color, national origin or ancestry, sex, gender, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, age, marital or veteran status, or disability. Complaints of discrimination or harassment based upon any protected class are to be reported and investigated pursuant to Policy and Procedure 5010 Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action.

The superintendent will provide for the annual evaluation, periodic surveys, annual notice, and complaint procedures as required by law to ensure that there is in fact equal access and opportunity for all students in the district and shall designate a staff member to serve as equity and diversity compliance officer and a staff member to serve as Title IX compliance officer.
 
EQUITY

The following are established as District values:
Excellence in Academic, Social, and Lifelong Learning
 
Cultural Understanding and Equity
 
Strong Community, Family and Business Partnerships
 
Open and Effective Communication
 
Distributive Leadership
 
Safe and Healthy School Environment
 
Outstanding Teachers and Staff
 
Quality Facilities and Resources
Beyond equal education access, educational equity is based on the principles of fairness and justice in allocating resources, opportunity, treatment, and success for every student. Educational programs promote the real possibility of equitable outcomes for each student. Equity strategies are planned, systemic, and focused on the core of the teaching and learning process.
 
The Board of Directors believes that the responsibility for student success is broadly shared by our staff, our families/guardians, our community and our students own efforts. The district is committed to identifying and correcting practices and policies that perpetuate the achievement gap and institutional racism and gender discrimination in all forms in order to provide all of its students with the opportunity to succeed in a manner compliant with all applicable state and federal laws.


Equity of Resources

The district is committed to advancing optimum participation in, contribution to, benefit from, and enjoyment of learning and work experiences by diverse students, parents, staff, and community. The district is committed to promoting and providing an equitable distribution of resources, opportunities, facilities, and supports, even when this means differentiating resource allocations on the basis of student needs. Resource allocation shall support the definition of educational equity adopted in this policy while complying with state and federal funding mandates.


Commitment to Diversity

The diversity of our student body, our community, and our staff is a strength that benefits our community and should be celebrated. The district welcomes, respects, and values the diversity of its students, parents, staff, and the broader community. The district is committed to fostering a learning environment where diversity is encouraged and to recruiting and retaining a workforce that reflects the diversity of our students and community. The recruitment of diverse teachers and staff provides all students with a better chance of seeing themselves as part of the education system. Diversity in education provides all children with the opportunity to learn from others with dissimilar backgrounds and recognizes the value of diversity in all learning environments. It is important that children of all races, cultures, and backgrounds are provided with familiar role models in schools. We are committed to hiring the best employees of all backgrounds who will bring their unique talents and skills into our school system. The district shall employ staffing processes that support and foster diversity in its staff through recruitment, employment, training, and retention of employees.


Professional Development Opportunities

The district shall offer opportunities for all staff members to improve their cultural competencies in serving our diverse student body and community. The district shall offer opportunities for all staff to improve culturally responsive instructional practices, curriculum, and assessment competencies in serving our diverse student body and community to increase individual and collective capacity to effectively teach our diverse student population and serve diverse families. The district staff shall work together to increase their individual and collective capacity to effectively meet the needs of its diverse student population and serve its diverse families and communities.


Equity in Practice

Practices, procedures and programs that result in over or under-representation of any group of students compared to peers shall be subject to close review to assure that such results are due to meeting student educational, social or emotional needs. Practices that do not meet such review criteria shall be eliminated. Teachers, administrators and district staff shall collaborate to establish and implement culturally responsive instructional practices, curriculum and assessments.
 
The Board of Directors, Superintendent, and staff commit to considering issues of equity in the adoption of all future policies that have a significant impact on student learning and resource allocation. This commitment also includes considering issues of equity in applying existing policies that have a significant impact on student learning and resource allocation and assessing if such policies need to be reviewed and updated by the Board.
 
The Board of Directors shall consider the values stated in this policy in conducting its business and in exercising its responsibilities to the community. The Superintendent shall establish such regulations, as may be necessary and appropriate to accomplish the purpose and intent of this Policy. The Board of Directors and Superintendent may also establish specific strategic goals or benchmarks with metrics for evaluation to implement this Policy as permitted by law.
 
 
 
Legal References:
Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964
Title VII, Civil Rights Act of 1964
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 Title IX
Educational Amendments of 1972
(IRCA) Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
The Civil Rights Act of 1991
The American with Disabilities Act of 1990
Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act
34 CFR  104 Nondiscrimination on the basis of handicap in programs or activities receiving federal financial assistance
RCW 28A.400.310 Law against discrimination applicable to districts employment practices
RCW 28A.640.020 Regulations, guidelines to eliminate discrimination
RCW 28A.642 Discrimination prohibition
RCW 49.60 Discrimination
RCW 49.60.030 Freedom from discrimination
RCW 49.60.180 Unfair practices of employers
RCW 49.60.400 Discrimination, preferential treatment prohibited
RCW 73.16 Employment and Reemployment
WAC 392-190 Equal Education Opportunity
WAC 392-190-0592 Public school employment
 
Cross References:
2020 Course Design, Selection, and Adoption of Instructional Materials
2140 Guidance and Counseling
2150 Co-Curricular Program
5010 Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
5010P Nondiscrimination and Affirmative Action
5011 Sexual Harassment of District Staff Prohibited