News
Parents Are Speaking — and School Boards Are Finally Listening

Across the country, parents are sending a clear message:
K–12 public education is off-track, and transparency is non-negotiable.
These examples underscore the growing national demand for parental authority,
curriculum openness, and genuine accountability from school districts.
Colorado: Majority of Voters Say the K–12 System Is on the Wrong Track
A new statewide poll shows 57% of Colorado voters believe their K–12 public schools are headed in the wrong direction—a sharp rebuke to the state’s education establishment. What’s driving the frustration?- Academic performance continues to stagnate post-COVID
- Families feel crowded out of major decisions
- Politicization inside classrooms remains a top concern
- Many voters say funding is less the issue than how funds are used
New Jersey: School Board Passes a Strong Opt-Out & Transparency Policy
Meanwhile, in Colts Neck, New Jersey, the local school board approved a robust “parents’ rights” policy that affirms:- Parents may opt their children out of lessons conflicting with family values or religious beliefs
- Schools must provide clear, advance notice of sensitive or controversial instructional materials
- Parents—not administrators—hold the primary authority over their children’s upbringing
- Curriculum transparency is required
- Staff must notify parents about sensitive student issues
Why This Matters: A National Mandate for Parents’ Rights
Colorado’s polling and New Jersey’s board action are two sides of the same national trend: Parents expect transparency. Parents expect accountability. Parents expect to be respected—not managed. And where parents show up—students win, communities win, and trust in public education begins to recover. For PRE supporters, these stories offer both clarity and momentum. The movement is working!By the Numbers
- 57% — Colorado voters who say K-12 is on the wrong track
- 1 — New Jersey school board with a model opt-out policy, soon to be followed by many more
- 50 states — Where PRE supporters and affiliates are engaging school boards, running for office, and helping shape policy
My Take: Suzanne Gallagher, Parents’ Rights In Education
The debate is no longer whether parents should have rights—it’s whether districts will recognize what voters already know: Parents are the primary stakeholders in a child’s education. Colorado shows the public is losing patience with systems that shut parents out. New Jersey shows what happens when families reclaim their rightful seat at the table. Local boards are where the change begins—and where parents have the most power.- We don’t have to wait for state legislatures.
- We don’t have to wait for Washington.
- And PRE is here to help every step of the way.
