Student Voices of Military-Connected Children Inspire Guidance from Secretary Duncan

Students talk with Secretary Duncan at the Department of Education

Students from MD, VA, and DC explain the challenges of having parents in the military to Secretary Duncan and Patty Shinseki.

The men and women serving in our Armed Forces make incredible sacrifices in service to our country. And so do their family members. Through multiple deployments and frequent moves, the spouses and children of service members live in constant transition.

In April—the Month of the Military Child–Secretary Duncan released a letter to school superintendents providing guidance on meeting the unique challenges faced by military-connected students.

During their K-12 education, these children move from six to nine times, and Duncan’s letter calls for school districts across the country to plan smooth transitions for them.

The letter provides additional guidance for school districts and schools (read the letter here), but what the letter fails to mention is what inspired the letter in the first place.

Earlier in April, Secretary Duncan, along with Mrs. Patty Shinseki, and Department of Defense Education Activity Director Marilee Fitzgerald, conducted a Student Voices roundtable with 21 children of service members who attend high schools in the DC area.

The discussion was part of Secretary Duncan’s Student Voices Series, which regularly engages students and increases connections between ED policies and student needs.  The students’ descriptions of their educational experiences were thoughtful and poignant, often revealing heartfelt and persuasive arguments for why we need to do more to assist school personnel in understanding the needs of 1.2 million military-connected children.

The students spoke candidly about their challenges. Many talked about the hardships one experiences when moving to new schools, including transferring course credits.  For several students, when their credits did not transfer, they could not progress through high school with their peers, and in several instances, they were not identified as “graduating seniors” at their new schools, despite the fact that they would have been “seniors” at their prior schools.

One student talked about her challenge of communicating with a deployed parent during school hours because of a “no cell phone” policy, and another explained her frustration that her high school wouldn’t be live streaming graduation so that her deployed father could watch the ceremony.

The conversation during this meeting helped Secretary Duncan understand how children are affected by policy, and contributed to the letter’s urging  schools to take immediate steps to provide assistance, including adopting and/or implementing the Interstate Compact on Educational Opportunity for Military Children.

The Secretary’s Student Voices sessions are designed for the Secretary and his senior staff to listen and learn from young Americans. But they also have an impact on policy, and in this case produced almost immediate action.  That’s one powerful example of why listening to student voices matters, and the Secretary looks forward to more such conversations,

Samuel Ryan is the co-lead for outreach to students in ED’s Office of Communications and Outreach

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4 Responses to Student Voices of Military-Connected Children Inspire Guidance from Secretary Duncan

  1. Charles Boyer says:

    Thank you for your question Barry, my name is Dr. Charles Boyer, I work on military issues at the U.S. Department of Education. Here are a few resources that will help college students whose parents are in the military services.

    If you have more questions I can be reached at charles.boyer@ed.gov.

    Charles Boyer

  2. Janet says:

    As a mother and spouse of Active duty soldier, our children face challenges, that most kids don’t. The military interstate compact is a good start, however there are states that have adopted it and they still have some schools that do what they want because they know they can wait the military out because we are not there for long. My daughter is a junior and has a learning disability, we move to Fort Lee, VA only to encounter a school district that is extremely defiant, but all they want is our money. I have encountered many, military parents like myself who are having soo many problems with the district that we have to send our children to because we live on the base. The school year is almost over and I finally get some services for my child even though we came with an IEP from a different state.

  3. Barry says:

    Outstanding article. Very informative. As a professor in higher education, I do have a question–What strategies and policies are in effect to help the college students whose parents are in the military services?? We need to reach out and help this special population of students.

    • Charles Boyer says:

      Thank you for your question Barry, my name is Dr. Charles Boyer, I work on military issues at the U.S. Department of Education. Here are a few resources that will help college students whose parents are in the military services.

      If you have more questions I can be reached at charles.boyer@ed.gov.

      Charles Boyer