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Increasing Numbers of P.V. Parents Choose to Protect Student Privacy From Military
by Student Empowerment Project
Monday Mar 19th, 2007 11:28 PM
INCREASING NUMBERS OF PV PARENTS CHOOSE TO PROTECT STUDENT PRIVACY FROM MILITARY RECRUITERS
Two Thirds of Watsonville and Aptos High School Parents Are “Opting Out”
WATSONVILLE - On the fourth anniversary of the War in Iraq, statistics recently released by the Pajaro Valley Unified School District (PVUSD) are showing that an increasing number of parents in the Pajaro Valley are choosing to “opt out” of having their high school child’s information released to military recruiters.

In June 2005, the former PVUSD Board of Trustees majority approved a policy to better inform parents of their right to not have their child’s information disclosed to military recruiters by placing the right to “opt out” on the student’s emergency card. The federal No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) requires public schools to release high school students’ information to military recruiters unless the parent(s) “opts out.” School districts are also required to inform parents of their right to not have their child’s information disclosed to military recruiters, which includes the students’ names, address, gender, age, ethnicity, Social Security numbers, academic achievement data and e-mail addresses.

The previous information given to PVUSD parents and students by the school district was being buried with dozens of other documents distributed at the beginning of the school year. As a result, numerous Pajaro Valley parents, students, teachers and community members requested that the information be placed on the emergency cards to better inform parents.

At the time, the Los Angeles Times documented that military recruitment goals were coming up short each year, and how military recruiters’ were utilizing overly aggressive and unauthorized tactics especially in schools with predominately minority students. Even the National PTA endorsed a federal bill (“the Student Privacy Protection Act” – former HR 551, 109th Congress) by San Jose Congressman Mike Honda to provide greater privacy protection for students from military recruiters. The National PTA stated, “the right to disclose personal information of minors should remain solely with their parents.''

Since enacting the emergency card policy, huge numbers of PV parents have chose to exercise their right to protect their child’s information from military recruiters. Numerous other districts have already enacted similar policies. Last year, Assemblywoman Sally Lieber (D-Mountain View) carried a bill to make the PVUSD policy a statewide requirement through Assembly Bill 1778 (“The Student and Family Privacy Protection Act of 2006”). Although the bill won the support of the State Assembly and Senate, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill last September.

At Aptos High School, the numbers of parents who chose to “opt out” from releasing their child’s information spiked from 16 percent in the 2003-04 school year to 67 percent in only two years after the emergency card policy was approved. At Watsonville High School, the number of parents who also chose to “opt out” skyrocketed from 4 percent in 2003-04 school year to 66 percent two years later.

“The Watsonville and Aptos High cases clearly demonstrate that when parents are better informed of their rights, they will choose to exercise them,” said Luis Alejo, a local public interest attorney and director of the Student Empowerment Project. “Parents are saying loud and clear that they do not want their child’s information released to military recruiters.”

Most other PVUSD high schools are also showing increased numbers of parents choosing to not disclose their child’s information to military recruiters. At Pacific Coast Charter School, 91 percent of parents opted out this school year. At the Academic/Vocational Charter Institute, 57 percent of parents opted out this school year. At the New School, the latest data was unavailable, but during the previous year in 2005-06, 100 percent of the parents of 116 students opted out. At Renaissance High School, 35 percent of parents opted out in 2006-05, which is an increase from 29 percent in 2005-06.

The only PVUSD high school that showed a decrease was Pajaro Valley High School where only 28 percent of parents opted out during the 2006-07 school year compared to 56 percent during the previous year in 2005-06.

“The data of PV High is disturbing and school officials should better ensure that parents are getting the right information. More outreach must be done to better inform the parents and students about rights,” said Alejo.
§Pajaro Valley Opt-Out Stats
by Student Empowerment Project Monday Mar 19th, 2007 11:34 PM
640_pv_opt_out_1.jpg
The Student Empowerment Project is a grassroots, student advocacy organization based in Watsonville that aims to increase student civic activism and leadership, improve conditions in California’s rural, public schools and increase access to higher education for low-income students throughout rural California.

Comments  (Hide Comments)

by opt-out campaigner
Tuesday Mar 20th, 2007 12:08 AM
one of the nice things about the new policy we got passed in the PVUSD a few years ago is that students have the right to opt-out too - a right that we're given under the No Child Left Behind Act, but most schools/districts ignore. So its not just the parents!
by Robert Norse
Tuesday Mar 20th, 2007 12:49 AM
Why the drop in opt-outs at Pajaro Valley High?
by bill naiditch
Tuesday Mar 20th, 2007 1:17 PM
Does the Defense Department have access to the names of who opted out? For instance, can they compare a list of all students with their list of who did not opt-out?
by student
Tuesday Mar 20th, 2007 3:31 PM
I don't think so, Bill. I imagine you're thinking of the Pentagon's huge recruitment database of youth based on a wide variety of information. So even if a student opts out from their local school giving information to recruiters, the military could still contact the student because the Pentagon got their data from some other source.
by tierra_madre
Tuesday Mar 20th, 2007 6:06 PM
Students have, are now or will be taking the California High School Exit Exam (or CAHSEE) this Spring. These tests include a "questionairre" section" the student is supposed to fill out to (supposedly) help the testing company to find out how to serve the students better. One question asks what the students expect to be doing after they graduate and the first option listed (or one of the first) is "Military."

I do not know what they are doing with this information or if a student indicates interest in the military if the company will then release info. to recruiters. BEWARE, however!! We all know how sneaky the military and these PRIVATE CORPORATIONS who create and correct these tests can be.... I wouldn't trust them at all and I'd instruct my students to keep their "questionaire" responses very general. ----- >

The government has NO RIGHT to surreptitiously collect information about students through MANDATED testing.

Students know your rights. You have a RIGHT TO PRIVACY!! F**K BIG FRICKIN BROTHER!

----> KNOWLEDGE IS POWER!

Thanks for posting this, Student Empowerment Project.
by k
Thursday Mar 22nd, 2007 12:47 PM
I don't know about the exit exam, but I do know that the Armed Service Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) test is one of the primary ways local military recruiters get students contact information. Schools are required to give students career tests, yet many school districts can't afford the fancy ones that rich schools get. So they use the military's ASVAB test, which basically says where the military thinks students would be most useful in the military. Districts can choose 'Option 8' to prevent student info from being released to recruiters, but most don't do so. The test is optional, but many students don't know that either.
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