Texas Supreme Court advisory
Contact: Osler McCarthy, staff attorney for public information
512.463.1441 or click for email
Friday, May 21, 2010
NEW COMMITTEE WILL ASSESS EDUCATION
OF FOSTER-CARE CHILDREN, MAKE RECOMMENDATIONS
In an order
posted Friday, the Supreme Court of Texas has established a committee to
examine how to improve education for foster children, who grapple with lower
school achievement, higher high-school dropout rates and lower test scores than
schoolchildren as a whole.
The 13-member committee will work under the Court’s Permanent Judicial
Commission for Children, Youth and Families, which was created in 2007 to help
courts improve outcomes for those caught n the child-protection system.
District Judge Patricia Macias of El Paso will serve as committee chair.
The Court’s order charges the committee with identifying and assessing challenges
to educational success of children and youth in foster care, identifying and
recommending judicial practices to help achieve better educational outcomes,
and seeking to improve collaboration, communication and court practice through
partnerships with the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, the
Texas education system and others working in education and child-protection.
“Far too many foster youth slip through the educational cracks,” said Justice
Harriet O’Neill, chair of the Permanent Judicial Commission for Children, Youth
and Families. “Judges are in a unique position to ask the right questions,
convene the necessary stakeholders and recommend practices that will help these
kids succeed in school and beyond.”
In its order the Court cites findings by the American Bar Association’s Legal
Center for Foster Care and Education showing foster children as a whole are
more mobile and suffer academically because of it.
The committee will issue a final report with recommendations no later than
March 31, 2012, which will follow a schedule for interim reports due at the end
of December and again at the end of August 2011.
Order