HOUSE BILL ANALYSIS

                 HB  2308

Title:  An act relating to school tests, questionnaires, surveys, analyses, and evaluations.

 

Brief Description:  Requiring parental consent before a school conducts certain tests, questionnaires, surveys, analyses, or evaluations.

 

Sponsors:  Representatives Mulliken, Johnson, McCune, Backlund, Carrell, Boldt, Sheahan, Smith and Talcott.

 

HOUSE COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION

 

Meeting Date:  January 16, 1998

 

Bill Analysis Prepared by:  Jim Morishima (786-7191).

 

Background:  State law requires school districts to adopt policies to ensure that a parent has access to the teaching materials for the parent=s child.  The State Board of Education has adopted an administrative rule that prohibits, absent written parental consent, the use of questionnaires to obtain information from a student about his or her personal beliefs or practices with respect to sex or religion, or that of the student=s parents.  Another rule requires school districts to obtain written consent of a parent prior to administering any diagnostic personality test to the parent=s child.

 

Summary of Bill:  A school may not use oral or written tests, questionnaires, surveys, examinations, or evaluations to elicit a student=s personal beliefs, or the personal beliefs of their family regarding sex or religion without the written consent of a parent or legal guardian.  The school must make available all material that will be used in connection with any test, questionnaire, survey, analysis or evaluation to any member of the school board or a parent or legal guardian of a student.

 

Unless the student is an adult or an emancipated minor, prior consent of the parent or legal guardian is required before a school administers tests, questionnaires, surveys, analyses, or evaluations that reveal the following information concerning the student or the student=s parent:

 

1.political affiliations;

2.mental or psychological history or problems of the student or the student=s family;

3.sexual behavior and attitudes;

4.illegal, antisocial, and self-incriminating behavior;

5.critical comments about close family members;

6.legally privileged communications (with doctors, lawyers, or ministers); or

7.income level except as required by law to determine eligibility for participation in a program or to receive financial assistance under a program.

 

Educational agencies must give parents and students effective notice of their rights prior to administering any test, questionnaire, survey, analysis, or evaluation that asks any of the pertinent questions described above.  The school board must be given an opportunity to hear a presentation about such a test, questionnaire, survey, analysis, or evaluation.  This presentation must be given at an open public meeting of the board.

 

Certain research studies that identify individual students and are approved by an institutional review board under United States Department of Health and Human Services regulations are exempt from most of the provisions of this act.

 

Appropriation:  None.

 

Fiscal Note:  Not requested.

 

Effective Date:  Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.