The Legislature enacted the Interstate Compact on Educational Opportunity for Military Children (compact) in 2009 to remove barriers to educational success imposed on children of military families due to frequent moves and deployment of their parents.
Article VIII of the compact requires each member state to have a state council to coordinate compliance with the provisions of the compact. The state council appoints the military family education liaison to assist military families and the state in facilitating the implementation of the compact.
The Purple Star Designation is created to recognize school districts that demonstrate educational and social-emotional supports to students of military service members as they face transitions to a new school. The Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) may collaborate with a state agency or nonprofit organization that has experience serving the needs of a diverse K-12 population to establish and administer the designation. The designation shall be awarded every two years beginning in 2024.
A school district must be considered for a Purple Star Designation if it completes all the required activities and at least one optional activity. The required activities are:
The staff point of contact must work jointly with the state military family education liaison; serve as the primary liaison between military families and the school district; complete professional development on special considerations for military students and families; and identify and inform teachers of military-connected students in their classrooms and the special considerations they should receive.
The optional activities are:
OSPI must make the following available on its website:
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: Purple Star designation will be led by a group of committed state leaders who seek to support military students and families. Military children face constant change such as new schools, new people, and new environments leaving them vulnerable. This change makes it difficult for military connected students to find support in lonely times. Students of military families can be uplifted through inclusion from staff, students, and the community. Feeling understood makes life easier and the purple star bill aims to achieve this for other students of military families. Military connected students move 6 to 9 times on average during their education, creating instability. The purple star program will assist in providing the stability for these military connected students, allowing for academic, social, and emotional success. The purple star award would extend the work of the Student-to-Student program which creates a welcoming environment for students and their families. It would also help ensure that schools and districts meet the requirements related to connecting and supporting our military students. The Purple Star award appears to be more of a designation for schools, this language change has been advised.