A few weeks ago, I walked into the Texas Capitol for the first time in my life—not as a tourist or a parent chaperone for a school visit but as a witness. I was there to testify before the House Public Education Committee on a deceptively simple bill: House Bill 5263, filed by Representative Charlie Geren. The bill aimed to require that every parent in Texas be able to access their child’s state assessment results with a single click.
On its face, it seems like a small administrative tweak. But I testified because it’s more than that. It’s about a parent’s right and need to know.
TEA has built an excellent tool in texasassessment.gov. It breaks down each child’s STAAR scores in a clear, easy-to-understand way. You can see exactly where they’re strong and where they’re struggling. It even recommends targeted resources for learning support. It’s the kind of transparency that is so important in public education.
But here’s the problem: most parents never see it.
I know, because I’m one of them. As a public-school parent, I tried to log in to the website and spent hours chasing down the information, calling my child’s school, then the district, then trying again. I was asked for things like a “unique access code” and a PEIMS ID. When I finally got the code, it didn’t even work. It was the wrong one.
It shouldn’t be this hard.
If parents are partners with the school in their child’s education, we need to equip parents with the most basic, critical information: Is my child on grade level?
Right now, most don’t know. When the Go Beyond Grades campaign was launched in Fort Worth last spring, parents were surveyed across Tarrant County. 96% of them believed their children were reading on grade level. The reality? Only about 50% were.
That’s what we call the perception gap—and it’s one of the most urgent problems we face.
House Bill 5263 was designed to close that gap by making state assessment information, specifically STAAR results, easily accessible for all parents. It would ensure privacy, protect data, and empower parents to act when their child falls behind.
I shared this story with the committee. I brought pages of notes, anticipating tough questions. I got none. Not one. Maybe because the problem—and the solution—is so obvious. How could anyone be against this?
Unfortunately, HB 5263 didn’t survive the session. It was folded into HB 4, a broader accountability bill that ultimately failed to pass, getting stuck in negotiations between the House and the Senate.
That’s frustrating. But it doesn’t mean there’s nothing we can do.
Here in Fort Worth, we didn’t wait. Last year, Fort Worth ISD made the change. FWISD parents now have quick, easy access to their child’s state test scores. Other districts and public charter networks across Texas can do the same—and they should.
Until a statewide solution is in place, we’ll continue doing everything possible to help parents navigate the system. We’ve created a step-by-step guide to access the TEA’s site (Texasassessment.gov.docx), and we’re connecting families to free summer learning opportunities across Tarrant County that help students stay on track.
Because here’s what I know:
Parents may not always have access.
But they always care.
And when given the information they need, they act—because no one will fight harder for a child than their parent.
Let’s not make that fight any harder than it has to be.
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