A group of Washougal parents say their children’s elementary classes are too crowded.
The group of about half a dozen parents approached the Washougal School Board at the April 10 board meeting.
Amy Gunn, a mother of three school-aged children who used to volunteer in her son’s third-grade Columbia River Gorge Elementary School classroom, told school board members that she had concerns over classroom behavior as well as classroom sizes.
“Not only was the classroom crowded at 27 to 28 students, it had several students with special needs and several other students who had serious behavioral issues. The classroom was loud and chaotic, and not a good environment for learning,” Gunn said. “The classroom had no aides or paraeducators to help out.”
Gunn said her son began to feel unsafe in his classroom this year, after another student allegedly spit into his eye. Unable to switch their 8-year-old son out of that classroom, Gunn said her family opted to homeschool the third-grader.
The school district has a class size goal determined in the collective bargaining agreement of 25 students for K-3 classrooms and 28 students for grades four and five.