Missouri Parent Survey
By: Ashley Donaldson Burle, Rich Hall, Ph.D., Claire Heggie, and Abby Burrola
The PRiME Center worked with YouGov to distribute a survey about various education topics to a sample of 600 Missouri parents of school-aged children. We summarize their perspectives in this report.
Key Points:
Most parents believed the quality of the local school their child attends is better than the quality of schools in the state.
A majority (57%) of parents felt their child was learning more in school in 2021–22 than in the previous year (2020–21).
Two-thirds (67%) of parents supported charter school operation throughout the state.
Nearly all (90%) parents believed career and technical education (CTE) should be emphasized as a postsecondary pathway.
Most (80%) parents felt the state should pay for college and career readiness exams for all 11th grade students.
Nearly two-thirds (65%) of Missouri parents believed teacher salaries should increase.
A plurality (43%) of parents felt Missouri does not spend enough on education.
More than three of five (62%) parents believed how racism exists in societies and institutions should be taught in schools.
A slight majority (52%) of parents opposed the geographic eligibility provision for the MOScholars program.
Less than one in four (22%) parents agreed they would like for one of their children to become a teacher.