Wissam Charafeddine for MI Board of Education

Engineering Michigan's Future

Campaign Hero

My Bio

I've spent my career at this intersection. I'm an engineer, an educator, an author, and a community builder from Dearborn. I work daily as a Family & Community Engagement Liaison in Michigan schools. I've built student governments, ed-tech tools, and the nonprofit institutions my community was missing for 20 years.

My Key Issues

Code the Future

The SBE adopted K–12 Computer Science Standards on May 14, 2019, making Michigan the 31st state to do so — but implementation was left voluntary and uneven. Michigan Governor Whitmer signed Public Act 206 of 2024 on January 17, 2025, requiring every Michigan high school to offer CS by the 2027–28 school year — but offering a course is not the same as requiring students to take it. As of 2022–23, 401 of Michigan's 1,265 high schools reported no students in any CS-related course. My three commitments: 1. District-by-district CS implementation transparency report; 2. A CS teacher pipeline plan to meet the 2027 mandate; and 3. STEAM integration across all subjects, not just math and science.

Tech That Works for Teachers

Rigorous, Teacher-Led Standards for Ed-Tech Procurement Anchored in real Michigan history: MI Roadmap: Transforming Education Through Technology was presented to the SBE in March 2017 — a vision document with no procurement standards or teacher input requirements. Michigan's SOPPA (Public Act 368 of 2016) governs student data privacy with ed-tech vendors — but addresses data only, not efficacy or teacher usability. My three commitments: 1. Mandatory Michigan Ed-Tech Quality Standards before purchase; 2. Required teacher review panels in all procurement; 3. An annual public Ed-Tech Transparency Report.

Schools That Know Your Family

Fully Funding Culturally Competent Family Engagement Anchored in real Michigan history: The MDE released MiFamily: Michigan's Family Engagement Framework, aligned to the Top 10 in 10 Strategic Plan — a strong document that is completely voluntary and unfunded. Federal law (Lau v. Nichols and ESSA) requires schools to provide interpretation and translation so families can meaningfully participate — requirements Michigan schools routinely fail to meet. My three commitments: 1. A funded Culturally Competent Family Engagement Pilot in high-density immigrant districts; 2. A mandatory Language Access Standard for family communications; 3. Dedicated state funding for family engagement coordinators tied to measurable outcomes.

Send Me a Message

Have questions or suggestions? I would love to hear from you!

Campaign Headquarters

29625 Buckingham St, Livonia, MI 48154, USA

wissam.charafeddine@gmail.com

(313) 516-9749