Home Mobile Archives Reader Blogs Register Login

Friday, June 17, 2005

Parental Choice Programs Working

Interesting...

The saga began in 1999, when Gov. Jeb Bush signed into law the first money-back guarantee in the history of public education: the Opportunity Scholarship Program. Under the program, whenever a public school receives two failing grades on Florida's academic performance standards, state educational officials come into the school with a remedial program, and the students are allowed to transfer to better performing public schools or to use a share of their public funds as full payment of private-school tuition.

Six years later, only 750 children are attending private schools using opportunity scholarships. But their footsteps have reverberated across the state, prompting failing public schools to reform. Steps taken by failing schools have included spending more money in the classroom and less on administration, hiring tutors for poor performing teachers, and providing year-round instruction to pupils.

Defenders of the status quo insist that such reforms were already under way. But a freedom of information request by the Institute for Justice from school districts that lifted schools off the failing list revealed ubiquitous reference to the dreaded V-word: Without such measures, school officials warned, we wind up with vouchers. The rules of economics, it seems, do not stop at the schoolhouse doors.

The results have been stunning. Even with tougher state standards, nearly half of Florida's public schools now earn "A" grades, while a similar percentage scored "C's" when the program started. A 2003 study by Jay Greene found that gains were most concentrated among schools under threat of vouchers.

Most remarkable has been minority student progress. While the percentage of white third-graders reading at or above grade level has increased to 78% from 70% in 2001, the percentage among Hispanic third-graders has climbed from 46% to 61%, and among blacks from 36% to 52%. Graduation rates for Hispanic students have increased from 52.8% before the program started to 64% today; and for black students from 48.7% to 57.3%. Minority schoolchildren are not making such academic strides anywhere else.


This isn't the full-on voucher type system that I feel would be extremely successful in raising the bar for public education in this country, but it does seem to be working well. Its hard to argue with success.

Unfortunately, some people are against programs like the one above. Can you guess who?

The usual cast of characters that has opposed parental choice programs in other states--teachers unions, the American Civil Liberties Union, and People for the American Way--mounted a legal attack on the Florida program as the ink was drying.


Why did they attack? Spokesmen from the groups above would no-doubt give you a litany of reasons. They'll tell us that public money going to private religious schools (which some parents have chosen over public schools) violates the separation of church and state. Others will tell you that public funding of private schools goes against the constitutions of many states which mandate that the government must provide schooling for children and that funding private schooling does not meet that requirement.

But those reasons above are nonsense. The real reasons are these:


  1. These people want to be in charge of what your child is taught. If parents are able to choose where their kids get their education they won't be able to do that.


  2. The teachers don't want to have to compete with one another. Most public school teachers only have to do their jobs well enough to remain employed at the public school. There is no threat of loosing students, and thus their jobs, should another school perform better. So when laws like this come along the teachers unions squawk.



The bottom line is this: Parental choice programs gives parents more control over how their children are educated. And, if Florida is any example, giving parents more control over their children's educations usually results in a better education for the children.

Look, specifically, at the numbers for the minority children. You can imagine why there's been such a large jump since this program began. Many of these minority parents probably live in areas with poor public schools. Its a story we're all familiar with. But with Gov. Bush's program they were able to send their kids to better schools. It has been said many times that education is the key to racial equality. If that's true, and I think most of us would agree that it is, then what is so wrong about a program that allows for a better education for all children?

Comments

Avatar for Say Anything » California School Wants To Re

[...] If these educators are really interested in helping minority students succeed they should look to Florida where Jeb Bush’s Parental Choice Programs are having great success. [...]

Avatar for Say Anything » Using Disaster Funding To Rai

[...] Schools, to use one of Oliver’s examples, are a much different thing. There is a private education industry in this country and it works quite well. Students who attend private schools are, by and large, better educated (in a more efficient and cost-effective manner) than kids in public schools. And its been proven in practice that when parents are given options for their child’s education, allowed to “shop with their feet” if you will, kids (especially low income and minority kids) get a better education. [...]

Avatar for Say Anything - North Dakota’s Most Popular P

[...] Down in Florida the President’s brother has instituted a vouchers-like education program that has kindled a firestorm of positive test scores from minority students, yet do you think that Gov. Bush get’s one lick of credit for this from the likes of Sharpton or Jackson? Are Sharpton or Jackson joining with Republicans to institute programs like this in other states where it is badly needed? Like California? Or New York? [...]

Avatar for Say Anything - North Dakota’s Most Popular P

[...] Anyway, here’s how the voucher system worked from an earlier post I had written on this subject: [...]

Avatar for The WB42 5:30 Report With Doug Krile: July 2005

[...]  Make sure you read the blogger’s comments after the story.  If the kids are having a tough time with English, lets just teach them slang:SAN BERNARDINO Incorporating Ebonics into a new school policy that targets black students, the lowest-achieving group in the San Bernardino City Unified School District, may provide students a more well-rounded curriculum, said a local sociologist.The goal of the district’s policy is to improve black students’ academic performance by keeping them interested in school. Compared with other racial groups in the district, black students go to college the least and have the most dropouts and suspensions.Blacks make up the second largest racial group in the district, trailing Latinos.A pilot of the policy, known as the Students Accumulating New Knowledge Optimizing Future Accomplishment Initiative, has been implemented at two city schools.Mary Texeira, a sociology professor at Cal State San Bernardino, commended the San Bernardino Board of Education for approving the policy in June.Texeira suggested that including Ebonics in the program would be beneficial for students. Ebonics, a dialect of American English that is spoken by many blacks throughout the country, was recognized as a separate language in 1996 by the Oakland school board.“Ebonics is a different language, it’s not slang as many believe,’ Texeira said. “For many of these students Ebonics is their language, and it should be considered a foreign language. These students should be taught like other students who speak a foreign language.’Oh brother…Ebonics is no more a “foreign language” than an Arkansas hillbilly’s drawl or a North Dakota norskie’s Scandinavian accentuation is.I find it interesting that the article notes that many of the kids are already speaking Ebonics. Or, at least, are already familiar with it. This is because they’re uneducated. Saying that you’re going to stop teaching them proper English and start enforcing their already bad speaking habits is called “giving up.” Its also called “lowering the bar,” which is probably why this switch from English to Ebonics is being suggested. The teachers are having a hard time doing their jobs, so they want to make their jobs easier. Soon all these kids will be getting “A’s” in Ebonics while the teachers are patting themselves on the back for a job well done (and probably asking for raises).Meanwhile, these students will soon be entering a marketplace where their Ebonics dialect will make them sound ignorant to the majority of Americans who speak proper English.The problem here is not the students. These minority kids are just as capable of learning as any other American kid. The problem is with the teachers.If these educators are really interested in helping minority students succeed they should look to Florida where Jeb Bush’s Parental Choice Programs are having great success.(via Wizbang) California School Wants To Replace English Class With Ebonics [...]

Avatar for Say Anything - North Dakota’s Most Popular P

[...] Of course, unions and many education associations are four-square against vouchers, mostly because a competitive market place isn’t always an easy place to work in (although most Americans deal with competition every day). In Florida a wildly successful voucher program (which had sparked startling increases in test scores for minority students and students across the board) was struck down in a court ruling after it was challenged by unions. [...]

Page 1 of 1        

Post a Comment


Before commenting, please recite:

Grant me the serenity to ignore the trolls,
the courage to debate with honest opponents,
and the wisdom to know the difference.

Name   
Email   
URL   
Human?
  
 

Upload Image    

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Note: Notifications will only be sent to confirmed email addresses.