The School Voucher Debate

If, like many parents, you’re dissatisfied with your local public school, you may have daydreamed about yanking your tax money out and using it as tuition at a private school that might better fit your child’s educational needs. If school voucher supporters have their way, that won’t be a fantasy much longer. Whether this appeals to you or appalls you, the issues are far more complex than they first appear.

Competition
Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman argued that free-market competition would improve school quality, as students (and their money) would flock to good schools and abandon bad ones. But here’s the rub: private schools, unlike public, are allowed to reject applicants. Critics argue that voucher programs would skim the best students and the most involved families from struggling schools, leaving less successful students, including the learning-disabled, behind in schools that would then be even worse.

Accountability
Private schools don’t have to meet the same standards public schools do, and their records aren’t always as transparent. However, schools that wished to accept vouchers might be required to meet certain standards.

Separation of Church and State
The vast majority of students in voucher programs attend religious schools rather than secular private schools, which tend to be more expensive. Critics charge that funneling public money into religious institutions violates the Constitutional principle of separation between church and state. Supporters argue that religious schools simply provide affordable options, and that they’re already in place in low-income neighborhoods. If voucher programs became widely instituted, affordable secular options might expand too. In the meantime, says Howard Fuller, Ph.D, Director of the Institute for the Transformation of Learning at Marquette University in Wisconsin, “The choice program in Milwaukee would not work without the inclusion of religious schools.”

Robbing the Poor to Help the Rich?
The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) argues that across-the-board voucher programs take money from public schools to benefit well-off families that can easily afford private school on their own. In other words, why should Richie Rich get thousands of dollars back when he would have attended private school anyway? Surprisingly, Fuller agrees, and the pioneering Milwaukee program applied only to low-income families. “I believe we should focus vouchers on poor and working class families who do not have the resources to move if they live in communities where schools do not work, nor do they have the resources to put their children in private schools.”

Race and Class
It’s no secret that poor and non-white students are the most likely to be trapped in failing public schools. Friedman argued that voucher programs would diversify schools, as children from low-income families would have the money to attend private school. Ironically, however, vouchers started as a reaction to integration, when white students received vouchers to escape integrated public schools for “segregation academies.” An evaluation of the New York City School Choice Scholarship Program by the Program on Educational Policy and Governance at Harvard University found that African-American participants who used the vouchers to attend private school reported more diverse classrooms, higher satisfaction, and achieved higher test scores than their peers in public school.

While complaining about the public school system seems to have become as American as apple pie, problems are easier to define than solutions. Fans of vouchers say more choice is always better. You’ll have to make your own in the upcoming presidential election: John McCain supports vouchers, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama oppose them.

 By Hannah Boyd of Education.com

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08.11.2009
Ms. T
The voucher article is interesting. Why has schooling our children become such a complicated issue? Ultimately whether kids are in private-secular, private-religious, or public schools, our focus needs to remain on the quality of what they are learning each day. I want to suggest a cutting edge curriculum for youth ages 7-19. It's called BOSS The Movement. It is an after-school program that teaches kids the HOW-To's of birthing their dreams, visions and ideas into reality. It focuses on leadership, entrepreneurism and building God-confidence in each student. Check it out at www.bossthemovement.com.
07.09.2009
Cheekyredhead
I see vouchers as a way of creating accountability for teachers which are sub-standard. Of course teachers and teacher's unions balk at this idea. How will they deal with the tenured staff members which are sub-par? We all know that there are many fabulous teachers out there just as there are mediocre ones. These individuals are not just in academia but other fields as well. In other fields there is a form of accountability and recognition not seen in the world of academia. Once one manages to acquire that degree by meeting the marginal guidelines set, obtained a position and tenure, there is no accountability nor any enforcability. If there was, theoretically we'd have weeded out the mediocre teachers. The stance teacher's union take blame the system for shortcomings, lack of funds, or just about anything else besides looking internally. All other business' look internally and fix issues. The pointing of fingers in academia is perpetual with no accountability & our kids suffer.
07.04.2009
Megan
I think exceptions need to be considered by those who are against the idea of vouchers. I am sending my daughter to private school only because they are making accommodations for her food allergies so she won't be singled out. The public school insists my child must sit with only one other child (teacher's pick) and refused to consider my request to check more than one child's lunch so more kids could sit at the "nut free" table. They also told me my child cannot go on certain field trips and would have to be a PE asst for the day. I said I would take her on a comparable learning experience trip and was told it would be an unexcused absence. Since when are nuts more important than a child's social and educational development? I am living paycheck to paycheck to make sure my daughter can be in a "normal" environment and would LOVE to get some help from the voucher system, even if it's a partial refund of my property taxes.
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