Education
A "turning
point" for school choice By The Editors
January 8, 2000 World
Magazine Volume 15; Number 1
Voucher programs survived legal challenges
in 1999 to flourish in 69 cities; tuition tax-credit initiatives also picked
up steam. Some public-school defenders are seeking alternatives to court:
10 school districts in New Jersey are implementing their own state-sponsored
choice program, complete with innovations that they say will improve schooling.
Even the prospect of real competition has some effect.
"1999 was a turning point for
the school-choice movement," says Fritz Steiger, president of the Arkansas-based
school-choice organization CEO America.
Among the victories for school-choice
supporters:
Tuition
Tax Credits: The U.S. Supreme Court let stand Arizona's Voluntary
Tuition Tax Credit, a state income-tax credit for contributions to privately
funded voucher programs. In Illinois, a judge tossed out one of two lawsuits
challenging the state's new $500 tuition tax credit. Signed in June, the
tax-credit law gives parents a 25 percent state income-tax credit for
their children's tuition, books, and lab fees.
Florida's
A+ Plan: The nation's first statewide voucher program is still
alive. Students in every Florida public school take a standardized test
at specific grade intervals. Students in schools that score a composite
F twice in four years are eligible for state-funded tuition vouchers to
attend private schools. Last week, in a 4-2 vote, the state Board of Education
reaffirmed the program and outlined plans for fine-tuning.
Horizon
Scholarship Program:Parents of 837 San Antonio kids enrolled
in the Horizon Scholarship Program, the first district-wide, privately
funded voucher program, report that they're happy with the private-school
choices they've made for their children.
Harvard researchers evaluated the
program's impact during the 1998-99 school year. When researchers asked
Edgewood district parents whether their child was at a school they preferred,
92 percent percent of Horizon program parents said they were, as opposed
to only 75 percent of Edgewood public-school parents.
The Harvard
study also exploded one popular anti-school choice myth: that
private schools accepting tax-paid vouchers will choose only "cream of
the crop" students, leaving public schools filled with low-performing pupils.
Researchers found no evidence of discriminatory admission practices among
schools receiving Horizon scholarships.
Interim
High Court Victory:The U.S. Supreme
Court squashed a temporary injunction imposed on the long-embattled Cleveland
Scholarship Program (CSP) by a federal judge. In August, just one day
before school was to begin, U.S. District Judge Solomon Oliver had yanked
CSP tuition aid from allof the program's nearly 4,000 students. He quickly
rescinded that decision, but still barred new enrollees from receiving
vouchers. The Supreme Court in November, by a 5-4 vote, reversed the judge's
order. But less than a week before Christmas, the judge issued a
permanent order finding the program unconstitutional. He elected not to
pick a new fight with the high court, exempting all the kids currently
in the program while his ruling goes through the appeals process.
Reprinted
with permission from WORLD Magazine,
©2000
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