We now have a newly released research study which confirms what we already know. Given a choice of which school to attend will make a meaningful difference to the education received by our children. And it will more than likely save taxpayers some money as well. What's not to like about that kind of freedom?
If that's the case, and it is, why then is there often such strong opposition by the teachers' unions and Democratic Party leaders to allowing such parental free choice? We want better educational outcomes and lower taxpayer costs, and school vouchers are one way to provide just that.
In any event, there's solid evidence that voucher programs are effective at helping low income parents of African-American students achieve better educational outcomes for their children. My question is this. Even without such evidence, why do government officials know more than the parents of our children about what schools are best for our kids to attend? I can think of none.
But let's return to the evidence supporting school vouchers for one and all. The study deals specifically with low-income families and places a special emphasis on African-American kids in New York.
In that connection, A Generation of School-Voucher Success is subtitled 'African-American kids in New York were 24% more likely to attend college if they won a scholarship to attend private school:'
"President Barack Obama last month signed an executive order promising
to "improve outcomes and advance educational opportunities for African
Americans." The order instructs federal agencies to "promote, encourage,
and undertake efforts" to increase "college access, college persistence
and college attainment for African American students." Unfortunately,
his administration remains opposed to the Opportunity Scholarship
program in Washington, D.C., which lets students—mostly low-income and
African-American—use a voucher to attend a private school.
Perhaps Mr. Obama will reconsider his
position on vouchers now that we have for the first time tracked the
impact of a voucher program all the way from kindergarten (in 1997) to
college enrollment (in 2011). Our study compared students who won a
voucher lottery with students who didn't—the only difference between the
groups was the luck of the draw, the gold standard in research design.
The study shows that an
African-American student who was able to use a voucher to attend a
private school was 24% more likely to enroll in college than an
African-American student who didn't win a voucher lottery.
The voucher program took place in New
York City. . . .
The foundation offered three-year
scholarships—that is, vouchers—worth up to $1,400 annually (in 1998
dollars) to approximately 1,000 low-income families with children of
elementary-school age. A recipient could attend any of the hundreds of
private schools, religious or secular, in New York City.
The city's
largest provider of private schooling was the Catholic archdiocese,
which reported average tuition at the time of $1,728 per year. Total
expenditures at these schools, from all revenue sources, came to $2,400
per pupil (compared to total costs of more than $5,000 per pupil in the
public schools). Over 20,000 applicants participated in the lottery.
Of the 2,666 students in the original
study, necessary information was available for over 99%. . . . We know of no
other voucher study that has been as successful at tracking students
over such a long period of time.
Although
our study identified no significant impact on college enrollments among
Hispanic students (and too few white and Asian students participated for
us to analyze), the impact on African-American students was large. Not
only were part-time and full-time college enrollment together up 24%,
but full-time enrollment increased 31% and attendance at selective
colleges (enrolling students with average SAT scores of 1100 or higher)
more than doubled, to 8% from 3%.
These impacts are especially striking
given the modest costs of the intervention: only $4,200 per pupil over a
three-year period. This implies that the government would actually save
money if it introduced a similar voucher program, as private-school
costs are lower than public-school costs. To get a similar (19%)
increase in college enrollment among African-Americans from a class-size
reduction effort in Tennessee in the late 1980s, the public-school
system had to spend $9,400 per pupil (in 1998 dollars).
The difference in the effects for
African-American and Hispanic students is probably due to the greater
educational challenges faced by the African-Americans. Only 36% of them
went to college if they didn't receive a voucher, compared to 45% of the
Hispanic students.
President Obama is certainly correct to
identify the particularly steep educational barriers that
African-American students must surmount if they are to become
college-ready. And he seems to have nothing against private school per
se, as he has long sent his own daughters to private schools.
Yet—apparently thanks to opposition to vouchers from powerful teachers
unions—the president still hasn't taken the next step and helped open
private-school doors for low-income children as well.
"I have an 8-year-old in third grade,
and she's doing great. It's miraculous the way she has changed," said a
voucher-winning African-American mother at a focus group session in
1999. The cause of the change was clear. It came from the power of
parental choice in education. It wasn't "miraculous"—unless you happen
to be one of the parents directly involved."
{NOTE: "The Effects of School Vouchers on College Enrollment: Experimental Evidence from New York City," was published Thursday.}
Summing Up
All parents should be able to choose where to send their kids to school and to finance that choice, parents should be able to use a substantial portion, if not all, of the money government currently spends per pupil in our public school system.
And this should be true for all students, low-income and all others as well.
Isn't it time to put the interests of our individual citizens above the teachers' unions and their allies, the Democratic Party?
Doesn't every American child deserve the opportunity to work hard and achieve the American dream?
And don't his or her parents deserve our support as well?
And that of the President and the Democratic Party, too?
Thanks. Bob.
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