School Choice: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.
The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ASPA as an organization.
By Robert Brescia
February 3, 2019
School choice is an
American educational initiative that severs the previously mandated bond
between where a family lives and the student’s assigned school. The idea
provides families with a choice of which school their children can attend. Instead
of collected tax dollars being pooled and redistributed by the state to public
school districts, those same tax dollars would follow the student instead of
the school. There are several mechanisms within the school choice strategy:
- School Vouchers. An amount of money
is calculated that supposedly corresponds to the cost to educate a student in a
district, usually for one year. That money is given to the family, who then
chooses whichever public or private school they want their children to attend.
- Education Savings
Account. Like
school vouchers, families receive funds in an individual savings account. They
can use a debit card to pay for educational services of all kinds, even at
multiple institutions.
- Scholarship Tax Credits.
The
incentive here is a tax break for those donating to scholarship granting
organizations or school tuition organizations. These scholarships pay for those
choosing a private or public school.
- Individual Tax Credit/Deduction. This lowers income
tax so that educational expenses such as tuition and most other related costs
can be paid for.
Who
is doing what to whom–the landscape of school choice.
Sixteen states currently have
school voucher systems in place, but the participation is low–within the single
or double digits. Six states have Educational Saving Accounts, again with very
low participation rates. Nine employ Individual Tax Credit/Deduction methods
with good participation percentages. 26 states offer Scholarship Tax Credits,
but again with extremely low participation rates.
The
Good:
- Freedom is a
wonderful thing, and so is local control of Americans’ lives and communities.
If education can be considered as a basic human right, then this implies parents
should have the liberty to choose where to send their children to school.
- School choice might
be a door-opener to innovation and productivity within a school. When you must
compete for your students, you innovate and create highly desirable programs,
project learning, and other ways to acquire necessary foundational skills.
- Many
impoverished children attend poorly ranked schools; school choice could open
doors to them previously closed by their nine-digit zip codes.
The
Bad:
- Let’s say that a
district has two high schools, and that private schools are sparse–and
primarily religious. Most families might want to use their voucher money at
High School A because it’s considered much better than High School B–better
teachers, safer environment, nicer neighborhood, and perhaps a legendary
football program. High School A’s physical facility will not accommodate
everyone that wants to go there. Therefore, a situation of haves and have-nots
has just been exacerbated, inviting more discord and even legal remedies to be
sought.
- Additionally, if
school money is given directly to parents, wouldn’t some of that money risk
finding its way into places other than school coffers? Money can have a way of
traveling in unintended directions.
- Many
districts have long-term facilities debt currently. Schools have been built for
a maximal number of projected students. Vouchers could result in those schools
operating with far fewer students and by consequence, much less efficiently.
The
Ugly:
- Most educational funding
issues have become political and partisan for many years now. School choice is
no exception.
- Some say that we
already have school choice–if you want to send your child to a private school,
you may do so. Just pony up the tuition. It’s not the state’s job to finance
your choice to do so.
- States don’t
control private schools, so vouchers could hypothetically be used to subsidize
a religious school. This could be completely counter to our American way of
life and culture.
- School
transportation systems usually cannot accommodate school choice systems. If you
choose a school across town, you’re on your own to get your child there and
back.
Conclusion.
I believe that some degree of
school choice is on the horizon in many states. The alternative is to keep trying
to make schools as homogenous as possible in their curricula, via Common Core
standards. But schools and districts have never been monolithic. We could also throw
more money at schools and hope for a better result. If you want to do that, just
aim your throw exclusively at the teachers. At least by paying teachers what
they are worth and unleashing their potential, we can hope to retain many more
of them and attract good people into the profession.
My state, Texas, is currently in
legislative session and tackling these issues head on. Some earth-shaking
things could come from this session. For example, Texas private schools do not
take the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness (STAAR) test or
end-of-course exams. If you give public money to private schools, they might
have to take on the STAAR test and a host of other constraints. Maybe–wait and
see.
Author: Dr. Robert Brescia serves as Founder & CEO of The Ethics House, a consulting startup designed to help cities and counties with their ethics programs. His latest book is Destination Greatness – Creating a New Americanism. Bob has a doctoral degree with distinction in Executive Leadership from The George Washington University. He also serves as Chairman of the Board at Basin PBS – West Texas public television and the Permian Basin American Red Cross. Please contact him at [email protected] or Twitter: @Robert_Brescia.




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Richard
February 6, 2019 at 8:13 pm
Excellent synopsis of the issue!