‘There Is No Oversight’: Private-School Vouchers Can Leave Parents on Their Own

In Education On

Plans from President Donald Trump and DeVos to create a federal private school choice program have hit roadblocks, but there’s a strong push to create new voucher programs in some states and expand existing programs in others. That’s raising critical questions over how well vouchers and other similarly-styled policies serve students and whether there are guardrails in place to ensure the public money being sunk into private school choice is a sound investment.

Findings from a string of recent studies in Indiana, Louisiana, and Ohio border on alarming, showing that students who attend private schools with the help of public money may end up doing worse after they leave their public schools.

But school choice advocates vigorously argue that parental demand for private school choice proves that it’s working. Excessive state oversight, they contend, undermines private schools’ ability to be flexible. And there’s no better system of accountability than the market-style kind that comes from giving parents the freedom to choose schools.

Critics counter that a lack of state oversight puts voucher students—many from poor families or with disabilities—at serious risk of falling even further behind.

Read full Education Week article

You may also read!

The Secrets of ‘Cognitive Super-Agers’

One of my greatest pleasures during the Covid-19 shutdowns

Read More...

Is Education No Longer the ‘Great Equalizer’?

There is an ongoing debate over what kind of

Read More...

Even the terrorist threat to the United States is now partisan

Hours after he announced his objection to forming a

Read More...

Mobile Sliding Menu