MAY 22, 2012
How to Fix What's Broke in Education
Harrisburg Patriot-News columnist Nancy Eshelman rightly sounded the alarm Sunday on Pennsylvania's public education system:
It's the same old story. Every spring, threats of higher taxes, slashed programs or both hang over our heads like thick black clouds.
It's time to yell, "Enough!"
This isn't a midstate problem. Schools across Pennsylvania are slashing and burning programs while jacking up taxes. What we need is someone in power to step up and lead the charge to fundamentally change the way we do business. Our system is broken. We need a better one, one that doesn't rely on property taxes, one that treats education with the importance and respect it deserves.
Ms. Eshelman is correct when she points out that Pennsylvania's public education is broken. But there is a proven policy solution that allows teachers, schools and families to do more with less: School choice. Twenty states have passed education reform that includes opportunity scholarships, or vouchers, to low-income students, and scholarships through tax credits.
The results speak for themselves. After 20 years of trying school choice, our best studies show all or some voucher students improve academically through the policy. The best part? Nineteen of 20 studies show that competition through school choice improves public schools, too. By contrast, simply increasing funding for flagging school districts does not fix the entrenched problems driving persistent failure.
School choice is the new solution Pennsylvania needs to fix its broken education system. With school budgets strained and taxpayer dollars stretched, it's also the remedy that will help students, families, teachers—and our public schools.
posted by PRIYA ABRAHAM | 10:00 AM | 0 comment
MAY 2, 2012
The Patriot Can Do Better Than This...
Our friends at The Patriot-News here in Harrisburg just posted an online poll that asks the following question:
The state Senate has passed a school voucher bill that would allow parents to move their children to better schools at taxpayer expense. Do you support that?
With all due respect to a fine newspaper, that is just not neutral language.
First of all, Senate Bill 1, the piece of legislation in question, is not just about vouchers. It would also expand the Educational Improvement Tax Credit, which is no minor issue, with this program having awarded more than 284,000 scholarships worth $335 million during its first decade.
Secondly, by alluding to doing something new and different "at taxpayer expense," the question implies that vouchers cost taxpayers extra money, but they don't. The money students would take with them from violent, failing schools—to remind you, an act of violence occurs every 17 minutes in one of our lowest-performing public schools—would get spent no matter what, as it would come out of the state subsidy to their original schools. The question is not whether taxpayers have to fork over the cash or not; it is whether students and their parents are forced to use it at a failing, violent school or take it elsewhere. And, of course, in the long run, school choice saves money.
Thirdly, while I would certainly advance the argument that the schools voucher recipients would choose to attend are indeed better than those where an act of violence occurs every 17 minutes, that is also a non-neutral term. "Different" would be more appropriate.
A better way to ask the question would be something like the following:
The state Senate has passed a "school choice" bill that would allow parents to move their children to different schools and have some taxpayer money follow them from the old school to the new. Do you support that?
Thanks to the Patriot for being part of this important discussion. Let's make it as factual as we can.
posted by CHARLES MITCHELL | 03:30 PM | 1 comment
MAY 1, 2012
Philadelphia School District Faces the Budgetary Music

It doesn't take an advanced degree to figure out that something's rotten in the school district of Philadelphia—or that school choice is the antidote. More than half of Philadelphia's 249 schools do not make Adequate Yearly Progress—they are failing. The school district is also notoriously violent: In 2011 alone, it saw nearly 4,000 violent incidents, including 1,437 assaults on students, 1,076 assaults on staff, 116 indecent assaults, 87 robberies, 37 arsons and 642 weapons possessions. Last year saw 10 rapes in Pennsylvania's public schools and all 10 were in Philadelphia.
To cap it all, the school district is almost insolvent, trying to plug a $218 million budget gap that is set to balloon to $1.1 billion by 2017. Faced with such woes, the school district is proposing some serious restructuring:
The plan—subject to public comment and (School Reform Commission) approval—would close 40 schools next year and 64 by 2017, move thousands more students to charters, and dismantle the central office in favor of "achievement networks" that would compete to run groups of 25 schools and would sign performance-based contracts.
As it happens, school choice in the form of Philadelphia charter schools—which have nearly 41,000 students—already saves more than $200 million on public education. That's because charter schools, on average, spend just 83 percent of what traditional public schools spend per student. The School District of Philadelphia retains more than $5,000 in funding for every child that moves to a charter school.
Ultimately, Philadelphia needs more school choice, not less. Opportunity Scholarships or a significant increase to the Educational Improvement Tax Credit would allow parents to use education tax dollars at the school of their choice, and grant an immediate escape to desperate families trapped by their ZIP code in violent, failing schools. It's good that Philadelphia school officials finally see the need to spend more efficiently, but that's a small step toward comprehensive—and necessary— education reform.
posted by PRIYA ABRAHAM | 10:10 AM | 0 comment
APRIL 11, 2012
School Choice: What the Research Says
As the benefits of current school choice programs become clearer, it is time to take our eyes off the past and look towards the future. Jay Green argues that despite many journalists' claims that the research on school choice is "mixed and inconclusive" there is "more agreement among researchers and analysts about the evidence on school choice than reporters let on."
In a piece Dr. Green and eight other researchers published for Education Week in February, four specific areas of agreement are emphasized.
- School choice improves student outcomes—voucher programs have a significant positive effect on graduation rates and lead to modest improvements in math and/or reading scores.
- School choice improves public schools—voucher programs have a positive effect on the performance of public schools in the area.
- School choice saves taxpayers money—even with conservative assumptions of the impact of school choice on state and district budgets, the results have been positive.
- School choice has not harmed students, taxpayers or schools—whether it be in studies of academic performance or public finances or the quality of public schools, voucher programs have not been shown to have any negative effects.
With the importance of educational success to keep America competitive, lawmakers need to embrace the school choice programs that have a proven positive effect. Expanding school choice will improve public schools and student performance, helping to adequately prepare the next generation.
posted by ALEJANDRO GARCIA | 04:37 PM | 0 comment
APRIL 5, 2012
I'm Bringing Some Gumbo to the State Capitol
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal refused to let government unions push him around. His reward? A sweet victory not just for himself, but for the taxpayers, parents, and students of Louisiana. Here's the word from our friends at the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice and CF's sister think tank, the Pelican Institute:
BATON ROUGE - Louisiana will be home to one of the nation's largest school voucher programs once Gov. Bobby Jindal signs legislation that recently passed his state's legislature. Today, by a vote of 60-42, the Louisiana House of Representatives approved Gov. Jindal's voucher expansion, which passed the Senate last night 24-15.
"This is a momentous day for the families of Louisiana," State Superintendent of Education John White said. "All students deserve a fair chance in life, and that begins with the opportunity to attend a high-quality school. These policy changes are aligned with that central belief, and Gov. Jindal and state lawmakers have demonstrated a clear commitment to prioritize the educational rights of Louisiana's next generation above all else."
The expansion of the Student Scholarships for Educational Excellence Program will allow low- and middle-income students in Louisiana public schools graded "C," "D," or "F" by the state accountability system to receive government-funded vouchers to attend private schools. Currently, that option is available only to children in New Orleans and students with special needs in eligible parishes.
Last month, a poll commissioned by the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, an organization supportive of school vouchers, found that 60 percent of Louisiana voters surveyed were in favor of Gov. Jindal's plan to provide vouchers to more families statewide.
"In passing this measure, lawmakers listened to their constituents who are demanding high-quality education options for Louisiana families," Robert Enlow, president and CEO of the Friedman Foundation, said. Enlow's organization was founded by Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, who first developed the idea of school vouchers. "This measure puts control of kids' educations where it belongs-in the hands of their parents. We applaud Gov. Jindal, Superintendent White, and the legislative leaders who are making Louisiana a lead state in putting students first."
Currently, 18 states, including Louisiana, and Washington, D.C., provide some type of private school choice either through vouchers or the tax code. With more than half of its student population now voucher-eligible, the magnitude of Louisiana's voucher program rivals only Indiana's, which enacted a similar statewide program last year.
"Louisiana just opened the doors of opportunity to thousands of children," Kevin Kane, president of Louisiana's Pelican Institute, said. "By expanding school choice, our K-12 education system will be more effective, innovative, and fiscally responsible. Students and parents will be the immediate beneficiaries, but, in the long run, Louisiana as a whole will prosper with a better educated population."
posted by CHARLES MITCHELL | 01:50 PM | 0 comment
MARCH 27, 2012
School Choice in Milwaukee Increases Graduation Rates
The latest analysis of the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program finds that students receiving scholarships to attend the school of their choice are more likely to graduate from high school. The series of reports commissioned by the University of Arkansas Department of Education Reform found that students enrolling in a private school with an opportunity scholarship were 4 to 7 percent more likely to graduate high school, attend college and stay in college than public school peers.
As we have noted previously, improving graduation rates benefits us all, as high school dropouts cost our economy billions every year.
The studies also found that students receiving a scholarship had higher growth on reading achievement tests, and that a high proportion of scholarship recipients are students with disabilities, contrary to the myths spread by school choice opponents.
posted by NATHAN BENEFIELD | 02:00 PM | 0 comment
MARCH 22, 2012
Does School Choice Reduce Crime?
Yesterday, Charles noted a key Wall Street Journal piece on a Council of Foreign Relations report. That report concluded that educational failure is dangerous for our national security and national well-being.
Another recent study published in the Quarterly Journal of Economics, highlighted in the Spring 2012 Education Next, looks more directly at the quality of public education and future crime rates.
We know that criminal offenders often have low levels of education: only 35 percent of inmates in U.S. correctional facilities have earned a high school diploma, compared to 82 percent of the general population. Criminal activity is concentrated among minority males; it begins in early adolescence and peaks when most youth should still be enrolled in secondary school. The schools these young men would attend are typically in high-poverty urban neighborhoods, have high rates of violence and school dropout, and struggle to retain effective teachers. Such schools may be a particularly fertile environment for the onset of criminal behavior.
That lack of a quality education relates to future criminal activity is well established, but does school choice help? Dr. David Deming of Harvard University studied students in Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools in North Carolina who could choose the best school for themselves, if they won a lottery for the available seat. He writes (emphasis added):
I find consistent evidence that attending a better school reduces crime among those age 16 and older, across various schools, and for both middle and high school students. The effect is largest for African American males and youth who are at highest risk for criminal involvement. ...
In this study, I find that winning a lottery for admission to the school of choice greatly reduces criminal activity, and that the greatest reduction occurs among youth at the highest risk for committing crimes. The impacts persist beyond the initial years of school enrollment, seven years after the school-choice lottery was held. The findings suggest that schools may be an opportune setting for the prevention of future crime. Many high-risk youth drop out of school at a young age and are incarcerated for serious crimes prior to the age of high school graduation. For these youth, who are on the margins of society, public schools may present the best opportunity for intervention.
Indeed school choice has many benefits, and not just for students and parents, but for all of us.
posted by NATHAN BENEFIELD | 00:52 PM | 0 comment
MARCH 21, 2012
Violent, Failing Schools Will Lead to Unsafe, Ailing America
That's the upshot of a story in this morning's Wall Street Journal. It begins:
Flaws in U.S. schools are increasingly causing a national-security risk, producing adults without the math, science and language skills necessary to ensure American leadership in the 21st century, warns a report issued Tuesday by the Council on Foreign Relations.
Warning that "the education crisis is a national security crisis," the report says that too many schools are failing to adequately equip students for the work force, and that many have stopped teaching the sort of basic civics that prepare students for citizenship. Resources and expertise aren't distributed equitably, often hurting the most at-risk students. The situation, it says, puts the country's "future economic prosperity, global position, and physical safety at risk."
What do we do, you ask? Exactly what CF and many parents whose kids are trapped in failing, violent schools have been requesting:
The report urges wider use of charter schools and other alternatives to neighborhood public schools that are underperforming....
The report acknowledges the persistence of the problems it highlights, noting that many of the same risks were identified in "Nation at Risk," a 1983 report commissioned by the Reagan administration that warned of "a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a nation and a people." But it cites reasons for fresh hope, including growing public awareness of the issues and bipartisan support for measures to address them.
"This country has a real but time-limited opportunity to make changes that would maintain the United States' position in the world and its security at home," it concludes.
Indeed. And you can imagine what comes after that inspiring call to action: whining from those who are profiting from the status quo. Here's union boss Randi Weingarten:
Six members of the task force offered "additional and dissenting views," including Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, a leading teachers union. While praising the task force's goals and endorsing the report, she criticized it for "placing inordinate responsibility for school improvement on individual teachers" and for "promoting policies like the current topdown, standardized test-driven accountability that has narrowed the curriculum and reinforced the teaching of lower-level skills."
Memo to Ms. Weingarten: Violent, failing schools aren't good for teachers, either. And the amount of money—including from sky-high property taxes due to the pensions for which unions have pushed—that teachers' friends, family members, and neighbors are forced to put into schools that are not giving our nation what it needs is an outrage. It's time for a new approach. That would be the same approach we use in virtually every other important decision in life, including higher education: choice and competition.
posted by CHARLES MITCHELL | 10:30 AM | 0 comment
MARCH 16, 2012
It's Good to be the King (of Charter Schools)
We blogged last month about HB 1973, a bill that would gut funding for cyber schools. Now it turns out there's a bill—recently introduced to the House Education Committee—that goes even further: It would amend public school law and impose more damaging, needless regulation on all charter schools.
Perhaps the most bizarre proposed change is one found on page 2, dealing with how appeal boards review local boards' decisions to issue or deny a charter (the original language is in brackets; the proposed language is underlined):
The appeal board shall [give due consideration to the findings of the local board of directors] use an arbitrary and capricious standard to review the decision of the local board of school directors.
An "arbitrary and capricious standard"? Seriously? Are we in pre-Revolutionary France?
Read the rest of HB 2220, however, and "arbitrary and capricious" fittingly describes the proposed changes. Like HB 1973, the bill limits schools' fund balances, the reserves they accumulate to meet operating expenses and which cover lags in funding, to a maximum of 12 percent of spending. Some lawmakers think this will make charters more like school districts—only they have been duped by an education establishment myth. As of July 2010, 143 school districts had undesignated fund balances exceeding that threshold. The only limit on school district funds is tied to new borrowing. Collectively, school districts had $2.8 billion in reserved funds following the 2009-10 school year.
The bill also outlaws advertising, though cyber and charter schools need to let communities know they exist. Such measures would cover all charter schools, not just cybers. And school districts face no such restriction.
Additionally, school districts would not have to pay cyber schools for "resident students" who attend them if the school districts offer cyber programs. That limits families' ability to use public education dollars at the school of their choice, forcing them into their school district's program if they want a cyber education at all. This bill effectively says that rather than funding children's education, tax dollars should be used to protect the status quo.
We've reported before how cyber and charter schools must meet accountability standards required of regular public schools, plus more. Overall, HB 2220 seeks to hamstring charter and cyber schools and diminish school choice, ensuring traditional public schools not only stay on top of Pennsylvania's education system, but rule over publicly funded charter schools, too. But hey—it's good to be the king.
posted by PRIYA ABRAHAM | 10:00 AM | 0 comment
MARCH 15, 2012
Principled, Punchy Pols Are Popular Pols
I've written previously in this space about Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, who has garnered enormous popularity while governing courageously. Today, with a new Quinnipiac poll about Gov. Tom Corbett's popularity engendering lots of chatter, I want to turn your attention to another relevant governor: Mitch Daniels of Indiana.
These days, Gov. Daniels is a rock star. Just yesterday, one of our CF supporters told me how much he wished Gov. Daniels would run for president, and believe me, he wasn't the first. Observers nationwide have toasted Gov. Daniels' effectiveness in turning the Hoosier State around. What we forget today, though, is that in the middle of his first term, this prophet had no honor in his hometown. The Indianapolis Star ran a pretty unambiguous headline on November 25, 2007: "50% disapprove of Daniels' work." The story noted that the year before, Gov. Daniels' approval rating had been an even lower 37 percent.
You might think, based on that, that Gov. Daniels subsequently turned tail and/or became a private citizen. You'd be wrong. He hasn't let up on taking a scalpel to spending. Less than a year after that poll came out, he won reelection resoundingly, garnering "more votes than any candidate for any public office in the state's history." And since then he has signed a right-to-work law and a major expansion of school choice.
Too many here in Harrisburg think constant caution or even cowardice creates confidence. Gov. Daniels' story says otherwise. We elect leaders to lead. Sometimes that entails making difficult decisions, and we expect those to be explained compellingly along the way. That's exactly what Gov. Daniels has done in Indiana, and the results are obvious—not just in terms of his own political standing, but by the people of his state being better off.
Here's hoping that as this enormously consequential year continues, politicians here in Pennsylvania learn the lessons Gov. Daniels can teach us.
posted by CHARLES MITCHELL | 01:27 PM | 0 comment

RSS FEEDS


.jpg)



.jpg)
