Congress has the opportunity to give
low-income parents in the District of Columbia scholarships of up
to $7,500 to enroll their children in a private school of their
choice. The proposal, passed by the Senate Appropriations Committee
and the House of Representatives, will come to a final vote in the
near future as part of the FY 2004 D.C. Appropriations bill or an
omnibus appropriations bill.
During floor debate or conference, it is
essential Members not add additional mandates to the
legislation's existing requirements on schools and families.
Additional requirements will reduce the number of options for
participating families and are unlikely to improve the program in
any way.
History of the
Legislation
Earlier this year, frustrated
parents and prominent elected leaders such as Mayor Anthony A.
Williams (D), D.C. Councilman Kevin P. Chavous and School Board
President Peggy Cooper Cafritz called on Congress to pass
legislation to provide needy students with scholarships to attend
private schools. Despite D.C.'s per-pupil expenditure of over
$12,000, students continue to fall behind. Less than 10 percent of
the District's 8th grade students are proficient in reading, math,
and science according to national assessments, and more than half
lack basic knowledge of these subjects.
On September 9, the House of Representatives
passed an amendment to the FY 2004 D.C. Appropriations bill (H.R.
2765) modeled after the D.C. Parental Choice Incentive Act (H.R.
2556). The $10 million proposal would grant low-income children in
the District a scholarship of up to $7,500.
The Senate Appropriations Committee
approved a companion bill on September 4, 2003, which authorized
$13 million for the scholarship program. The reform proposal also
includes an extra $26 million for D.C. public schools and public
charter schools. The $545 million D.C. Appropriations bill
(S.1583)was reported out of Committee on September 4 but foes of
parental choice have prevented it from reaching the Senate floor.
For more history see D.C. Scholarship
Proposal Would Give Students Access to Quality Schools by Krista
Kafer (http://www.heritage.org/Research/Education/Bg1671.cfm)
Requirements in the
Legislation
The Senate and House bills
contain a number of requirements for organizations that administer
the program and schools that participate. Organizations that
administer scholarship programs must:
-
Apply to the U.S. Secretary of
Education,
-
Have a majority of voting board
members be residents of the District of Columbia,
-
Ensure schools are financially
responsible, and
-
Use a random selection process for
admissions, with priority given to students in low-performing
public schools.
The House bill requires that
scholarships be limited to children from families whose annual
income does not exceed 185 percent of federal poverty guidelines,
which is currently $34,040 for a family of four. The Senate bill
requires that families' incomes not exceed 200 percent of poverty.
Furthermore, both the House and Senate bills require an annual
evaluation of the scholarship program.
The evaluation is to be conducted by the
U.S. Secretary of Education and presented to Congress. The
evaluation must include:
- A comparison of the students' academic
achievement (including drop-out, retention, graduation, and college
admissions rates as well as measures of safety issues) compared to
those who do not use scholarships,
- Success of the program in expanding choice
options for parents,
- Reasons parents choose to
participate,
- Impact of the program on public schools,
and
- Degree of parental
satisfaction.
Additionally, the participating schools
must report once a year to parents on their children's academic
achievement, the aggregate achievement level of his or her
classmates, and the safety record of the school. Schools may not
discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, or sex
and must accept any students on a religious-neutral
basis.
An amendment offered by Senator Dianne
Feinstein (D-CA) and adopted during committee mark-up in the Senate
contains additional requirements. Organizations administering the
program must test scholarship students with the same standardized
tests given to students in D.C. public schools, and teachers at
participating private schools must have college degrees. During
committee mark-up and floor consideration, Senator Mary Landrieu
(D-LA) and others failed in attempts to add additional requirements
that would have required:
- Private schools meet adequate yearly
progress (AYP) and teacher mandates under the federal No Child Left
Behind Act,
- A loss of funding after three years if
students did not make AYP. Public schools do not lose funding under
such conditions,
- Teachers would have to be "certified" and
to have met NCLB subject area mastery stipulations. Some of the
best, most competitive private schools in the District such as
Sidwell Friends and Georgetown Day School do not require "teacher
certification," though many of their teachers hold Masters degrees
and Ph.D.'s in the subjects they teach.
Another provision would have restricted the
program so that only children from the D.C. public schools
identified as failing under NCLB could participate. Had the
amendments been adopted, only students from 15 District schools,
mostly middle and high schools, could benefit from the program.
Furthermore, these measures are not required of the charter schools
in the District of Columbia, which enjoy significant bipartisan
support.
Recommendations
Congress should
pass legislation that will enable as many of the District's poor
students as possible the opportunity to choose a good school. While
negotiating the final appropriations legislation, Members should
resist adding any new requirements that would restrict the number
of schools or students who participate. Specifically, they
should:
-
Oppose adding mandates requiring
private schools to meet the terms of the No Child Left Behind Act
that are intended to raise achievement at ailing public
schools. Private schools
already are accountable to parents for their performance; NCLB
sought to address the lack of accountability in the public system.
Teacher certification and AYP requirements under NCLB would be
superfluous to private schools. They would increase the cost of
compliance and dissuade schools from participating, thus reducing
the pool of schools from which poor families may choose. The
District's private school students consistently achieve at higher
rates than those in public schools. Private schools are inherently
accountable to their clientele and should not be saddled with
additional requirements.
- Do not constrain the number
of students who can participate to those attending the worst public
schools.Limiting the
number of students who may participate according to where they
attend school is unfair to the rest of the students. Just six percent of D.C. 4th graders are
proficient in math, and only 10 percent are proficient in reading.
In other words, a great many students at the District are "higher
performing" schools are struggling. These students should be given
an opportunity to attend a school that better meets their
needs.
No New
Restrictions
According to the FY 2004 D.C.
Appropriations bill, "Parents are best equipped to make decisions
for their children, including the educational setting that will
best serve the interests and educational needs of their child." The
bill will enable poor families in the District
of Columbia to enroll their children in a school that best meets
their needs.
Research on privately funded
vouchers in the District and on private and publicly funded
programs nationwide has shown school choice to be beneficial to
students and to the public school system. In order to make the
most of this opportunity, it is essential that Congress not add new
restrictions on schools or students to the legislation. Congress
should send a strong bill to the President that will give the
greatest number of families the greatest number of options for
their children.
In the words of Mayor Anthony A. Williams,
Councilman Kevin P. Chavous and D.C. School Board President
Peggy Cooper Cafritz, "We, as local
leaders, are simply imploring Congress to embrace our efforts to
help our long-neglected student population with every available
tool. We believe the current proposal adequately addresses
legitimate concerns about constitutionality, separation of church
and state, accountability, selection of students and other
issues."
Krista
Kafer is Senior Policy Analyst for Education at The Heritage
Foundation