Parents and children have quite a few decisions to make at the start of a school year. From clothes and computers to pencils and pens, the list of choices seems endless. And for many children, even the school itself has been picked, with more students attending something other than the local public school.
Yes, a lot has changed since Nobel Prize-winning economist
Milton Friedman first proposed education vouchers in 1955. Back
then, no one paired the words "school" and "choice." Vermont and
Maine were operating voucher-like "tuitioning" programs in small
towns, and Minnesota had an education tax deduction. But vouchers,
tax credits, public school open enrollment, dual enrollment, home
schooling and charter schools were things in the distant future.
Today, Friedman's vision is finally becoming reality. Why?
It's largely because more and more parents are objecting to the
sorry state of some of our schools. In inflation-adjusted dollars,
Americans are paying twice as much for public elementary and
secondary education today as they did in 1970. Yet only a third of
America's fourth graders can read proficiently, according to the
Department of Education. Nearly 60 percent of high school seniors
lack even a basic understanding of American history.
The news is bleaker for low-income children: More than half can't
read or perform mathematics at a basic level, as measured by
federal assessments. While some excellent public schools exist, our
monopolistic education system is leaving too many children
behind.
Still, for years, when a student was struggling or a parent was
dissatisfied, the only option was to move or pay for a private
education -- a choice (and a sacrifice) many families simply
couldn't afford.
Controlled choice programs and magnet schools, set up mostly to
foster racial balance, provided some families access to better
schools, but real change didn't occur until the 1980s. In 1985,
Minnesota became the first state to let junior and senior high
school students take college courses at public expense. A few years
later, it instituted the first interdistrict public school-choice
law, allowing students to attend schools in other districts.
In 1987, Iowa established the first education tax credit. In 1990,
Wisconsin adopted a voucher program for poor students in Milwaukee.
The first charter school opened in Minnesota in 1992. Five years
later, the Arizona legislature introduced a new kind of education
tax credit designed to encourage contributions to tuition
scholarship funds.
In the 15 years between the Iowa tax credit and last year's Supreme
Court decision upholding the use of religious schools in the
Cleveland Scholarship and Tutoring Program, most states had enacted
at least one public or private school-choice program.
And over the past decade, privately funded voucher programs have
flourished, helping tens of thousands of families nationwide afford
a good education.
As of this year:
- Six states have voucher programs.
- Six have education tax credits or deductions.
- 40 states and the District of Columbia have charter-school
laws.
- 15 states guarantee public school choice within or between
districts. (Other states have choice programs that are optional for
districts, target only specific populations, and/or require that
parents pay tuition.)
- 21 states have comprehensive dual enrollment programs that
enable high school students to attend college classes for high
school and postsecondary credit at minimal or no expense to the
student. Others have limited programs.
- All states allow parents to homeschool their children.
Researchers studying both private and public scholarship
programs, charter schools and home schooling have been able to
confirm what parents have always known: School choice works. It
improves academic performance, increases parental satisfaction, and
fosters accountability within public-school systems.
And the improvements aren't seen just in the students who leave the
public schools. Research indicates that public schools and
districts improve their services and operations in response to
competition from charter schools.
Let's remember: The goal of an educated citizenry predates public
education as we know it. The latter isn't sacrosanct: Institutions
are made to serve people, not the other way around. The old
solutions -- more programs, more regulations, new computers, lower
class sizes, and higher spending -- haven't brought us the
improvement we know children need. Competition and freedom have
always worked for Americans, and should be given a chance to
improve education today.
Giving all families the opportunity to choose a good school for
their children was once a vision seen by only a few. Today it's an
idea that's gaining ground. We owe it to today's children to push
ahead, until we give every student a real choice and a chance to
succeed.
Krista Kafer is
the Senior Education Policy Analyst for The Heritage
Foundation
Reprinted with Permission of Foxnews.com