School choice shouldn't be confined to college students
By Randy Page
People like choices.
This simple aphorism is the basis of South Carolina's most popular and far-reaching educational reform in the last four decades: state scholarships for higher education.
Throughout South Carolina the HOPE, LIFE and Palmetto Fellows Scholarships have helped thousands of students attend college. Many of the students come from disadvantaged circumstances. Some will be the first in their family to attend college. For others the scholarship helps lighten the load of high interest student loans.
These scholarships can be used at a wide range of public and private colleges and universities. This is a personal choice, rightly left to students and their parents.
The basic concept is simple. College graduates are important for the state's economy. Helping students obtain a higher degree serves a public purpose. Extending the opportunity to low-income students also reduces social and economic inequality.
These scholarships are an excellent example of school choice. Parents, educators and lawmakers have praised them unanimously.
Which begs the questions: why aren't we offering similar choices to students in grades K through 12?
It can't be an issue of student age. State lawmakers have already created a school choice model of tuition scholarships for pre-kindergarten children through First Steps, which has served thousands of low-income families since 1992.
And it is not a matter of money. Per-student spending in South Carolina's public schools averages $11,480 while proposals for choice scholarships and tax credits rarely exceed $2,500. This would result in a financial windfall for the public schools, which receive most of their money through programs that are funded in block grants.
There must be something peculiar to the K-12 system. Neither public colleges nor public pre-kindergarten schools lobbied to fight against school choice. Both saw it as an exciting expansion of access, not as a threat.
The big difference with K-12 schools is political.
The K-12 public school system is a $7.9 billion dollar a year institution that believes it has the sole civic and moral authority to educate children in South Carolina. It is has raised protection of the organizational status quo above the instructional needs of students. This is a shame.
Through political partnerships with the teachers', administrators', superintendents' and school boards' unions it has spent millions of dollars to fight change. It even worked hard to block scholarships targeted at special needs and high disability students.
The most telling insight about this mean-spirited fight came from Debi Bush, president of the South Carolina School Boards Association. She recently described a call for universal educational access as a negative attack on "dedicated public school teachers, principals, students and parents." Nothing could be further from the truth.
Parents in upper- middle- and high-income families already enjoy K-12 choices. They can move between attendance zones or districts, place their kids in a private school or sacrifice a parent's time and income in order to home school their child. Many other families don't have these luxuries.
The Department of Education estimates that average private school tuition in the United States was $6,600 per student last year. The average rate was even lower in South Carolina. This is half of public school per-student spending. A $1,000 tax credit or a $2,500 scholarship would dramatically expand the number of families in South Carolina who could afford to consider homeschooling or private schools. This would free millions of dollars for traditional public schools. It would also be a better way to fund public charter, magnet and virtual schools that are struggling to win their share of financial support from local school districts.
Choice has worked well for pre-kindergarten and college students in South Carolina. It has greatly expanded student access to quality instruction. This has benefited the students as well as the public in general.
Students in grades K through 12 deserve the same opportunities.
Randy Page is president of South Carolinians for Responsible Government.
Comments
Ross (anonymous) says...
To find out why Randy Page says the things he says about South Carolina's public schools, visit Buying South Carolina.
November 29, 2008 at 1:36 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
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