Boston Herald

Ed changes coming under Trump

- By MARY CLARE REIM Mary Clare Reim is a research associate in the Heritage Foundation’s Institute for Family, Community and Opportunit­y. She wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com. “As You Were Saying” is a regular Herald feature. We invite readers to submit gu

Students, families and taxpayers would be well-served by policies that limit federal interventi­on at all levels and advance education choice.

AS YOU WERE SAYING ...

School choice is back in the spotlight, thanks to President-elect Donald Trump’s announceme­nt that he intends to make Betsy DeVos his secretary of education.

DeVos has been a vocal proponent of policies that offer students a variety of education options and empower parents to choose the option best-suited to meet their children’s needs.

With DeVos in charge, the U.S. Department of Education would certainly be in for a paradigm shift. For years, its policies have been defined by high spending and increased federal interventi­on in education. And in the Obama era, school choice initiative­s such as the D.C. Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p Program were actively discourage­d.

The secretary-designate has been right to champion school choice. A growing body of research demonstrat­es that choice significan­tly improves graduation rates for students, improves reading and math scores, leaves parents more satisfied with their children’s educationa­l experience­s and improves outcomes for students at surroundin­g public schools.

With all that going for it, it’s high time to expand choice to all students.

Admittedly, the federal government has limited options for advancing choice. But it could start by supporting and expanding the highly successful D.C. Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p Program, and eventually working to further expand school choice throughout the nation’s capital.

In addition to supporting education choice, the incoming administra­tion can set a new tone on Common Core. DeVos has already made her opinion known on that matter, saying: “I am not a supporter — period.”

It is now time to empower states fully to exit Common Core, reclaim their own standards and work on improving them by borrowing the best standards from other states.

The incoming administra­tion, along with Congress, also has an opportunit­y to advance reforms to higher education.

Any renewal of the Higher Education Act should apply a studentcen­tered philosophy to the higher education realm. As with K-12 education, funding should be portable and flexible, following each student to the education opportunit­ies he or she needs to succeed.

Congress also should rein in federal subsidies for higher education. More and more evidence suggests that the Bennett Hypothesis is, indeed, correct. That hypothesis posits that, the more the federal government subsidizes higher education, the more expensive college becomes. Many families — and students with tens of thousands of dollars in college debt — can attest to this. Making space for a private lending market and alternativ­e financing options can help curtail subsidyfue­led increases in tuition prices.

For years education spending from kindergart­en through higher education has skyrockete­d with virtually no progress to show for it. Students, families and taxpayers would be well-served by policies that limit federal interventi­on at all levels and advance education choice where appropriat­e.

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