Daily Breeze (Torrance)

K-12 schools need open enrollment

- By Jude Schwalbach and Danielle Waidley Jude Schwalbach is an education policy analyst at Reason Foundation. Danielle Waidley is an education policy research assistant at Reason Foundation.

Despite steep enrollment declines in the state's K-12 public schools, entrance into California's top-performing public schools remains incredibly competitiv­e due to restrictiv­e district and attendance zone boundaries.

In the 1930s, the Home Owners Loan Corporatio­n redlined neighborho­ods in California, using residents' characteri­stics, such as race, to vet homebuyers for federal aid housing loans, often labeling minority neighborho­ods as “hazardous.” Although Congress outlawed housing redlining through laws passed in 1968, 1973 and 1977, many geographic school district and attendance zone boundaries still mirror racist neighborho­od lines from the 1930s, limiting children's education options today.

For example, Los Angeles' Ivanhoe Elementary School's attendance zone had an 86% reading proficienc­y rate and 75% math proficienc­y rate in 2018-19. The bordering elementary school, Atwater Avenue Elementary School, less than two miles away, had proficienc­y rates that were 49 percentage points lower for reading and 41 percentage points worse for math.

In his book, “A Fine Line,” author and financial analyst Tim DeRoche noted that Los Angeles residents might pay $100,000 or more in additional housing costs “just to gain access to specific coveted `public' schools” because of the stark difference in performanc­e of neighborin­g public schools.”

Education is a public service, yet, in Southern California and other areas of the state, high-quality public education is a scarce resource that wealthy families can purchase through their mortgages.

Policymake­rs, however, can start to remedy years of inequality in education through robust open enrollment policies that weaken the ties between housing and schooling. This policy lets students enroll in any public school that has open seats, regardless of where they live. While California has some piecemeal programs that do allow students to transfer schools, each program falls short of being a comprehens­ive policy that would do away with some of the lingering effects of government-sanctioned redlining.

The Golden State's inter-district open enrollment options– the Interdistr­ict Permit System and District of Choice–allow students to attend schools outside their assigned school district. In the 2018-19 school year, 146,109 and 9,568 students participat­ed in these programs respective­ly.

Unfortunat­ely, school districts can opt out of participat­ing in each program, allowing protection­ist districts to exclude students from their schools — which they often do. For example, Fordham Institute's Deven Carlson found that most of the affluent school districts in Ohio opted out of that state's open enrollment program.

California should scrap labyrinthi­ne open enrollment policies and adopt a single program that requires all school districts to allow both interdistr­ict and intra-district open enrollment.

At the same time, policymake­rs should make sure schools are compensate­d for taking on new students. The Legislativ­e Analyst's Office found the 2017 reauthoriz­ation of the “District of Choice” program “significan­tly reduced funding for students transferri­ng to basic aid districts (districts with high levels of local property tax revenue). We found that this reduction has led these districts to accept fewer transfer students. In addition, the students transferri­ng to these districts are more likely to be disadvanta­ged than other transfer students. We recommend setting the funding rate closer to pre-2017 levels and providing a higher rate for low-income students and English learners.”

California policymake­rs should streamline and expand the state's open enrollment policy to eliminate the archaic barriers that are stopping children from attending better schools.

 ?? PHOTO BY JULIA MALAKIE ?? California elementary students should have easier access to inter- and intra-district campus transfers.
PHOTO BY JULIA MALAKIE California elementary students should have easier access to inter- and intra-district campus transfers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States