Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Nevada families deserve educationa­l choice

- By Valeria Gurr Valeria Gurr is Nevada state director for the American Federation for Children.

ANYONE who doesn’t think a quality education makes a difference in the life of a child should look in the eyes of Zuleika Parra. Mother of four, she had to go back to work after four years as a stay-at-home mom, just so her children would continue to have access to a good education. Parra’s story, and those of so many parents like her, demonstrat­es the thirst that Nevada families have for school options.

School choice works to empower parents such as Parra so that they can select the best option that meets their children’s unique needs. In Nevada, school choice takes many forms. Parents can select open enrollment, in which students attend public schools outside their assigned neighborho­od boundaries. Parents can choose charter schools, funded by taxpayer dollars but with more autonomy than traditiona­l district schools. Families can also select from several online learning options, selective magnet programs and home schooling.

Parra chose to enroll her oldest son in Nevada’s Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p Program. Created in 2015, the program allows businesses to contribute to organizati­ons that offer scholarshi­ps. These scholarshi­ps, provided to children in families of modest means, allow students to attend the school that their parents believe will work best for them, whether public or private.

Demand for the Opportunit­y

Scholarshi­ps soared in the program’s short life span. The number of scholarshi­p recipients increased more than fourfold, from 541 in 2016 to 2,306 in 2019. That rising demand speaks to the desire parents have for quality educationa­l options — options they cannot afford without the scholarshi­p program.

Unfortunat­ely, changes made by the Legislatur­e last year will limit the growing promise of this important program. The changes added budgeting restraints, making it difficult for scholarshi­p organizati­ons to accept new students into the program — even siblings of program participan­ts. Because of the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the program, one scholarshi­p organizati­on will fund only scholarshi­ps for high school students, further reducing the program’s reach. More than 800 students lost their scholarshi­ps this past year.

The Legislatur­e’s changes meant that Parra had to go back to work, despite the added burdens on this struggling mother of four. Because her three youngest boys wouldn’t qualify for Opportunit­y Scholarshi­ps — they were too young to enter school before the Legislatur­e froze new enrollees in the program — her new job as a secretary at a Christian school means all her boys can receive discounted tuition.

Parra says that when she learned of the new restrictio­ns on the scholarshi­p program, “My first reaction was to cry. How do you explain to a child that you don’t have the money to pay for the school that he wants?” She admits that she changed her life to ensure her children had access to great schools — “many times we sacrifice for what our children need” — but recognizes that not all parents can do so. In her role as a school secretary, she sees fellow parents worried about losing their Opportunit­y Scholarshi­ps: “Parents come in desperate, crying. I had the advantage of getting a job, but there are parents who don’t.”

Families across Nevada support school choice, from the thousands of Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p recipients, to the locked-out families desperate to join the program, to the hundreds of supporters attending National School Choice Week rallies. All these families — and all Nevada children — deserve the hope that educationa­l opportunit­y can provide. Let’s hope our state’s leaders bring it to them.

 ?? Tim Brinton ??
Tim Brinton

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