Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Voucher critic, advocate spar at Marquette

Cost of program, education cuts debated at forum

- ANNYSA JOHNSON MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL

School choice advocate Scott Jensen said Wednesday that the Republican­controlled Legislatur­e will likely boost funding for public schools in the next legislativ­e session.

But the former lawmaker, with ties to President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of education, said he also expects legislator­s to continue the expansion of the state’s voucher programs by simplifyin­g their regulation­s and lifting the enrollment caps that have created waiting lists in some communitie­s.

“Choice isn’t going to end. It’s here for good. So let’s give all parents across the city and the state high-quality options to choose from,” Jensen said during a debate with Julie Underwood, a University of WisconsinM­adison law and education professor and voucher critic, at Marquette University Law School.

Underwood questioned how the state can continue to adequately fund public schools while continuing to support the expansion of taxpayerfu­nded vouchers for private schools.

“It’s expensive,” Underwood said of the state’s three voucher programs, which cover Milwaukee, Racine and the rest of the state.

“We have a program that now costs us $247 million. All at a time when the state of Wisconsin has been one of the biggest public school cutters in the United States,” she said. “It concerns me that the solution would be to continue to shift resources from public to private, or to shift the bill to the public schools.”

Jensen and Underwood squared off as part of a discussion on the lessons learned from a quarter century of school vouchers in Wisconsin, moderated by Alan Borsuk, a longtime education journalist and fellow at the law school.

Wisconsin’s is the largest voucher program in the country with 261 schools and more than 33,700 students taking part. As part of the program, students receive state-funded vouchers of $7,232 or $7,969, depending on the grade, to attend private schools, most of them religious.

“Nearly a quarter of all children in the city of Milwaukee receiving a publicly funded education are doing so through the voucher program,” Borsuk said in setting up the discussion.

Jensen and Underwood are among the leading voices in the decadesold debate over vouchers in the state. Former chief of staff under Gov. Tommy Thompson, Jensen is now senior strategist for the American Federation for Children, the school choice advocacy group founded by billionair­e philanthro­pist Betsy DeVos, who has been tapped by Trump to head the U.S. Department of Education.

Jensen called DeVos “a visionary” who has worked with private and public schools — namely the Grand Rapids district in Michigan. He said

Trump’s proposal to invest $20 billion to expand school choice is “like much of the Trump agenda ... pretty vague.”

He speculated that choice proponents could advocate for federal vouchers for special education, or a tax credit for businesses and individual­s who fund scholarshi­ps that allow students to attend voucher schools, similar to a bill proposed by Sen. Marco Rubio (RFla.).

“It’s early and the white paper during the

campaign was pretty brief,” he said.

Underwood said DeVos’ lack of an education background made her “probably the least traditiona­lly qualified nominee for secretary of education,” and said her appointmen­t signals an interest by the Trump administra­tion in school privatizat­ion and deregulati­on.

She hopes the $20 billion would be used to “support the infrastruc­ture and children across the United States.”

The two found little to agree on Wednesday, but one point of common ground was that vouchers are not the panacea reformists had hoped. In

general, voucher schools perform no better, or only marginally better, than public schools serving similar students. Another was the need for greater accountabi­lity.

“There are some things we would do differentl­y if we started all over again,” Jensen said.

He said the only way choice works is if parents have the informatio­n — rankings, test scores, curriculum — to make informed choices about their children’s schools.

“We’ve only now, sadly, begun to get to that level where that sort of informatio­n is available to parents,” he said. “That sort of thing should have been done long ago.”

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Scott Jensen (left), a school choice advocate and senior strategist for the American Federation for Children, and Julie Underwood, a professor of law and education at UW-Madison, speak during a forum on school vouchers.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Scott Jensen (left), a school choice advocate and senior strategist for the American Federation for Children, and Julie Underwood, a professor of law and education at UW-Madison, speak during a forum on school vouchers.

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