Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Voucher high school to close in Milwaukee

HOPE Christian cites shortage of teachers

- Molly Beck

The largest network of private schools in the state’s taxpayer-funded voucher system is closing its high school at the end of the school year after nearly 20 years in operation, school officials announced on Friday.

Milwaukee’s HOPE Christian High School opened in 2005 as part of a network that also operates six elementary schools in Milwaukee and Racine. Nearly all of its 3,400 students live in some of the most impoverish­ed areas of the two cities.

All graduates of its high school have for 12 years gone on to enroll in college — a much higher rate than for students overall in Milwaukee. In comparison, 46% of Milwaukee Public School graduates enrolled in post-secondary education within a year in 2017, according to the latest data available.

HOPE Christian officials cited a shortage of teachers and not enough state funding in announcing their decision to close the school.

“State funding has been significantly inadequate to support long-term high-quality outcomes at HOPE Christian High School, and over time, this challenge has only gotten worse with no end in sight,” unnamed officials said in a news release on Friday.

“We do not believe we can provide the depth and breadth of offerings we desire for the high school at the current funding levels.”

Board member C.J. Szafir said in an interview that the school building will be transforme­d into an additional K-8 school. He said school officials will help students and families find a new high school.

“We’re all very upset,” Szafir said. “We understand the impact that this is going to have on families but as we take a step back, HOPE’s been such a pillar for their communitie­s and there’s a tremendous amount of good that our K-to-8 schools are doing. And we’re frankly excited about the ability to expand our K-to-8 program to reach more kids.”

HOPE Christian High School enrolled 265 students in the 2020-21 school year, according to state records. That’s about half of what each of the network’s seven elementary schools enroll.

Under state law, Milwaukee high schools participat­ing in the voucher systems receive $8,946 per student — a 41% increase since 2005 when the payment was $6,351.

Szafir said there is more interest in the network’s elementary schools than in the high school because some students prefer to attend high schools with more sports, extracurri­cular activities and advanced courses that he said the network cannot afford to provide. “To be sure, this is a funding challenge we’ve always faced, but have reached a point where we see an opportunit­y to fill a need in the community and serve a greater number of

families through our growing K-8 schools,” he said.

Staff will be given a bonus to work until the end of the fiscal year and will be given the opportunit­y to apply for open positions, according to school officials.

Szafir, who is president of the conservati­ve Institute for Reforming Government, said he hopes the event prompts lawmakers to make real efforts to overhaul how schools are funded.

“I certainly think there should be a bipartisan focus on how to tackle some of these major problems,” Szafir said, referring to longstandi­ng gaps in academic achievemen­t between white and Black students in Wisconsin. “These are concerns that transcend party.”

Democratic Gov. Tony Evers proposed massive changes to how schools are funded when he worked as state superinten­dent, and as governor, to account more for students living in poverty, but those proposals were rejected by the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

His plans also have called for freezing enrollment in the state’s voucher systems, saying the state needs to allocate more money for K-12 schools in order to properly fund the private school voucher system and the public school systems.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States