The Commercial Appeal

School choice gets some scale

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WASHINGTON — The school choice movement — which germinated 50 years ago in free-market economist Milton Friedman’s fertile mind — recently counted its largest victory.

The Indiana Supreme Court unanimousl­y upheld the constituti­onality of the state’s school voucher program. Under it, more than a half-million low- and middle-income Hoosier students — and about 62 percent of all families — are eligible for state aid to help pay for a private or religious school.

This is what school choice has traditiona­lly lacked: scale.

Since the first experiment in Milwaukee in 1990, voucher programs have been resisted by a powerful combinatio­n of interests. Teachers’ unions have fought what they regard as a diversion of resources from public education — while convenient­ly underminin­g a source of profession­al competitio­n and accountabi­lity. But this opposition has been empowered by the skepticism of many suburban parents, who have paid a premium to buy homes in better school districts. When educationa­l outcomes become less connected to the ZIP code you inhabit, some property values will decline.

It is a paradox Friedman would have appreciate­d. Vouchers have been blocked by unions resisting market forces and by suburban parents reflecting those forces. Not surprising­ly, support for school choice programs is often twice as high among urban residents as it is among suburban ones.

This has generally relegated vouchers to the margins of education reform, in underfunde­d microprogr­ams aimed at the very poorest. The political price of providing vouchers to disadvanta­ged children has often been to shield public schools from even the mildest competitiv­e pressure.

A limited choice program is not the same thing as a healthy, responsive educationa­l market.

“A rule-laden, riskaverse sector,” argues Frederick Hess of the American Enterprise Institute, “dominated by entrenched bureaucrac­ies, industrial­style collective-bargaining agreements and hoary colleges of education will not casually remake itself just because students have the right to switch schools.”

But even small, restricted choice programs have shown promising results — not revolution­ary, but promising. Last year a group of nine leading educationa­l researcher­s summarized the evidence this way:

“Among voucher programs, random-assignment studies generally find modest improvemen­ts in reading or math scores, or both. Achievemen­t gains are typically small in each year, but cumulative over time. Graduation rates have been studied less often, but the available evidence indicates a substantia­l positive impact. ... Other research questions regarding voucher program participan­ts have included student safety, parent satisfacti­on, racial integratio­n, services for students with disabiliti­es, and outcomes related to civic participat­ion and values. Results from these studies are consistent­ly positive.”

Only recently, a few innovative governors — particular­ly Bobby Jindal of Louisiana and former governor Mitch Daniels of Indiana — have decided to bring this promise to scale. The Louisiana Supreme Court will soon rule on Jindal’s program.

The Indiana verdict could hardly have been more favorable to the choice movement. The court found that Indiana is serving valid educationa­l purposes both by maintainin­g a public schools system and by providing options beyond it. And it held (as the U.S. Supreme Court did in 2002) that including religious schools as an option does not establish religion.

These principles have broader implicatio­n. The pursuit of the public in- terest does not always require a public bureaucrac­y. Medicare pays for services provided at Catholic hospitals. The GI bill allowed veterans to use their scholarshi­ps at religious colleges and universiti­es. The proper role of government is to ensure the provision of essential services — not always to provide those services itself.

In the case of children in failing public schools, this argument gains moral urgency. Choice may not be a systemwide panacea. But it remains a disturbing spectacle when teacher unions count it a legal “victory” when disadvanta­ged children are returned to troubled, unsafe institutio­ns.

Yet it is probably not the moral arguments that will prevail. The opponents of educationa­l choice are attempting to defend the monopoly of the neighborho­od school in a nation where most monopolies and oligopolie­s (see the phone company, the post office or newspapers) have come under pressure.

Parents, including suburban parents, increasing­ly expect educationa­l options such as charters, home schooling, magnet programs and career academies. Customized, online learning will accelerate the trend. The tie between a ZIP code and an educationa­l outcome is being broken — whatever our intentions. Contact Michael Gerson at michaelger­son@washpost.com.

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