The Phoenix

School choice matters to families

- By Colleen Cook Guest columnist Colleen Cook is a veteran of the United States Navy, parent of three children who have used charter school options, and president of the National Coalition of Public School Options. She lives in Oklahoma.

When I see Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf trying to close Pennsylvan­ia’s charter schools, I cannot help but think of what that would have done to my family if we didn’t have school choice in Oklahoma.

Legislator­s in Pennsylvan­ia should know that my oldest son — a well-behaved, honor-roll student — attempted to take his own life. Internal struggles had changed school from a place of learning to a place of fear and despair for him. Feeling trapped, he almost succeeded in taking his own life and shattering ours.

Following this near tragedy a few important things happened: My son was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome, a diagnosis that helped him understand why he was feeling so lost.

And I moved him and my two other children out of public school and into a virtual public school where they could learn in an environmen­t better suited to their needs.

That experience inspired me to become more involved in Oklahoma and nationally as a voice in support of the school choice that not only saved, but changed my son’s life.

I now serve as president of the National Coalition for Public School Options, an organizati­on dedicated to promoting all school choice options and empowering parents to choose what’s best for their families. Our mission is neatly summed up by our motto: #ITrustPare­nts.

Unfortunat­ely, Gov. Wolf does not seem to trust Pennsylvan­ia parents. He believes he knows what’s better for children. Among his attacks on charter schools, he claims Pennsylvan­ia charters aren’t accountabl­e.

This simply isn’t true. They’re held accountabl­e by parents, who make the choice to send their children to charters. And more importantl­y, we can remove them. Charter schools also have been closed, but district schools that fail children for years are never under the same threat or accountabi­lity.

Gov. Wolf misses the entire point of what makes charter schools such an essential part of a modern education system.

No family chooses to take their child out of a school that is working for them.

Families choose charter schools because the local traditiona­l public school option has failed their family in education or safety and in some cases, both.

We urge Gov. Wolf and the Legislatur­e to consider the educationa­l successes of hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvan­ia students who currently attend or previously attended charter, magnet and cyber schools.

It may surprise some to know that as parents of charter school students, we believe in accountabi­lity more than most.

That’s why we chose to leave traditiona­l failing public schools for charters. We hold charters equally accountabl­e with our decisions.

We also don’t oppose reform, but reform should treat all public schools the same. Traditiona­l schools are permitted to fail our children year after year.

We see this in nearly every state, and it’s a horrible hypocrisy.

According to the Pennsylvan­ia-based Commonweal­th Foundation, the state’s 500 school districts hold $4.6 billion in reserve funds. Reserves have grown for 13 consecutiv­e years, including $64 million in 201718. In 2015, PennLive found that the reserves were enough to fund all 26 state prisons for two full years and still have money left over.

In fact, charter schools receive only about 72% of the per-pupil funding that district schools receive.

If anything, charter students deserve more support not less because brick-and-mortar and cyber charters are working hard to help children every day in Pennsylvan­ia and across the country.

Every charter parent believes in holding public schools accountabl­e, and we’re open to real reforms, but let’s demand those reforms impact all Pennsylvan­ia schools.

Otherwise, it isn’t reform. It’s an attack on parents’ right to choose the schools that best fit their children.

Fortunatel­y for my children in Oklahoma, I had a choice. And it literally saved my son’s life.

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