Boston Herald

Perks only for the ‘right’ kind of public schools

- By Charles Chieppo and Jamie Gass Charles Chieppo is a senior fellow and Jamie Gass directs the Center for School Reform at Pioneer Institute, a Bostonbase­d think tank.

You can at least understand why some elected officials prioritize public over private schools. They are, after all, the schools for which those officials are responsibl­e, the ones their constituen­ts fund and that most of the children of those constituen­ts attend.

What’s much harder to defend is officials favoring certain types of public schools over others, as Boston Mayor Michelle Wu has done with “BPS Sundays,” a new pilot program that provides Boston Public Schools students and up to three guests free admission to six major Boston museums, including the Franklin Park Zoo and New England Aquarium, on the first two Sundays of each month through August.

It’s a great idea, but other Boston public school students — such as those who attend charter public schools and the METCO program — need not apply, and it’s a stretch to believe politics doesn’t have something to do with that.

METCO is a voluntary racial integratio­n program that sends over 3,000 mostly low-income Boston students to suburban school districts. Last year, a comprehens­ive Tufts University study compared the performanc­e of those students to those who applied to METCO but weren’t selected in the admissions lottery.

METCO students did better across the board on MCAS, their SAT scores were 30% higher, students were a third less likely to drop out, 17% more likely to attend college, and 6% more likely to graduate in four years. By age 35, they earn about 60% more than those who applied but were not selected.

METCO’s success at narrowing race- and income-based achievemen­t gaps is further magnified by the study’s finding that student gains are even larger among those whose parents didn’t attend college.

The 13,000 Boston students who attend the city’s 20 charter schools outperform BPS by an even larger margin than METCO students do. Many of them are also low income, unable to afford — as Herald columnist Joe Battenfeld wrote — the more than $100 tab for taking a family of four to the Aquarium.

BPS Sundays isn’t the only way in which public officials discrimina­te against those who attend non-favored public schools. Despite its success educating disadvanta­ged students, the Commonweal­th hasn’t expanded METCO in decades.

Municipali­ties pay for traditiona­l public-school buildings. In Boston, that means the more than $31,000 per pupil annual spending — second only to New York among the nation’s 100 largest cities — only covers operating costs. Massachuse­tts charter schools must stretch their funding allotment to also pay much of the facilities bill.

It’s hard not to notice that it’s the schools and programs that are most successful at educating low-income kids that routinely draw the short straws in the through-the-looking-glass world of Massachuse­tts education politics. That may not be an accident; they are the schools and programs that are most threatenin­g to a status quo that wields vast political power in Boston and across the Commonweal­th.

Academical­ly successful education options aren’t tolerated because they lay bare a fundamenta­l myth: All that’s needed to improve districts like BPS is a little more money.

 ?? MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD ?? New England Aquarium visitors view fish in the four-story Giant Ocean Tank in 2022 in Boston. The Aquarium is one of the cultural sites included in BPS Sundays.
MATT STONE — BOSTON HERALD New England Aquarium visitors view fish in the four-story Giant Ocean Tank in 2022 in Boston. The Aquarium is one of the cultural sites included in BPS Sundays.

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