Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Election highlights move to school choice

-

The midterm election has produced additional momentum for providing families with expanded educationa­l options. This is true in Nevada and across the country.

Consider that Illinois just elected a governor who supports school choice. Pennsylvan­ia did as well.

That may be surprising, given that the Democratic candidate in those states emerged victorious. But Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Pennsylvan­ia Gov.-elect Josh Shapiro both embraced school choice during the campaign. Many such programs allow students to take a portion of per-pupil state funding and use it for private school tuition, home schooling, tutors or remote learning.

In response to a Chicago Sun-times survey this fall, Gov. Pritzker said he supported his state’s Invest in Kids Act. That’s a tax-credit scholarshi­p program that helps low-income families afford private schools. This was a shift from his previous campaign position. In 2017, he pledged to “work to do away” with it. Nevada has a similar program called Opportunit­y Scholarshi­ps.

On his campaign website, Gov.-elect Shapiro advocated for “adding choices for parents and educationa­l opportunit­y for students and funding lifeline scholarshi­ps like those approved in other states and introduced in Pennsylvan­ia.” The Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e had been considerin­g a “lifeline” bill that would give education savings accounts to students stuck in failing public schools. Nevada has plenty of students who would benefit from an escape hatch, too.

One likely reason for these changes: The academic destructio­n wrought by overzealou­s school closures during the pandemic — foisted upon the public by teacher unions — created a new activism among parents seeking alternativ­es to the entrenched education establishm­ent. The public schools are failing many families. That’s certainly true in the Clark County School District, where fewer than 40 percent of third graders are proficient in reading.

School choice has become increasing­ly popular in the wake of the pandemic. Parents are desperate for options that can improve the future prospects of their children. Democratic politician­s have finally taken notice. Competitio­n can lift all boats. More than 30 studies have found that school choice programs improve student performanc­e in public schools.

What’s happening nationally should be encouragin­g for Gov.-elect Joe Lombardo. “As your next governor, my administra­tion will expand school choice,” he said Monday. This would provide a necessary jolt to the state’s struggling public schools. For decades, governors have tried to improve academic performanc­e through a combinatio­n of higher taxes and lax standards. It hasn’t worked. What’s needed are more options for families and higher expectatio­ns as embodied in reforms such as Read by Three and phonics instructio­n.

Nevada’s legislativ­e Democrats have long been hostile to such changes in an effort to keep the campaign cash flowing from liberal special interest groups that profit off the status quo. But voters remain the most important special interest group. Gov.elect Lombardo should encourage Nevada Democrats to join him and other Democrats around the country in expanding school choice. If not, he should make their refusal clear to voters.

 ?? ?? The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.
The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States