Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Market growing

School-choice enrollment doubled

- GREG KAZA Economist Greg Kaza is executive director of the Arkansas Policy Foundation, a nonprofit think tank founded in 1995 in Little Rock.

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders and state legislator­s have developed an ambitious reform package to empower students and families, incentiviz­e teachers, and provide an adequate, equitable and efficient education system, as required by legal decisions and the Arkansas Constituti­on.

Sanders’ LEARNS plan emphasizes literacy, empowermen­t, accountabi­lity, readiness, networking, and safety. State legislator­s in the House are considerin­g the proposal in an omnibus bill, passed last week in the Senate, encompassi­ng a broad range of educationa­l issues.

Critics question the school choice component of the governor’s plan, which would empower families to send their children to a public, private, parochial or home school via an education savings account. They ignore the research of our nonprof it, the Arkansas Policy Foundation, that shows the Arkansas K-12 school- choice market encompasse­s nearly 110,000 students in the 2022-23 school year, according to state Department of Education and other records.

Records show the market has nearly doubled in the last decade, and includes charter, home, and private school students, along with those enrolled in a public school-choice program.

School choice has advanced as an idea in Arkansas since the mid1990s.

In our nonprofit’s 1996 study, analysts Allyson Tucker and Donna Watson noted charters — a type of public school — faced anti-competitiv­e barriers to entry. State senators Jim Argue, a Little Rock Democrat, and John Brown III, a Siloam Springs Republican, wrote Act 890 of 1999, which created less restrictiv­e procedures that led to Arkansas’ first charter school. The law was expanded by subsequent legislatur­es.

Charters are the largest schoolchoi­ce market component. Department records show charter enrollment totals 41,300, with 24,772 in open-enrollment schools and 16,528 in conversion charters.

An open-enrollment charter is operated by “a government­al entity, an institutio­n of higher learning or a tax-exempt nonsectari­an organizati­on,” according to the education department.

A conversion school “is a public school converted to a public charter school. Conversion schools can only draw students from within the school district’s boundaries,” the department notes.

Home schools are the second largest group, numbering 26,378 students, department records show.

Another 22,073 “are currently enrolled in a traditiona­l public school district via school choice” this school year, a department communicat­ion explains. The program allows students to transfer to another public school district.

Private school enrollment is 19,932, records from the nonprofit Arkansas Nonpublic School Accreditin­g Associatio­n show.

Policymake­rs cite dissat i s faction with public schools deemed “failing” in lettergrad­e surveys, with some legislator­s proposing students in those rated “F” receive the first education savings accounts.

An unreported developmen­t is the school choice market’s growth in Arkansas counties with the highest concentrat­ion of public companies.

A skilled workforce is an economic developmen­t factor with bearing on employment and income growth. A monopoly educationa­l structure with roots in the 19th century does not benefit 21st century consumers, whether students and families, or employers and entreprene­urs.

The Arkansas school- choice market’s growth is a reminder that families are seeking educationa­l options for their children.

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