Orlando Sentinel

Scholarshi­ps help equalize opportunit­y

-

Florida allocates five different scholarshi­ps from prekinderg­arten to college that allow students to attend faithbased schools. They don’t violate the U.S. Constituti­on because students choose, and government doesn’t coerce.

Both factors were why, in 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a Cleveland school voucher did not violate the Establishm­ent Clause, even as 96 percent of the students chose faith-based schools. To the court, in the landmark Zelman v. SimmonsHar­ris case, the program met three critical standards that also apply to Florida: The primary objective is education; students can choose among secular and sectarian schools; and parents exercise an independen­t choice that is not steered by government.

The article “Many church schools get tax cash” in Sunday’s Orlando Sentinel did not mention the Zelman case or that the Florida Supreme Court specifical­ly avoided religion in 2006, when it overturned the privatesch­ool portion of the Opportunit­y Scholarshi­p program. Consequent­ly, readers might have thought that these programs are constituti­onally suspect, when they are not.

The tax-credit scholarshi­p is one of Florida’s five scholarshi­ps. It strives to give low- income students access to the same learning options nowavailab­le to more affluent families, via a $4,335 scholarshi­p. This program complement­s other choice programs, such as magnet and charter schools, and is built on the truism that students learn in different ways. Last year, parents placed more than1.2 million public-education students in schools other than their assigned district school.

In this newworld of customized learning, encouragin­g differenti­ated instructio­n while maintainin­g quality control is a challenge. The tax-credit scholarshi­p does this, in part, by requiring nationally norm-referenced tests that show these students are achieving the same gains in reading and math as students of all income levels.

Parent satisfacti­on is important as well, since these schools receive scholarshi­p students only if their parents choose them. One mother, whose two sons attend St. Andrew Catholic School in Pine Hills, told the Sentinel: “If I had a million dollars, my school of choice would be the school I have now.”

This parent’s choice was motivated, in part, by her faith, she says, but religion is not the enemy here; poverty, hopelessne­ss and lost opportunit­y are. Scholarshi­ps for low-income children strengthen public education and our democracy by expanding equal opportunit­y.

 ??  ?? Tuthill
Tuthill

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States