Introduction
"Private school choice" or "voucher programs" allow parents to put
tax dollars toward a private education - for example - in the form of
a subsidy to the chosen school. The dollar value of a voucher is
usually equal to, but may be less than, the state average per pupil
expenditure, and may cover the partial or full cost of a private
school tuition. What follows is a review of the types of voucher
programs that have been proposed, the status of existing programs,
arguments for and against private school vouchers, and research
findings.
What types of voucher programs have been proposed?
Voucher proposals vary in design. Some limit the number of
students or specify a category of students eligible for vouchers
(e.g., students from low-income families), while others may have no
restrictions. Most voucher programs require the schools receiving
vouchers to participate in state testing programs, comply with civil
rights laws and hire teachers who meet state certification
requirements. A growing number of proposals would allow religious
schools to receive vouchers.
Foundations, corporations and individuals have sponsored private
school vouchers for low-income public school students for years.1 Many of these
privately-funded scholarship programs allow students to attend
private religious schools and have recently been seen as an
alternative to publicly-funded vouchers.
What is the status of vouchers?
Milwaukee has the country's only operating voucher program.2 But this year, voters in Ohio
passed a voucher initiative,3 and in Washington, D.C.,
Congress is debating whether or not to implement a voucher experiment
in the coming year.
One controversial issue is whether religious schools should be
included in voucher plans. Ohio does include them, but when Milwaukee
moved in that direction this year, the Wisconsin State Supreme Court
issued an injunction to temporarily halt the use of state money for
vouchers to religious schools until the court's final decision. In
the meantime, private foundations and organizations are raising money
to help Milwaukee students remain in the religious schools they
chose.
Despite predictions that the recent changes in political
leadership would lead to passage of more voucher proposals, plans
failed this year in a number of states including Connecticut,
Florida, Illinois, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Texas.4 Nonetheless, governors in
Pennsylvania, Minnesota and Connecticut recently proposed their own
voucher plans. At the federal level, analysts predict that a school
choice demonstration proposal, such as HR 1640 authored by
Representatives Weldon and Riggs, has a better chance of passing
Congress than in prior years. Meanwhile, at the annual Christian
Coalition's "Road to Victory" conference in Fall 1995, legal and
political strategies were outlined for creating private voucher
systems across the country.5
In the Far West Laboratory (FWL) region, voucher proposals
surfaced in Arizona and Nevada, but did not make it to the full
legislature for vote. Arizona Representative Scott Bundgaard withdrew
his voucher amendment that would have reimbursed parents for private
school tuition if they believed their children's physical safety was
threatened in public schools.6
In Nevada, Assembly Bill (AB) 340, sponsored by Bill Harrington,
would have allowed taxpayer dollars to pay for private education but
failed in committee.7
California's AB 84, still in committee, would establish a small
voucher demonstration program in three districts within Los Angeles
County.8 This year, a
leading California voucher advocacy organization postponed its
campaign efforts for a statewide voucher ballot measure until the
1998 election.9
What are arguments in support of vouchers?
Proponents argue that an unrestricted voucher program, one that
truly allows for freedom of choice, would serve as a catalyst for
improving public education. Unrestricted vouchers, they argue, will
also give low- income parents genuine opportunities to be consumers
of educational services. They believe that public schools will become
more effective when forced to compete for funding with private
schools and each other; those unable to attract students will cease
to exist.10
Voucher supporters believe that public schools are hampered by too
much government intervention. For this reason, some argue against
placing too many restrictions on private schools that wish to accept
vouchers. They contend that the same bureaucracy that has undermined
public schools will then similarly constrain the effectiveness of
private schools.
What are arguments against vouchers?
Opponents maintain that vouchers given to students already
attending private schools would reduce public school funding, even if
no students were to leave the public school system.11 They also fear that only
those students who have access to transportation and information, as
well as the ability to supplement government subsidies, will be able
to fully benefit from voucher programs.
Some worry that the lack of an oversight mechanism to monitor
participating private schools will mean far less accountability with
no guarantee that all children are learning basic skills. Others
challenge the constitutionality of voucher programs, arguing that
including religious schools violates the separation of church and
state.
What are lessons learned from research on voucher programs?
Research on the nation's only traditional voucher system in
operation - the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program - is inconclusive.
In its fourth year of operation, the program provided approximately
830 low-income students with $3,200 grants to attend any
non-religious school in the state.
Wisconsin's state-appointed evaluator, John Witte at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, concluded that results from an
on-going Milwaukee study cannot be used to infer the success or
failure of voucher programs elsewhere. He contends that the student
sample size was small, other voucher programs may not be directly
targeted at the same group of students, and student outcomes are
affected by a complex set of interrelated variables, not just the
element of choice.12
Witte's fourth year report13 also indicated neither
positive nor negative significant results in student performance.
While parental involvement was higher than in the public schools,
choice families (compared to the average public school family) were
generally smaller and more involved in their children's schooling
before the voucher program. The study also showed that the initial
student attrition rate (half returned to public schools) tapered off
more recently to about the same level of mobility as found in regular
Milwaukee public schools. Critics, however, have contested this and
other findings in Witte's study.14
Although no voucher program exists in the FWL region, a 1993
survey of California private schools found that space in these
schools was so limited that unless schools planned to expand their
capacity, less than one percent of public school students could be
accommodated.15 These
findings indicated that the impact of vouchers would depend largely
on the supply of private schools and their ability to make space for
new students.
As voucher proposals continue to surface, it will be important to
track the emerging court decisions and interpretations thereof.
Emerging research may also lend clarity to some of the more
controversial elements contributing to the political debate over
private school vouchers. Across the country people will undoubtedly
be watching to see how voucher programs already in place evolve and
what lessons can be learned from their experiences.
Endnotes
1 For more information on private scholarship
programs, see Miller, L. (1995, September 13). Couple gives $25
million for Catholic school vouchers. Education Week, p. 5;
and Choice opportunities: Private scholarship programs - by
the Center for Education Reform (Washington, D.C.).
2 The only traditional voucher program is in
Milwaukee, although since 1894, Vermont has provided students with
subsidies to attend any schools, including private, if they are in
isolated rural areas. Puerto Rico also enacted a voucher program in
1993 which serves over 16,000 students. A Supreme Court case decision
in 1994 determined that inclusion of private religious schools in the
program was unconstitutional; the case is now being appealed. See:
Center for Education Reform. (1995, Winter). School reform in the
United States: State by State Summary . Washington, D.C.: Author.
3 Ohio's original legislative proposal failed,
but a voucher demonstration program to be piloted in Cleveland was
added into the budget proposal, which was signed on June 30, 1995, by
the governor.
4 Richardson, J. (1995, November 29). Minn.
governor unveils private school voucher plan. Education Week ,
p. 13.
5 Reporter's notebook. (1995, September 20).
Education Week , p. 7.
6 Legislature in brief. (1995, April 5). The
Arizona Republic.
7 Bremner, F. (1995, April 5). Private school
aid bill stuck in committee. Reno Gazette- Journal.
8 To date, Assembly Bill
(AB) 84, authored by Murray, is still in committee.
9 Lindsay, D. (1995, September 6). With voters
lukewarm, California group shelves voucher initiative until 1998
election. Education Week.
10 For a more in-depth discussion of markets in
education, see: Moe, T.M. & Chubb, J.E. (1990). Politics,
markets and America's schools . Washington, DC: The Brookings
Institution.
11 California Department of Education. (1993,
May 14). Analysis of the Parental Choice in Education Initiative
(Attachment B). This analysis pointed out that "each student who
leaves the public schools to redeem a scholarship reduces public
school funding twice. First, when he leaves, and a second time when
his scholarship and 'savings' are counted in satisfaction of the
(reduced) state obligation to fund public schools."
12 Lindsay, D. (1994, December 14). Wisconsin
blocking voucher data, researcher says. Education Week , p.14.
13 Witte, J.F., et al. (1994). Milwaukee
Parental Choice Program: Fourth year report . Madison: University
of Wisconsin.
14 Petersen, P. (1995). Critique of the Witte
evaluation of Milwaukee's School Choice Program . Cambridge:
Harvard University: Center for American Political Studies.
15 Dianda, M.R. & Corwin, R.G. (1993).
What a voucher could buy. A survey of California's private
schools. Los Alamitos, CA: Southwest Regional Laboratory. This
study is based upon a survey of California's private schools. Certain
schools characterize themselves in the survey as more receptive to
vouchers. Of these voucher-receptive schools, more than 70 percent
are operating at almost full capacity (85 percent). Given this
information, the report estimates that private schools in California
could accommodate less than one percent of California's public school
population, unless they expanded their capacity. Almost half of the
private schools that would accept vouchers also plan to increase
capacity in the form of additional teaching staff, increasing
classroom space, and diversifying courses of study.