This Report Card for Betsy DeVos' Favorite Education Policy Is Pretty Bad
A new study takes a hard look at DC's federally funded voucher program.
Students in Washington, DC's federally funded voucher program performed worse academically, particularly on math test scores, after a year of private school, according to a new federal analysis released Thursday.
The study, conducted by the US Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences, found that students who left public schools as part of the DC Opportunity Scholarship Program performed significantly lower on math scores than those who did not. (They also scored lower in reading, but researchers noted that those results were not statistically significant.) In 2010, when the DOE's research division previously evaluated the voucher program, it found that it had no significant impact on reading and math scores but a significant increase in high school graduation. Notably, Thursday's study found that parents in the voucher program were more likely to feel like their child's school was safe.
The analysis comes as President Donald Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos continue to promote the expansion of school choice at the national level. The administration has proposed a $1.4 billion investment toward school choice programs for the coming fiscal year, including $168 million in spending for charter schools and $250 million in school vouchers for families.
While decades of research has shown voucher programs have had little to no effect on student achievement, studies of newer programs in the last two years have mostly revealed worse academic outcomes for participating students:
- A November 2015 study of Indiana's voucher program determined that students who attended private school through the program scored lower on math and reading tests than kids in public school.
- In Louisiana, students who attend private schools through the voucher program showed significant drops in both math and reading in the first two years of the program's operation, according to a February 2016 study by researchers at the Education Research Alliance of New Orleans. The program had no impact on students' non-academic skills.
- Researchers at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservative think tank, concluded in a July 2016 study of Ohio's voucher program that students who took part in the voucher program fared worse academically than those who attended public schools.
The Opportunity Scholarship Program, created by Congress in 2004, provides tuition vouchers for 1,100 low-income students who transfer from public schools to private ones in the nation's capital. Earlier this year, House Republicans filed This Report Card for Betsy DeVos' Favorite Education Policy Is Pretty Bad | Mother Jones: