3,090 results on '"SCHOOL choice"'
Search Results
2. Spillover Effects of Specialized High Schools. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-1013
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Christine Mulhern, Shelby McNeill, Fatih Unlu, Brian Phillips, Julie A. Edmunds, and Eric Grebing
- Abstract
Specialized high schools are an increasingly popular way to prepare young adults for postsecondary experiences and expand school choice. While much literature ex- amines charter school spillover effects and the effects of specialized schools on the students who attend them, little is known about the spillover effects of specialized high schools on traditional public schools (TPS). Using an event study design, we show that one type of specialized high school, North Carolina's Cooperative Innovative High Schools, initially attracted students who were higher achieving and more likely to be white than TPS students, but these specialized schools became more representative of the district population over time. On average, the opening of specialized schools had a mix of null and positive spillover effects on TPS student achievement. While there is some evidence of negative spillovers from the first schools that opened, the effects become more positive over time.
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- 2024
3. Charter School Expansion, Catholic School Enrollment, & the Equity Implications of School Choice. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-1027
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Shaun M. Dougherty, Andrew Miller, and Yerin Yoon
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Catholic schools have seen more than a 30% decline in enrollment over the past 20 years. While some of the decline in enrollment may have been spurred by secular trends or the Church abuse scandal, the increase in schools of choice, principally public charter schools, may explain at least some of this decline. In this paper we estimate the effect of the opening of charter schools in proximity to Catholic schools across the entire U.S. We find that the opening of a nearby charter school has a negative impact on Catholic school enrollment and increases the likelihood that the school will close. We also find that charter openings induce greater racial isolation. Findings are especially pronounced in K8 schools, rather than high schools.
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- 2024
4. 2024 Schooling in America: Public Opinion on K-12 Education, Transparency, Technology, and School Choice
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EdChoice, Colyn Ritter, Alli Aldis, John Kristof, and Paul DiPerna
- Abstract
This is the 12th edition of EdChoice's Schooling in America survey. The purpose of this annual survey is to gauge public opinion on a range of issues in K-12 education, including school choice policies and parents' schooling experiences. From April 9 to April 30, 2024, we surveyed 2,319 current school parents and 1,502 members of the general population. We report polling results based on a nationally representative sample of both groups. Nearly 4,000 interviews were conducted online and over the phone. In this year's survey, we also asked new questions related to recent issues in education pertaining to transparency, accountability, technology, and artificial intelligence. The survey yielded many findings including: (1) School safety is now the top reason to choose a school for charter (37%), private (36%) and homeschool (53%) parents; (2) Most Americans (70%) and nearly two-thirds of parents (64%) say K-12 education is on the wrong track; (3) The majority of school parents think standardized tests are an important accountability measure, especially for teachers (67%), schools (65%), and school districts (65%); and (4) Two-thirds of parents (66%) say that schools should teach students how to use artificial intelligence responsibly.
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- 2024
5. The Role of School-Based Transportation in School Choice: Evidence from Detroit. Technical Report
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National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice (REACH), Jeremy Singer, and Sarah Winchell Lenhoff
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In school choice systems, many families face geographic constraints. Yet, there is limited evidence on the association between school-based transportation and students' school choice, especially in fragmented transportation contexts. Using unique data on Detroit kindergarten students' eligibility and access to school-based transportation, we find that students with access to a bus at a school-- either a traditional or shuttle-style bus--were 4-5 percentage points more likely to enroll in that school. The association was greater for traditional buses in higher-crime neighborhoods and for shuttle-style buses for farther-away choices. We did not find that this association differed by block-group-level household car ownership. Our findings suggest that school-based transportation can increase school choice access, depending on policy design and contextual factors. [This report was written in collaboration with the Detroit Partnership for Education Equity & Research (Detroit PEER).]
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- 2024
6. How Do Hybrid School Leaders Measure Program Success? Experimental Evidence from a National Sample of Hybrid Schools. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-997
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Matthew H. Lee, John Thompson, and Eric Wearne
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Hybrid school enrollments are trending up and many parents express a diverse range of reasons for enrolling their children in hybrid schools. Yet little is known about the pedagogical goals pursued by hybrid schools. We aim to help close this gap in the literature with a stated preferences experiment of hybrid school leaders' perceptions of program success. Sixty-three school leaders participated in a survey experiment in which we randomly assigned attributes to hypothetical programs and asked school leaders to identify the most successful program. We find that hybrid school leaders consider a broad range of student outcomes when evaluating program success, including labor market outcomes, civic outcomes, and family life. Students' religious observance produced the largest effect sizes, a reasonable finding considering that roughly two-thirds of the schools represented in our sample have some religious affiliation. We do not find evidence that test score outcomes and higher education matriculation contribute meaningfully to perceived success.
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- 2024
7. Helping Families Navigate the Changing Education Landscape. Policy Analysis. Number 976
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Cato Institute, Colleen Hroncich, and Jamie Buckland
- Abstract
Unlike vouchers and tax credit scholarships that do not allow parents to customize their children's education, Education savings accounts (ESAs) provide funding to pay for part-time classes at public and private schools, tutoring, curricula, services for special needs, and more. As navigating the opportunities that come with ESAs can be difficult, there is a growing movement to include "choice navigators" as an eligible expense in ESA programs, which can inform parents what educational opportunities are available and help tailor an education program for their children. This paper examines several key elements, including determining the types of navigation services that parents need in the changing education landscape; identifying best practices that states can adopt to simplify ESA navigation; tapping into the experiences of current ESA users and traditional homeschoolers; and deciding whether there are policies that can encourage an adequate supply of navigators without creating counterproductive rules.
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- 2024
8. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [June 2024]
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between June 5-7, 2024 among a sample of 2,251 Adults. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 2.44 percentage points. Among the key findings are: (1) Almost half of parents reported their child participating in athletics programs in June, the highest participation out of any activity listed. Culture-focused programs and career preparation had the lowest levels of participation; (2) School switchers are most likely to indicate a change in schools because of bullying, excessive stress/anxiety, or their academic needs not being met at their former school; and (3) One-third of school parents say they would be extremely or very likely to move their child to a different school if their school eliminated academically advanced classes. This report highlights findings pertaining to: (1) Views on K-12 Education; (2) Schooling and Experiences; (3) K-12 Choice Profiles; and (4) Survey Profile and Demographics.
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- 2024
9. Ohio Charter Schools after the Pandemic: Are Their Students Still Learning More than They Would in District Schools? Research Brief
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Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Stéphane Lavertu
- Abstract
Over the past two decades, researchers have spent countless hours studying the impacts of public charter schools--independently-run, tuition-free schools of choice that serve some 3.7 million U.S. students today. Just prior to the pandemic, studies from Ohio and nationally indicated that charters on average delivered superior academic outcomes compared to traditional districts. And the very finest charters in Ohio and around the nation were driving learning gains that gave disadvantaged students the edge needed to succeed in college and career. The pandemic scrambled most everything about K-12 education. But did it upend what we know about charter school performance? The present study examines the post-pandemic performance of Ohio's brick-and-mortar charter schools, which enrolled 81,000 students--mostly from urban communities--during the 2022-23 school year. The results reveal that, in terms of student achievement growth, Ohio's charter schools remain a better educational option for the average charter student.
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- 2024
10. Can Our Schools Capture the Educational Gains of Diversity? North Carolina School Segregation, Alternatives and Possible Gains
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University of California, Los Angeles. Civil Rights Project / Proyecto Derechos Civiles, Jennifer B. Ayscue, Victor Cadilla, Mary Kathryn Oyaga, and Cassandra Rubinstein
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May 17, 2024 marks the 70th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark Supreme Court decision that ruled segregated schools were "inherently unequal." At the time, North Carolina was one of 17 states that enforced de jure segregation, that is, segregation by law. The state of North Carolina and the school districts within the state have played prominent roles in our nation's history of school desegregation. North Carolina's public school enrollment is increasingly multiracial, and the expansion of school choice means that a growing share of students attends charters and private schools, both of which tend to be more segregated than traditional public schools. On the cusp of this important anniversary, the authors assess where North Carolina schools are now in terms of school desegregation, as segregated schools are systematically linked to unequal educational opportunities and outcomes, while desegregated schools are associated with numerous short-term, long-term, academic, and nonacademic outcomes for individuals and society.
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- 2024
11. Neighbors' Spillovers on High School Choice. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-962
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Juan Matta, and Alexis Orellana
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Do residential neighbors affect each others' schooling choices? We exploit oversubscription lotteries in Chile's centralized school admission system to identify the effect of close neighbors on application and enrollment decisions. A student is 5-7% more likely to rank a high school as their first preference and to attend that school if their closest neighbor attended it the prior year. These effects are stronger among boys and applicants with lower parents' education and prior academic achievement, measured by previous scores in national standardized tests. Lower-achieving applicants are more likely to follow neighbors when their closest neighbor's test scores are higher. A neighbor enrolling in a school with one s.d. higher school effectiveness, peer composition, or school climate induces increases of 0.02-0.04 s.d. in the applicant's attended school. Our findings suggest that targeted policies aimed at increasing information to disadvantaged families have the potential to alleviate these frictions and generate significant multiplier effects.
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- 2024
12. Segregated Choices: Magnet and Charter Schools
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University of California, Los Angeles. Civil Rights Project / Proyecto Derechos Civiles, Ryan Pfleger, and Gary Orfield
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This report analyzes changing racial composition in a comparable subset of schools to enable policy-relevant comparisons between charter and magnet schools. It reports the levels of segregation and diversity in these two systems, which is important because of strong evidence that diverse schools produce educational gains and substantial lifelong benefits in terms of college, employment, and other key life goals. Primary data was acquired from the U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), Common Core of Data (CCD), and Public Elementary/Secondary School Universe Survey Data. In the school districts where both forms of choice were tried, magnets have done better than charters at modestly integrating students. An obvious explanation for this is that a basic mission of magnets, especially initially, was to address racial isolation. Policymakers interested in gaining the benefits of integration through choice might look closely at magnet schools. The higher segregation in charter schools observed in this analysis, coupled with other studies with similar findings, suggests that reforming charter schools, if not advancing alternatives like magnet schools or something even more powerful, is needed to address segregation and its well-documented harms.
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- 2024
13. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [April 2024]
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between April 4-8, 2024 among a sample of 2,257 Adults. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 2.41 percentage points. Among the key findings are: (1) In April, at least one-third of parents have a child attending a microschool or are interested in learning more about microschools. When given a more detailed description of a "microschool," parents appear to have less interest; (2) Among microschool parents, 28% say instruction is completely virtual or online, though only 4 percent of parents interested in microschooling would prefer this instruction style; and (3) Parents say the most important considerations when choosing a microschool for their child are teaching a different curriculum than the local public schools, state accreditation, and state-licensed educators. This report highlights findings pertaining to: (1) Views on K-12 Education; (2) Schooling and Experiences; (3) K-12 Choice Profiles; and (4) Survey Profile and Demographics.
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- 2024
14. The Unfinished Battle for Integration in a Multiracial America -- from 'Brown' to Now
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University of California, Los Angeles. Civil Rights Project / Proyecto Derechos Civiles, Gary Orfield, and Ryan Pfleger
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"Brown v. Board of Education" held that the educational systems of seventeen states that mandated segregated schools violated the Constitutional guarantee of equal protection. The decision helped set off the civil rights revolution. However, after so many years of backlash, schools of the South are dramatically less segregated than what existed before "Brown." "Brown" brought to a head the conflict between the professed belief in equal opportunity and the reality of clearly inferior schools for Black and Latino children. Many whites saw the desegregation changes that the courts and federal agencies ordered as a threat. From a civil rights perspective, the battle was for connecting young people of color to transformative educational opportunities. Opponents mobilized and they attacked the courts and the law. This report examines the changing patterns of segregation and diversity in U.S. public schools, updating earlier work with contemporary and historical data. At a time when U.S. social and political polarization are severe and race relations are dangerously strained, schools matter even more.
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- 2024
15. Did the Emergence of Ohio Charter Schools Help or Harm Students Who Remained in District Schools? Research Brief
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Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Stéphane Lavertu
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For more than twenty-five years, public charter schools have served Ohio families and communities by providing quality educational options beyond the local school district. But it's no secret that we've also had a long-standing debate over whether increasing school choice impacts students who remain in traditional districts. In important--and sometimes impassioned--discussions such as these, rigorous research is critical to ground conversations in facts and evidence. Our latest report offers an analysis of the rapid scale-up of Ohio charter schools during the late 1990s and early 2000s. It finds that charters slightly boosted the graduation and attendance rates of traditional district students, while having no significant impacts on their state exam scores. These results follow a body of research from various locales showing that expanding educational choice--whether via public charter schools or private schools--consistently yields neutral to slightly positive impacts on traditional districts.
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- 2024
16. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [February 2024]
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between February 2-5, 2024 among a sample of 2,252 Adults. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 2.41 percentage points. Among the key findings are: (1) Just under one-third of parents have seen or heard of at least one violent incident at their child's school. Parents of high school-aged children and those in urban areas have seen or heard of more incidents than their counterparts; (2) Parents are slightly more concerned about bullying at their child's school than they are about cyberbullying. Around 1 in 3 parents are "extremely" or "very" concerned about either issue; and (3) One-third of parents feel at least somewhat negatively about the impact of cell phones on their children's socialemotional development. One-third of parents feel that students should be allowed to have cell phones in the classroom, while two-thirds feel they should be able to have them in schools. This report highlights findings pertaining to: (1) Views on K-12 Education; (2) Schooling and Experiences; (3) K-12 Choice Policies; and (4) Survey Profile and Demographis.
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- 2024
17. Families on the New Frontier: Mapping and Meeting the Growing Demand for Unconventional Schooling
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Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation and Thomas Arnett
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Seismic shifts are shaking the landscape of K-12 education. Public school districts across the US have lost over a million students since 2020. Meanwhile, novel educational models--such as microschools and hybrid homeschooling--have more than doubled their enrollments. This paper explores what's driving families to seek these new learning environments by utilizing a theory and methodology called Jobs to Be Done. According to the theory underpinning Jobs to Be Done, people adopt new solutions--such as microschools--when struggling moments in their lives cause them to seek new ways to make progress in the face of those struggles. Through interviews with parents who recently moved their children to microschools, this research uncovered three Jobs to Be Done driving families' decisions: (1) Job 1: When I disagree with decisions at my child's school and I'm feeling unheard, help me find an alternative that will honor my perspective and values; (2) Job 2: When my child is unhappy, unsafe, or struggling at school, help me find an environment where they can regain their love for learning; and (3) Job 3: When my child's school is too focused on academic milestones and neglects other forms of learning, help me find a balanced educational experience for my child. As the educational landscape continues to evolve, the insights in this paper have the potential to empower new educational models with the understanding and tools to successfully navigate these changes. [This report was co-produced with VELA Founder Network and The Re-Wired Group.]
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- 2024
18. High School Choices and Contexts of Newcomer Students in HISD
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Rice University, Houston Education Research Consortium (HERC), Tori Thomas, Camila Cigarroa Kennedy, Brian Holzman, and Stephanie Potochnick
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This brief explores the characteristics of the high schools that newcomer students choose to attend in the Houston Independent School District (HISD). Using data from the 2007-2008 through 2018-2019 school years, the study compares the high school enrollment patterns between newcomer students who attended Las Americas, a school dedicated to serving newcomer middle school students, and newcomer students from other HISD middle schools. Specifically, this brief examined school characteristics related to potential peer networks, English learner (EL) support and resources, disciplinary climate, and academic context. The analyses show that compared to non-Las Americas students, Las Americas students tended to enroll in high schools that provided more access to potential social networks with similar peers with respect to racial/ethnic diversity as well as foreign-born status. While Las Americas students were more likely to enroll in high schools where they might have greater access to EL support and resources, there were no differences in the disciplinary climate of the high schools attended between former Las Americas and non-Las Americas enrollees. Finally, Las Americas students were more likely than non-Las Americas students to choose high schools with a context potentially more conducive to academic achievement, as measured by end-of-course exam scores.
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- 2024
19. School Choice: Expanding Educational Freedom for All. Hearing before the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary Education of the Committee on Education and the Workforce. U.S. House of Representatives, One Hundred Eighteenth Congress, First Session (April 18, 2023). Serial No. 118-5
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US House of Representatives. Committee on Education and the Workforce, Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary Education
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This document records testimony from a hearing before the Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary Education of the Committee on Education and the Workforce that was held to examine school choice. Opening statements were provided by: (1) Honorable Aaron Bean, Chairman, Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education; and (2) Honorable Suzanne Bonamici, Ranking Member, Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education. Witness statements were provided by: (1) Honorable Warren Davidson, a Representative in Congress from the State of Ohio; (2) Honorable Mark Pocan, a Representative in Congress from the State of Wisconsin; (3) Adrian Smith, Former Member of Congress, Nebraska; (4) Luke Messer, Former Member of Congress, President, Invest in Education; (5) Derek Black, Professor of Law and Ernest F. Holdings Chair in Constitutional Law, University of South Carolina; (6) Denisha Allen, Senior Fellow, American Federation for Children; and (7) Lindsey Burke, Director of the Center for Education Policy, Heritage Foundation. Additional submissions include: (1) Ranking Member Bonamici: (a) Letter dated April 18, 2023, from the National Coalition for Public Education; and (b) Letter dated April 25, 2023, from the National Parent Teacher Association; and (2) Honorable Rau'l Grijalva, a Representative in Congress from the State of Arizona: Statement for the record submitted by Rau'l M. Grijalva.
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- 2024
20. The Privateers: How Billionaires Created a Culture War and Sold School Vouchers
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Josh Cowen and Josh Cowen
- Abstract
In "The Privateers," Josh Cowen lays bare the surprising history of tax-funded school choice programs in the United States and warns of the dangers of education privatization. A former evaluator of state and local school voucher programs, Cowen demonstrates how, as such programs have expanded in the United States, so too has the evidence-informed case against them. This thought-provoking work traces the origins of voucher-based education reform to mid-twentieth-century fears over school desegregation. It shows how, in the intervening decades, a cabal of billionaire conservatives supporting a host of special political interests--including economic libertarianism, religious choice, and parental rights--have converged around the issue of education freedom in an ongoing culture war. Through deliberate policymaking, legislation, and litigation, Cowen reveals, an insular advocacy network has enacted a flawed system for education finance driven largely by dogma. Far from realizing the purported goal of educational equity, privatization is failing students and exacerbating income inequality, Cowen finds. He cites multiple research studies that conclude that voucher programs return poorer academic outcomes, including lower test scores on state exams, especially among students who are at greater academic risk because of their race, their religion, their gender identity, or their family's income. Continued advancement of these policies, Cowen argues, is an assault on public education as a defining American institution.
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- 2024
21. The Effects of Unified School Enrollment Systems on New Orleans Schools: Enrollment, Demographics, and Outcomes after the Transition to OneApp. Technical Report
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National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice (REACH), Jane Arnold Lincove, and Jon Valant
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Unified enrollment (UE) systems were designed to improve efficiency, equity, and transparency in school choice processes, but research has focused on efficiency gains. This study examines whether moving from decentralized enrollment processes to UE mitigates or exacerbates racial segregation that often occurs in choice systems. Specifically, we examine a subset of charter schools in New Orleans that had enrolled disproportionately high numbers of white students prior to entering UE. We find that UE entry was associated with increased enrollment of nonwhite students in these schools without offsetting declines in white enrollment, facilitated by schools also increasing total enrollment after entering UE. We find no meaningful impacts of UE on school accountability measures, student or teacher mobility, or student discipline.
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- 2023
22. Setting Priorities in School Choice Enrollment Systems: Who Benefits from Placement Algorithm Preferences? Technical Report
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National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice (REACH), Education Research Alliance for New Orleans (ERA), Jon Valant, and Brigham Walker
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Many cities with school choice programs employ algorithms to make school placements. These algorithms use student priorities to determine which applicants get seats in oversubscribed schools. This study explores whether the New Orleans placement algorithm tends to favor students of certain races or socioeconomic classes. Specifically, we examine cases where families of Black and White or poor and non-poor children request the same elementary school as their top choice. We find that when Black and White applicants submit the same first-choice request for kindergarten, Black applicants are 9 percentage points less likely to receive it. Meanwhile, students in poverty are 6 percentage points less likely to receive a first-choice placement than other applicants for the same kindergarten program. However, these biases are not inevitable. In non-entry grades, where placement policies favor students whose schools are closing, Black and low-income applicants are more likely to obtain first-choice placements than their peers. We examine these priorities and simulate placements under alternate specifications of a deferred-acceptance algorithm to assess the potential of algorithm reform as a policymaking tool.
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- 2023
23. Setting Priorities in School Choice Enrollment Systems: Who Benefits from Placement Algorithm Preferences? Policy Brief
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National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice (REACH), Education Research Alliance for New Orleans (ERA), Jon Valant, and Brigham Walker
- Abstract
Many U.S. cities with school choice programs have adopted unified enrollment systems to manage their application and placement processes centrally. Typically, these systems use placement algorithms to assign students to schools. These algorithms make placements based on families' rank-ordered requests, seat availability in schools, and various priorities and lottery numbers that determine students' standing at each school. This study examines the placement algorithm--and broader school request, placement, and enrollment patterns--in New Orleans, which has a citywide system of charter schools. The authors explore whether the priority categories in the New Orleans placement algorithm tend to favor students of certain races or socioeconomic classes. Specifically, the authors examine cases where families of Black and white children, or lower-income and higher-income families, submit the same first-choice requests for kindergarten (a key entry grade for elementary school). In addition to examining whether certain groups of students are more likely than others to get school placements when they vie for the same seats, the authors run simulations to assess how placement patterns might differ with different policies.
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- 2023
24. Communities in the Driver's Seat: Black Mothers Forum Microschools Raise Sustainability Questions
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Arizona State University (ASU), Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), Travis Pillow, and Eupha Jeanne Daramola
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Black Mothers Forum (BMF) was founded in 2016 to combat institutional racism, including disproportionate discipline, unrepresentative curricula, and racial bullying in Phoenix-area schools. When the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted public education, the organization launched a network of microschools as outposts of this mission. These microschools were able to start quickly, make frequent course corrections, and sustain their efforts after the pandemic, thanks in part to Arizona's growing ecosystem of diverse education options. The initial pandemic-era effort to launch these microschools was documented in a case study published by the Center on Reinventing Public Education in 2022. This followup brief revisits the initial case study with an eye toward the pedagogical tensions and questions of sustainability that it brought to light. This brief is based on in-person classroom observations, a new round of interviews with BMF microschool leaders and educators, and an analysis of Arizona's education policy landscape.
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- 2023
25. Believing in Public Education: A Demographic and State-Level Analysis of Public Charter School and District Public School Enrollment Trends
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National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, Drew Jacobs, and Debbie Veney
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"Believing in Public Education: A Demographic and State-level Analysis of Public Charter School and District Public School Enrollment Trends" is a new data analysis that examines enrollment trends during the last four school years (2019-2023). Over the last four school years (2019-20 to 2022-23), charter schools have gained more than 300,000 students, an increase of 9%. Meanwhile, district public schools have been unable to recover the 1.5 million students they lost during the pandemic, a 3.5% loss. The report examined data for White, Black, and Hispanic students in 26 of 42 states included in the analysis. All three groups are continuing to choose charter schools--and, in some cases, charter school enrollment growth is even outpacing expected numbers based on population growth trends.
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- 2023
26. National Longitudinal School Database (NLSD): Data Description
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Jamie M. Carroll, Douglas N. Harris, Anjana Nair, and Emilia Nordgren
- Abstract
The National Longitudinal School Database (NLSD) comprises three files, making up a near-census of all schools and districts in the United States from school years 1990-91 to 2019-20. The three files are the Public School File, Private School File, and District File. As evident by the titles, the first two files report data at the school-level for both public and private schools. The District File reports data at the public school district-level. We have set up these files so that they can be easily merged together in a variety of ways. This data set is unique in that it allows researchers to examine various aspects of school choice across traditional public schools, charter schools, magnet schools, and private schools. These data have been used to examine changes in and effects of charter schools over time (Chen & Harris, 2022) as well as trends and predictors of school closures (Harris & Martinez-Pabon, 2023). This Codebook provides documentation on the sources and methods used to create the first release of the NLSD. It is organized into three sections, corresponding to the three NSLD files (Public, Private, District). Each of the three data files are in a "long" format, such that each row observation provides data for a given school (or school district) in a given school year (1990-1991 through 2019-2020). The accompanying Appendix spreadsheet describes the variables in each data set in more detail, including information on years available, number of observations, ranges, blanks and missing data, and data source. In future releases, we expect to augment the NLSD with additional data beyond the 2019-20 school year and from other sources relevant to its users. Potential developments include integrating data from the Office of Civil Rights, incorporating state-level charter and school take over policies, and exploring methodological refinements to the existing data.
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- 2023
27. How Free Market Logic Fails in Schooling--And What It Means for the Role of Government. EdWorkingPaper No. 23-866
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University and Douglas N. Harris
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Market-based policies, especially school vouchers, are expanding rapidly and shifting students out of traditional public schools. This essay broadens, deepens, and updates prior critiques of the free market logic in five ways. First, while prior articles have pointed to some of the conditions necessary for efficient market functioning, I provide a more comprehensive list. Second, with an up-to-date literature review, I show that all of these conditions fail to hold to an unusual extent in schooling relative to other markets. Third, because of these failures, I argue that the most potent critique of the free market approach to schooling comes from the intellectual home of markets--economics. Fourth, I show that the issues leading to inefficiency are the same ones leading to inequity. Fifth, I argue that the analysis points to specific roles for government, which go well beyond those included in new universal school voucher policies but are also narrower than the roles of government encompassed in traditional public education. For these reasons, the current policy direction is off-track and apparently inconsistent with the main criteria on which we evaluate education policy and even with the values that voucher advocates profess.
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- 2023
28. How States Protect Funding for K-12 Public Schools: A Summary of State Policies
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EdChoice, Hanover Research (HR), and Lueken, Martin F.
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As current trends across the country indicate widespread declining student enrollment and attendance, EdChoice is interested in how states respond. It enlisted Hanover Research to summarize publicly available information for each of the 50 U.S. states about the role enrollment plays in state funding formulas, as well as any state-level policies that may reduce the impact of declining enrollment on education funding. This report presents an analysis of the policy scan and summarizes the key findings of the policy scan including trends in education funding formulas, funding, and enrollment protections across the United States. Key findings covered in this report include: the type of education funding formulas in each state; the metrics these formulas use to measure enrollment; as well as the declining enrollment; hold harmless, and temporary provisions for enrollment and funding protections identified in the initial policy scan. This policy scan analysis is part of a series of studies that will enable EdChoice to examine the broader landscape of the impact of declining enrollment on school funding and related policies across the United States. The full version of the policy scan can be found in "How States Protect Funding for K-12 Public Schools. State Profiles Index."
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- 2023
29. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [November 2023]
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between November 8-12, 2023 among a sample of 2,260 Adults. The interviews were conducted online and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of Adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. This report highlights: (1) views on K-12 education; (2) schooling and experiences in K-12 education; (3) views on technologies, social media; (4) school choice policies; and (5) survey profile and demographics.
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- 2023
30. Is Reputational Pressure Enough to Create Competitive School Choice Effects? Evidence from Seoul's School Choice Policy. EdWorkingPaper No. 23-860
- Author
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Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, Youngran Kim, and Ron Zimmer
- Abstract
During the pandemic, a number of states instituted hold-harmless funding policies to protect school district financially from declining enrollments (Center for Public Education, 2021). In addition, some school choice policies have protected traditional public schools financially from declining enrollments. Together, these policies raise the question of whether competitive effects can exist in a policy environment of reduced financial pressure. Theoretically, despite the lack of financial pressure, schools could feel competitive pressure in other ways including a loss of reputation as students move to schools of choice (Epple, Romono, & Urquiola, 2017; Friedman, 1962; MacLeod & Urquiola, 2009; Urquiola, 2016). To provide insights on whether schools can improve without the threat of financial loss, we examine the Seoul school choice program which introduced autonomous private high schools (APHSs) in the context in which there is equalized funding across schools. More specifically, we examine whether competition induced by APHSs affects the achievement of students attending traditional public and private schools. The effect of APHSs is identified by exploiting plausible exogenous APHSs' entry through the random assignment of students. We find a small and positive effect of APHS penetration on the Korean and English achievement of private school students while finding no effects for traditional public schools, which have limited ability to respond.
- Published
- 2023
31. Effective ESA Implementation: Helping Stakeholders Create Family-Centric Programs That Work
- Author
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EdChoice
- Abstract
Implementation of ESA programs will not be easy. The ESA model is novel and foreign to most state education agencies, which have little to no experience with helping families purchase a wide variety of educational goods and services using government funds. Even if agencies had the relevant experience, ESA programs are complex, involving millions of individual transactions as thousands of families make purchases from thousands of schools and other education providers. EdChoice developed this guide to help state agencies succeed as they roll out ESA programs. EdChoice's goal is to ensure that ESA programs achieve their purpose: to empower families to choose the best education for their children.
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- 2023
32. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [October 2023]
- Author
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between October 12-16, 2023, among a sample of 2,251 adults. The interviews were conducted online, and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. This report highlights: (1) views on K-12 education; (2) schooling and experiences in K-12 education; (3) views on technologies and social media; (4) school choice policies; and (5) survey profile and demographics.
- Published
- 2023
33. Teachers and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [October 2023]
- Author
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between September 23, 2023-September 27, 2023 among a sample of 1041 Teachers. The interviews were conducted online. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 3.08 percentage points. Among the key findings are: (1) Positive feelings about the direction of K-12 education fell sharply at the national, state, and local levels. These levels of pessimism have not been seen since last year; (2) Teacher concerns about violent intruders entering their child's school have fallen significantly since the spring. They are less concerned about this than parents; and (3) Just over 40 percent of teachers say their students spend "too much" time using technology. High school teachers are most likely to say their students overuse tech. This report highlights findings pertaining to: (1) Views on K-12 Education; (2) Teaching Profession and Experiences; (3) Views on Technologies, Social Media; (4) School Choice Policies; and (5) Survey Profile and Demographics.
- Published
- 2023
34. 2023: The Year of Education Freedom. Backgrounder. No. 3788
- Author
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Heritage Foundation, Center for Education Policy, Butcher, Jonathan, and Bedrick, Jason
- Abstract
Americans are dissatisfied with the public school system--and student academic outcomes have fallen to historic lows. Increasingly, state lawmakers are responding by giving parents more options for their children's education. Some of these new opportunities, such as in Arkansas and Iowa, allow every child in the state to apply. Policymakers also took crucial steps to protect parents' rights as the primary caregivers for their children. Several states adopted new parent bills of rights or prohibited attempts by schools to withhold information from parents about their children. All these reforms, including efforts to eliminate the racial prejudice caused by colleges' so-called diversity, equity, and inclusion offices, are crucial changes that will give students more opportunities to succeed in school and in life. This "Backgrounder" lists the new state policies and describes the features of these laws.
- Published
- 2023
35. School Choice Programs Need a Firewall for Homeschoolers. Briefing Paper Number 164
- Author
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Cato Institute and Colleen Hroncich
- Abstract
The growth of homeschooling from a somewhat fringe movement during the 1970s and 1980s to a more widespread and socially accepted approach in recent decades has provided a strong foundation of flexible learning models. When Florida's school choice expansion, House Bill 1, was introduced in January 2023, one of its goals was to allow more homeschoolers to participate in the education savings account (ESA) program. But many homeschoolers and homeschool advocacy groups balked at the proposal. Having worked hard to achieve independence, they were loath to be linked to government funding. Even if the program were optional, they feared that associated regulations would eventually extend to traditional homeschoolers. In the end, the bill passed with new language that satisfied traditional homeschoolers by creating a new option for parents to educate their children at home. As states continue to enact and expand education savings accounts, Colleen Hroncich argues that it is crucial that policymakers craft bills in a way that maximizes freedom and minimizes roadblocks.
- Published
- 2023
36. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [September 2023]
- Author
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between September 12-14, 2023, among a sample of 2,258 adults. The interviews were conducted online, and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. This report highlights: (1) wellbeing and happiness; (2) views on K-12 education; (3) schooling and experiences in K-12 education; (4) views on social media; (5) school choice policies; and (6) survey profile and demographics.
- Published
- 2023
37. Promoting Microschool Partnerships. Sketching a New Conservative Education Agenda
- Author
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American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and Steven Thayn
- Abstract
As more states adopt universal education savings account (ESA) programs, analysts have declared that the "final frontier" of school choice has been reached. Another choice that parents might want to make and policymakers should support as an intermediate option between private school and homeschooling is partnering with their local schools to establish parent-run microschools. This paper proposes that states can foster these partnerships by incentivizing school districts to allow small groups of parents to teach students at home with public financial assistance but total curricular freedom. This proposal gives parents maximum power to choose the curriculum without severing ties with local schools. With microschooling, parents with the power to choose curricula can positively change public education's very nature, unlike with ESA or voucher proposals that require the student to leave the system.
- Published
- 2023
38. Does School Choice Affect Private School Tuition? Backgrounder. No. 3785
- Author
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Heritage Foundation, Center for Education Policy, Bedrick, Jason, Greene, Jay P., and Burke, Lindsey M.
- Abstract
In the past three years, more than 20 states have enacted new education choice policies or expanded existing ones. Several more states are considering adopting policies that would allow parents to choose the learning environments that align with their values and work best for their children. However, some critics have raised concerns that school choice policies might spur increases in private school tuition, thereby undermining efforts to expand education options. A review of the research literature by the Martin Center found that the research "suggests that federal student aid increases university tuition rates, perhaps by as much as 60 cents on the dollar." The effects of these subsidies are evident. In inflation-adjusted dollars, the national average cost of college tuition and fees has risen 239 percent since 1980. In order to determine the effects of school choice policies on private school tuition, the authors analyzed 10 years of tuition data from Private School Review. The data show that, overall, the adoption of private school choice policies does not elevate tuition rates. If anything, the estimated effect shows that enacting school choice results in private schools charging lower tuitions than they otherwise would, although that effect is not statistically significant.
- Published
- 2023
39. From Surviving to Thriving: K-12 Choice and Opportunity for Rural Texas Students and Teachers. Backgrounder. No. 3783
- Author
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Heritage Foundation, Center for Education Policy, Texas Public Policy Foundation (TPPF), Ladner, Matthew, and Bedrick, Jason
- Abstract
Rural students in Arizona enjoy far more education choice options than rural students in any other state. Education has flourished in rural areas under Arizona's robust choice environment just as much as in the remainder of the state. The data could not be clearer: Rural students with expanded opportunities thrive, as do their teachers and communities. A one-size-fits-all education system in fact fits few students and teachers, whereas a pluralistic and diverse system of schools fits more students and teachers. When families have many options to choose from, district schools will have a strong incentive to improve. If Texas lawmakers empower their educators to create new schools, educators will rise to the challenge, both inside and outside the school system. Key takeaways from this paper include: (1) Arizona and Texas are border states with large and growing cities, as well as vast rural areas, but the outcomes of their K-12 education systems have been opposites; (2) While the Texas economy is racing full speed ahead, the state's K-12 education has stalled and is in decline, with some of the worst cases in rural areas; and (3) Texas lawmakers should use Arizona--which has the country's most robust education choice policies--as a model, very much including its rural areas.
- Published
- 2023
40. Report on the Condition of Education 2023. NCES 2023-144rev
- Author
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National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) (ED/IES), American Institutes for Research (AIR), Irwin, Véronique, Wang, Ke, Tezil, Tabitha, Zhang, Jijun, Filbey, Alison, Jung, Julie, Mann, Farrah Bullock, Dilig, Rita, and Parker, Stephanie
- Abstract
This is the revised edition of the 2023 "Report on the Condition of Education," which is a congressionally mandated annual report from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). Using the most recent data available (at the time this report was written) from NCES and other sources, the report contains key indicators on the condition of education in the United States at all levels, from prekindergarten through postsecondary, as well as labor force outcomes and international comparisons. There are core indicators that are updated every year and spotlight indicators that provide in-depth analyses on topics of interest to education agencies, policymakers, researchers, and the public. At the broadest level, the Condition of Education Indicator System is organized into five sections: family characteristics; preprimary, elementary, and secondary education; postsecondary education; population characteristics and economic outcomes; and international comparisons. The Report on the "Condition of Education 2023" encompasses key findings from the Condition of Education Indicator System. The full contents of the Indicator System can be accessed online through the website or by downloading PDFs for the individual indicators. [For the first edition of the report, see ED628286.]
- Published
- 2023
41. Integrating Housing and Education Solutions to Reduce Segregation and Drive School Equity. Research Report
- Author
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Urban Institute, Center on Education Data and Policy, Megan Gallagher, and Rachel Lamb
- Abstract
School desegregation and equitable access to educational opportunity takes alignment in the housing and education sectors. Racist housing policies and practices have systematically limited access to opportunity for generations of people of color, profoundly affecting their wealth, and perpetuating racial disparities in opportunity and well-being for children. Contemporary school enrollment patterns of students of different races reflect the legacy of state-sanctioned segregation and decades of exclusionary practices in housing and education. This report lays out a through line between housing policies and practices, inequitable school resources, and inequitable educational outcomes. It discusses racist policies that drive residential racial segregation and how limited residential opportunities have manifested for students through school segregation and education inequity. Next, it shares solutions from communities across the country to address segregation across both sectors, including housing mobility for students in segregated communities and schools, housing supports for students who want to stay in gentrifying neighborhoods, and inclusionary zoning policies that encourage affordable housing construction near higher-performing schools. Finally, it presents guidance and resources that practitioners can use to improve equity in their own communities. These include steps communities can take to assess current conditions, identify partners, establish shared outcomes, implement solutions, and influence policies in both sectors. [This report was written with Alexa Kort and James Carter.]
- Published
- 2023
42. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [August 2023]
- Author
-
EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between August 10-13, 2023, among a sample of 2,259 adults. The interviews were conducted online, and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. This report highlights: (1) wellbeing and happiness; (2) views on K-12 education; (3) views on schooling; (4) tutoring and extracurriculars; (5) school choice policies; and (6) survey profile and demographics.
- Published
- 2023
43. Choice in a Time of COVID: Immediate Enrollment Decisions in New York City and Detroit. Policy Brief
- Author
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National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice (REACH), Cordes, Sarah A., Lenhoff, Sarah Winchell, Schwartz, Amy Ellen, Singer, Jeremy, and Trajkovski, Samantha
- Abstract
The COVID-19 crisis caused the educational system's sudden and drastic upheaval as parents were forced to decide where their children would attend school and how they would get there. These decisions were complicated by the uncertainty surrounding what type of online or hybrid schooling districts would offer, the health risks of different transportation options, and the vaccine timeline. Families had to weigh the quality of their children's education, the health risks, and the logistics of various schooling options, which could have long-term implications for educational equity and access. The report examines the enrollment trends and student mobility patterns during the 2020-21 school year in New York City and Detroit--two major urban districts with school choice programs. The findings challenge some common assumptions about the pandemic's impact on education and shed light on its long-term implications for access and equity in schooling. [This policy brief was written in collaboration with the Detroit Partnership for Education Equity & Research (Detroit PEER). For the technical report, see ED629591.]
- Published
- 2023
44. Choice in a Time of COVID: Immediate Enrollment Decisions in New York City and Detroit. Technical Report
- Author
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National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice (REACH), Cordes, Sarah A., Lenhoff, Sarah Winchell, Schwartz, Amy Ellen, Singer, Jeremy, and Trajkovski, Samantha
- Abstract
The COVID-19 crisis caused the educational system's sudden and drastic upheaval as parents were forced to decide where their children would attend school and how they would get there. These decisions were complicated by the uncertainty surrounding what type of online or hybrid schooling districts would offer, the health risks of different transportation options, and the vaccine timeline. Families had to weigh the quality of their children's education, the health risks, and the logistics of various schooling options, which could have long-term implications for educational equity and access. The report examines the enrollment trends and student mobility patterns during the 2020-21 school year in New York City and Detroit--two major urban districts with school choice programs. The findings challenge some common assumptions about the pandemic's impact on education and shed light on its long-term implications for access and equity in schooling. [For the policy brief, see ED629590.]
- Published
- 2023
45. The Public, Parents, and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [July 2023]
- Author
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between July 7-17, 2023, among a sample of 2,256 adults. The interviews were conducted online, and the data were weighted to approximate a target sample of adults based on gender, educational attainment, age, race, and region. This report highlights: (1) wellbeing and happiness; (2) views on K-12 education; (3) views on schooling; (4) tutoring and extracurriculars; (5) school choice policies; and (6) survey profile and demographics.
- Published
- 2023
46. Durability and Debate: How State-Level Policy Actors Frame School Choice
- Author
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Eupha Jeanne Daramola, Taylor N. Allbright, Julie A. Marsh, Huriya Jabbar, and Kate E. Kennedy
- Abstract
School choice policies have become a prominent feature of K-12 education in recent decades, reflecting the broader institutionalization of market-based political ideology in education. In this qualitative multiple case study, we draw on framing theory and interviews with 57 state-level education policy actors to explore the nature of the continued debate over school choice in five U.S. states. We find five patterns of framing choice as beneficial, centering around five purported goals--quality, equity, liberty, plurality, and innovation--along with critiques of these frames. Our findings illustrate that despite the contested nature of these policies, the broad appeal and flexibility of "choice"' helps to explain its durability.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Conservative Case for Public School Open Enrollment. Sketching a New Conservative Education Agenda
- Author
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American Enterprise Institute (AEI), Smith, Aaron Garth, and Schwalbach, Jude
- Abstract
Nearly 70 years after Milton Friedman first proposed K-12 education vouchers, students in Arizona, Iowa, Utah, West Virginia, and other states can customize their education using education savings accounts (ESAs). ESAs allow parents to spend public education funding on expenses such as private school tuition, tutoring, and homeschooling curricula. However the vast majority of students nationwide (84 percent) still attend traditional public schools--and will for the foreseeable future. Conservatives would be wise to support policies that give families choice within the public education system. The authors argue that cross-district open enrollment does precisely that, and it has strong bipartisan support. One state where families are reaping the benefits of open enrollment is Wisconsin. This article describes the state's experience with open enrollment over the past 25 years.
- Published
- 2023
48. Education Freedom and Work Opportunities as Catalysts for Increasing the Birth Rate among Married Couples. Backgrounder. No. 3769
- Author
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Heritage Foundation, Burke, Lindsey M., Greszler, Rachel, and Wilcox, Brad
- Abstract
Pursuing new, commonsense approaches to education reform and work-family policies, from childcare and early education through higher education and workforce flexibility, will foster the conditions for family flourishing and increase birth rates for married couples. Affordable childcare from a variety of providers, including at-home options, access to high-quality K-12 education that reflects a family's values, a higher education landscape that provides numerous routes to upward mobility, and flexible work arrangements will give couples the confidence that they can have the number of children they desire. Public policy should support families as they form and grow, and can do so through reducing government regulatory overreach, directly funding students instead of institutions, and by removing barriers to a flexible workforce. Ultimately, these reforms will support couples as they raise their children to become productive members of a free society.
- Published
- 2023
49. Teachers and K-12 Education: A National Polling Report [May 2023]
- Author
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EdChoice and Morning Consult
- Abstract
This poll was conducted between April 26-May 6, 2023 among a sample of 961 Teachers. The interviews were conducted online. Results based on the full survey have a measure of precision of plus or minus 3.46 percentage points. Among the key findings are: (1) Private school and charter school teachers say they are thriving to a much higher degree than public school teachers; (2) About 1 in 4 teachers believe students are performing very well academically, emotionally, and socially; (3) Nearly 3 out of 4 teachers want more investment in mental health programs for teens to reduce the possibility of school shootings; and (4) Six out of ten teachers feel the need to make some changes to their teaching approach based on pandemic impacts. This report highlights findings pertaining to: (1) Well-Being and Happiness; (2) Views on K-12 Education; (3) Teaching Profession and Experiences; (4) Teaching Opportunities and Schooling; (5) School Choice Policies; and (6) Survey Profile and Demographics.
- Published
- 2023
50. North America: Demand for Graduate Business Degrees. Regional Report. Prospective Students Survey 2023 Data Report
- Author
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Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC)
- Abstract
The Prospective Students Survey is one of the Graduate Management Admission Council's (GMAC) keystone research programs. The global graduate management education (GME) community has relied on data from this survey to gain insights about candidates' decision-making processes when considering and applying to graduate business schools since 2009. The findings detailed in this report are based on responses from a total of 2,710 individuals surveyed between January and December 2022. Prospective students who responded represent those interested in various MBA and business master's program categories, including full-time MBA, professional MBA, executive MBA, master's in management and international management, and other specialized business master's programs. Responses used for analysis included candidates who are at different stages of the GME journey, including those who are actively applying to business schools or currently doing research about graduate business degrees. This year, the information gleaned from the Prospective Students Survey is being released in a nine-part series for easier consumption and improved user experience. Each regional report showcases results from the 2023 Prospective Students Survey by candidates' country of citizenship, residence, and preferred destination of study. This regional report showcases results from North America. [The following individuals made significant contributions to the publication of this report: Quan Yuan, Alexandria Williams, and Kun Yuan.]
- Published
- 2023
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