STUDENTS
AT FAILING LITTLE ROCK SCHOOLS
DESERVE
SCHOOL CHOICE
"The
most callused aspect of the (Arkansas) education monopoly is that it willingly
and deliberately forces children--except those whose parents have wealth--to
attend bad schools. And it does so with financial resources taken from parents
already struggling financially and at the expense of their ability to choose a
better school for their sons and daughters." Policy
Foundation report (Murphy Commission) 1998
(February 2015) The Policy Foundation has
maintained an interest in education reform ideas since its founding in Little
Rock 20 years ago.
The Foundation published the first
Arkansas study calling for charter schools in 1996.1 Critics attacked the idea, but 22 conversion
charters and 18 open-enrollment charters operate in Arkansas in the 2014-2015 school
year, state Department of Education records2 show.
The Foundation published three 1998 studies
on Arkansas' K-12 public education system.
They advanced ideas that were later adopted: charter school expansion,
and district and school report cards.
Foundation amicus briefs3 in the Lake View school finance case explained
the need for a uniform accounting system.
An administrative restructuring proposal explained that schools could
preserve their identities and mascots without the contentious urban-rural
conflict that later ensued.
The Foundation published a study4 in 1999 that called
attention to serious academic and fiscal problems in the Little Rock School
District. Critics attacked the study but
its ideas remain highly relevant. The
state Board of Education took over the L.R.S.D. on January 28 following last year's identification of six area schools as being in
academic distress.
Foundation
Proposes School Choice at Failing Little Rock Schools
The Policy Foundation proposes that
students enrolled at Little Rock schools in academic distress have the option
to benefit from independent school choice programs. These schools are Baseline Elementary, Cloverdale
Middle School, Henderson Middle School, J.A. Fair High School, Hall High
School, and McClellan High School.
The following eight states5 in the region have
independent school choice programs for students:
(Alabama) Parent-Taxpayer
Refundable Tax Credits (2013), and Tax Credits for Contributions to
Scholarship-Granting Organizations (2013)
(Florida) John
M. McKay Scholarships for Students with Disabilities (1999); Florida Tax Credit
Scholarship Program (2001); and Personal Learning Scholarship Account Program
(2014)
(Georgia) Georgia
Special Needs Scholarship Program (2007), and Qualified Education Expense Tax
Credit (2008)
(Louisiana)
Elementary
and Secondary School Tuition Deduction (2008); Louisiana Scholarship Program (2008); School Choice for Certain Students with Exceptionalities (2010); and Tuition Donation Rebate Program
(2012)
(Mississippi) Dyslexia
Therapy Scholarship for Students with Dyslexia (2012), and Nate Rogers
Scholarship for Students with Disabilities Program (2013)
(North Carolina) Special
Education Scholarship Grants, Children with Disabilities (2013), and
Opportunity Scholarships (2013)
(South Carolina) Educational
Credit for Exceptional Needs Children (2013)
(Virginia)
Education Improvements Scholarships Tax Credits Program (2012)
Arkansas, Kentucky, Tennessee and West
Virginia are the only states in the region without independent school choice
programs for students. Arkansas should
not be the last state to consider the reform.
1 Allyson Tucker and Donna
Watson. Arkansas' Weak Charter
School Law: Failing The Grade.
2 Arkansas Department of Education: http://www.arkansased.org/contact-us/charter-schools
3 Attorney Cathleen V. Compton filed the briefs
on behalf of the Policy Foundation.
4 A Performance Analysis of the Little Rock School District: Ten years of rising revenues and declining student academic achievement. The study is posted on the Policy Foundation's homepage at: www.arkansaspolicyfoundation.org
5 Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice:
http://www.edchoice.org/School-Choice/School-Choice-Programs