Studies Show School Choice Widens Inequality: Popular Among Parents,
But Little Evidence that Children Learn More
School choice programs which allow parents to select the schools their
children attend deepen educational inequality and fail to yield consistent
learning gains, according to nine studies of choice initiatives coordinated
by researchers at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. The findings
will be presented at the annual meeting of the National Conference of
State Legislatures in Milwaukee this weekend.
The two-year long research project examined choice programs in Detroit,
Milwaukee, St. Louis, San Antonio, and Montgomery County, Maryland; African
American and Hispanic families' views of choice plans; voucher initiatives
in higher education and preschool settings; and the public and private
school markets overseas.
The coordinators said in all the programs parents who opted for a "choice
school" over a neighborhood school were better educated and supervised
their children's schoolwork more closely, compared to parents who kept
their children in the neighborhood school.
"School choice advocates place great faith in the market model,
assuming that parents will be good shoppers and will move their children
into higher quality, more responsive schools," said Bruce Fuller,
codirector of the study. "But choice advocates need to recognize
that many students are left behind in low-quality schools. Unregulated
choice programs unfairly penalize children whose parents are not savvy
educational consumers."
Few Achievement Gains
Researchers found little evidence that school choice programs actually
boost student achievement. "Political enthusiasm and rhetorical claims
about the virtues of school choice have far outpaced concrete evidence
of merit," reported HGSE Professor and study codirector Richard Elmore
in his summary of the studies. "Thousands of children have participated
in Milwaukee's public-private voucher experiment over the past three years,
yet we see no discernible gains in learning."
Milwaukee is especially significant nationally, according to Elmore,
because it is the longest-running voucher experiment and is often cited
as a model. This month the Wisconsin legislature is expected to expand
Milwaukee's program, and House Speaker Newt Gingrich has urged Congress
to use the Milwaukee program as a model to reform schools in Washington,
D.C.
Only in San Antonio, Texas, did researchers find evidence of learning
gains among students who left their neighborhood school to enter a "choice
school." While students showed gains on achievement tests after one
year in the choice program, researcher Valerie Martinez of the University
of Texas found that their families also had stronger educational backgrounds
than those not in the program. Thirty-two percent of San Antonio parents
who chose a new school had attended college compared to 12 percent of
non-choosing parents.
"The educational background of families has a far stronger correlation
to student achievement than any equalizing effect from schools. San Antonio's
choice programs clearly benefit the most motivated and relatively advantaged
families," said Fuller, "These results suggest that school choice
may inadvertently exacerbate stratification and inequality, as well as
further isolate children who have the least support at home."
Choice Can Increase Racial Segregation
School choice also has the potential to further the re-segregation of
public schools. For example, Montgomery County, Maryland, a suburb of
Washington, D.C., created magnet schools as part of its school desegregation
efforts in the late 1970s. Researchers found that many parents choose
magnet schools on the basis of racial composition and cultural similarity.
White parents tend to choose schools with higher white enrollment, while
black parents select schools with higher black enrollment. Only by using
their authority to deny transfer requests have school officials kept the
choice process from increasing segregation.
Parental Support from Black and Hispanic Families
Despite the potential for segregation, researchers found parental support
for choice programs, especially from minority and low income parents.
In Milwaukee, for example, 59 percent of all participating parents are
AFDC recipients, while these parents make up only 39 percent of the city's
public school parents. Surveys conducted in Detroit and St. Louis showed
that low-income black and Latino families were the strongest backers of
choice plans. Voucher experiments in Milwaukee and San Antonio have boosted
enrollment in small private schools that emphasize Afro-centric curricula
or bilingual instruction. Waiting lists to enter the choice programs continue
to grow, demonstrating strong support from these ethnic communities.
Implications for Policy Makers
According to Fuller and Elmore, policy makers need to take parental
support for choice into account, along with the potential for segregation.
"The politics of choice programs are heated and complicated,"
Fuller said. "We need to design choice plans where children benefit
equally," he said. He pointed to additional findings from the school
choice studies that could guide policy makers:
-
Schools with a distinct curricular focus can attract an integrated
student body.
In Montgomery County, language immersion and multicultural magnet
schools are among the most popular, attracting a racially diverse
population. But other schools without a clear identity draw few applicants
and exhibit very little change in the pattern of racial segregation.
Researcher Jeffrey Henig of George Washington University, also found
vast differences in how much parents knew about magnet schools. Only
39 percent of all Latino parents were aware of the magnet school option,
compared to 72 percent of Anglo parents.
- Choice programs--if designed well--can boost parental involvement
in and satisfaction with schools.
In Milwaukee, parents participating in choice programs visited their
child's school more and felt considerably better about their new schools,
relative to parents who kept their child in the neighborhood public
school. Choice schools are smaller and strongly committed to parental
involvement in general.
-
In St. Louis, many inner-city youths retreat to their neighborhood
schools after trying suburban schools.
In St. Louis, UCLA professor Amy Wells found that some black youths
who traveled to the white suburbs perceived these schools to be better--but
later moved back to their neighborhood schools for reasons of cultural
similarity, familiarity, or academic performance. Wells also found
that many high school youths make their own decisions about where
to attend school, not their parents.
-
Choice has been used successfully in other education settings.
The largest voucher program ever funded--portable Pell grants
for college students--has boosted access to community colleges,
but has not increased the numbers of low-income students in four-year
universities. Vouchers and tax credits have increased access to and
improved the quality of U.S. preschools, according to Fuller. Unlike
choice plans, however, most preschool aid is targeted to poor and
working-poor parents and quality is regulated by state governments.
Complete Studies and Experts Available
The complete set of nine evaluations is being edited by Elmore, Fuller,
and Harvard Professor Gary Orfield and will be published by Teachers College
Press, Columbia University next year. The series was supported by the
Lilly Endowment of Indianapolis, Indiana.
For More Information
Contact Ariadne Valsamis at (617) 495-0740