By Aziah Siid | Word In Black
(WIB) – With school districts and states busy banning books, restricting the teaching of Black history, and punishing Black children for what the hair growing out of their heads looks like, parents and guardians may increasingly be asking themselves one question: Is this the best place for my child to learn and develop โ or is there a different educational option?ย
Helping parents answer that question is the stated goal of National School Choice Week, the annual observance that, according to its website, promotes โthe process of allowing every family to choose the K-12 educational options that best fit their children.โ Schooling options include all forms of education, fromย traditional public schoolsย toย public charter schools,ย public magnet schools,ย private schools,ย online academies,ย micro-schools, andย homeschooling.ย
โThe reason weโre having this conversation is because traditional schools are poorly designed,โ Garrett Smiley, co-founder and CEO ofย Sora Schools, an innovative virtual private middle school and high school, tells Word In Black.ย
Smiley created Sora Schools โ 11% of students are Black โ in 2019 before the pandemic hit, forcing many of the nationโs K-12 schools to adopt some form of distance learning. The school is open to students from across the country, regardless of race or socioeconomic status.
But the conversation around School Choice Week is full of controversy, with Black parents in the middle, trying to figure out whatโs best for their kids. Supporters believe school choice lets parents tailor education to the unique needs of their kids. In contrast, opponents believe itโs a back-door way to drain funds from public schools into private or charter schools at the expense of parents for whom public school is the only option.
The Roots of School Choice
Jose Vilson, executive director ofย EduColor, a national nonprofit dedicated to race and social justice issues in education, says school choice was initially intended to positively serve communities โ like lower-income students. Over time, however, the vision for creating these opportunities for students has changed into something that may not be as beneficial as it appears on the surface.ย
โGenerally, itโs supposed to mean students are supposed to have a plethora of choices of which schools they can go to depending on any number of factors,โ Vilson explains. โIt evolved โ over the last 30-odd years, Iโd say โ into a way to privatize a public institution and provide false choice.โ
The modern school choice movement began in 1990 with the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program, led by Black superintendent and education reformer Howard Fuller. The program came about from decades of Black parents and activists pushing back against the segregated, under-resourced schools their children were forced to attend due to school zoning rules. To give these children the opportunity to have an excellent education, Milwaukeeโs program took public funds to pay for private schooling.
โIโve always seen school choice from a social justice framework as opposed to a free market framework,โ Fuller said in a 2019 interview with Jon Hale, an education professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
As Hale wrote, however, โThe Republican Party seized on the new voucher plan and pushed it through the state legislature. Ever since the Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954, when the Supreme Court declared school segregation unconstitutional, the Republican Party has increasingly aligned itself with school privatization efforts through vouchers and โfreedom of choiceโ plans.โ
Fuller drew plenty of criticism for agreeing with Republicans on school choice, but what does the data show result-wise?
Test Scores and Graduation Rates
Joshua Cowen, a professor of education policy at Michigan State University, was one of the evaluators of Milwaukeeโs voucher program from 2005 to 2010. He wrote in 2022 in the Hechinger Report that the โevaluation tracked more than 2,500 voucher kids alongside 2,500 carefully matched public school kids. After five years, we found very little difference on test scores between the two groups.โ
Cowen wrote that these results came out at the same time that poor test scores for students participating in Louisianaโs voucher program post-Hurricane Katrina came out โ and several other studies since have demonstrated the same disappointing result.
On the flip side, Patrick J. Wolf, a distinguished professor of education policy at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, wrote in a 2021 op-ed for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette that โThe 19 most rigorous scientific studies of private school-choice programs find that they tend to have positive effects on student achievement, especially several years after students have entered a private school of their parentsโ choosing. The evidence is even stronger that choice programs increase the chances of a student graduating from high school, attending college, and receiving a college degree.โ
Wolf also wrote that private school choice programs reduce the likelihood that a student โwill commit crimes or be a party to a paternity suit.
Both Vilson and Smiley say that ultimately, when selecting a school thatโs best for your child, test scores and graduation rates shouldnโt be the sole determinants. How the school makes the student feel matters as well.
โA child went to a charter school that was very popular, a really smart child, but unfortunately, his teachers found him too hyperactive, and so he found himself in detention frequently in this charter school,โ Vilson says. โHe moved to a school that may not have been as prestigious per se, in the way the charter school was, but he seems to be a whole lot happier, and itโs reflected in his grades.โ
Costs and Lotteries
Public charter schools are usually tuition-free. However, choice may come with an out-of-pocket price tag for families if they go for a private education. Tuition at the online school Soras is $12,500 per year, but 47% of families participate in the Flexible Tuition program and pay $6,000 annually on average. The lowest income families pay a maximum of $3,600.
โWe always have had a flexible tuition program. We receive no money from the government. This is really just taken out of our operating budget,โ Smiley says. He also says the introduction of Education Savings Accounts, particularly in Southern states, made the option of attending schools like Sora a reality for students coming from lower-income households.
โThese vouchers that folks can apply to private school โ itโs really unlocking a totally different type of family,โ Smiley says. โFamilies who donโt have a ton of resources and donโt have the ability otherwise to come to independent schools, but they recognize that their situation is not good, and now theyโve been given this power from their state government to go shopping,โ Smiley says.
But before securing the money to pay for a school, some parents have to worry about getting their students into a school to begin with.
โItโs hard, but the public option is probably easier in many ways because thereโs not this element of a lottery,โ Vilson says. โWhen you enroll your child in a public school, youโre guaranteed a seat, as opposed to charters, there is this lottery element, and if they get in parents are happy.
Academic and Cultural Excellence
Sora Schools offers over 100 classes โ or expeditions as they call them โ for families to pick from, ranging from learning about banned books to the history of fashion.
โOur corridor academic model is offering kids hundreds of different learning options every six weeks, and they only need to choose two or three of them,โ Smiley says.
Students typically work closely with advisors who are assigned to 10 to 15 students. They consult about their academic goals, schedules, and more.
โIf there were folks who truly wanted to build an Afrocentric type school, usually what Iโve seen is they make it into a charter or independent school,โ Vilson says. โItโs more about trying to create an environment thatโs sustainable for students in impoverished environments, particularly those who are most marginalized racially.โ
And as Hale wrote, from his conversations with Fuller, he came to understand the legendary education reformer โbelieves โmom and popโ charter schools are more emblematic of the long history of the Black freedom struggle than schools proposed by national charter school networks, as these grassroots schools are more often driven by the demands of historically marginalized communities.โ
Overall, says Vilson, the focus should be on how โto ensure you have an environment thatโs sustainable for children who live in poverty,โ regardless of the educational model.
