The Biggest Education Innovation Is Growing Use of School Choice
Homeschooling, charter schools, and other “alternative” learning approaches are now mainstream.

It wasn't long ago that "normal" schooling meant public school, understood as some variation on the theme of classes punctuated by the sound of a bell, lunch in a cafeteria, and detours to run around with beat-up gym equipment. Catholic kids had similar experiences at parochial schools and some mostly rich kids went to private academies. Anything else was a little weird and required explanation. But, accelerated by pandemic-era stresses, innovations in recent years brought big changes to education. The biggest change of all is probably the growing acceptance won by charters, homeschooling, and a host of flexible approaches to teaching kids as the old model loses its luster.
Just how much the world has changed came home to me when the tech at my eye doctor's office asked about my son, who attended a charter school with her daughter when the kids were younger. I mentioned that he was thriving as a homeschooler and had just started a laboratory biology class at the community college. Her daughter was also homeschooled, she told me. The girl was technically enrolled in the public high school now, but that was mostly to gain access to community college courses. Her daughter already had two years of college credits put away.
"Northern Arizona University offered her a free ride for the last two years," she told me.
This conversation would have been almost unthinkable when I was in school. But the world has morphed dramatically since then, especially when it comes to our attitude towards education.
"How have your opinions on homeschooling changed as a result of the coronavirus?" EdChoice asks parents every month. In December 2021, 68 percent of respondents reported that they are more favorable to homeschooling than they were before the pandemic. Only 18 percent are less favorable.
It's not just homeschooling. The same survey finds rising support (70 percent) for education savings accounts which allow parents to withdraw their children from public schools and receive a deposit of public funds to pay for education expenses, school vouchers (65 percent) by which public education funds follow students to the schools of their choice, and publicly funded but privately run charter schools (68 percent) like the one my son attended through third grade.
"Support for school choice in America continues to soar," agreed survey findings published last summer by the American Federation for Children.
These alternatives were developed and building support long before COVID-19 emerged as a viral menace in early 2020. But the pandemic accelerated growing discontent with schools that were already widely seen as rigid, politicized, and ineffective. School officials who found educating kids a challenge in good times left kids high and dry in the midst of a public health crisis.
"That school systems have struggled to adapt to these unfamiliar conditions is understandable," Alex Spurrier of Bellwether Education Partners noted last September. "But for millions of families, their willingness to tolerate institutional sclerosis in their children's education is starting to wear thin."
"I…and everybody in our community can no longer count on the public schools," Jennifer Reesman, a Maryland mom, told NPR in November. "And I feel like after the last year and a half, there was a lot of that sentiment that this is just not something we can count on."
So, families that had never before considered alternatives sent their kids to charters or shelled out tuition for private schools. Others tried their hands at homeschooling or joined with other families to set up learning pods and microschools. And, as the polling numbers make clear, they became increasingly open to these alternatives and to policies that make it easier to escape closed classrooms, mask requirements, incompetent implementation of distance learning, and escalating curriculum battles.
If you and your friends are dissatisfied with "normal" education and are giving the competition a try, it's impossible to continue to think of homeschooling, charters, and other innovations as weird. And, as families go, so goes the culture in which they participate and the institutions with which they interact.
"Each applicant to Harvard College is considered with great care and homeschooled applicants are treated the same as all other applicants," the Ivy League school specifies in its application requirements.
"William & Mary is happy to accept and review applications from students who have been home-schooled," the prestigious Virginia state school notes on a page devoted to such applicants.
In taking college admission tests traditionally required (though becoming less prevalent) for college applications "homeschooled students can register for the SAT online or on paper, just like any other student," says the College Board.
Private schools long ago gained acceptance among colleges and employers alike; the big change for them has been the number of families looking at policies that would make such alternatives more accessible. And even before the pandemic, charter schools won wide respect by successfully sending their graduates through college at a higher rate than traditional public schools.
"And while charter leaders don't want to stir up more controversy by saying it out loud, the implication is clear: Traditional high schools need to get on board with the same goal," Richard Whitmire wrote for education publication The 74 in 2017.
Employers are harder to pin down in terms of attitudes towards students and graduates from other than traditional public schools since there are so many of them with diverse viewpoints. But the local supermarket certainly didn't balk at my son's background and his bosses appreciate the resulting flexibility. The only challenge has been reining-in their enthusiasm for his availability when so many adults aren't looking for work and traditionally schooled teens are in class. His experience is likely to be replicated around the country after what many people term a "historic" year for school choice, with more innovations to come.
"Wealthier parents always have an alternative. But many middle- and lower-income families don't," Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) observed in her state of the state address earlier this month. "Which is why I'll be introducing legislation that allows middle- and low-income families and students with an individualized educational plan to receive a portion of the 'per pupil' funds allocated annually by the state to move their child to the education system of their choice."
As is often the case with big changes, success will be best measured by the degree to which education options that were once unthinkable become casually accepted parts of our everyday conversations.
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Does "school choice" provide a way for racist white parents to pull their kids out of public schools with mandatory critical race theory instruction? Because if so I'm against it.
#LibertariansForCRTInPublicSchools
#RadicalIndividualistsForRacialCollectivism
mandatory critical race theory instruction
Alt-Right lies! There is no CRT in schools!
Schools having been redefined as to be referring to the foundational cornerstone of the building, reverently kept in the janitors' closet on 1D.
Meanwhile, the rest of the humanitarian unified educational structure continues as planned.
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Yeah, this growing use of school choice is being accelerated by the obstinance of teachers unions. Parents are opting out.
Newflash to teachers unions: It is only a matter of time before tax dollars follow the child. Your gold-plated benefits and salad days are coming to an end. Better prepare now.
My views on homeschooling have not changed as a result of the pandemic: it is far superior and costs considerably less than government schools. Glad to see more folks caring about their children’s education.
After all Chumby, a mind is a terrible thing to waste.....in a public school system. 🙂
Those government funds accounts are a trap. Ten years down the road, those funds will be used to force private schools to the same crt bullshit that has infected public schools. There is no way around this happening because the precedent has already been set by federal loans for colleges.
If you're so fucking stupid to think that CRT is being taught in anything less than a grad level course then you're stupid as shit. Perhaps you need to go back to school.
If you're so fucking stupid to believe the narrowly defined CRT in higher academia is what is being lambasted, you might be a Democrat.
You can scratch the "might". rasp is a full-on prog idiot.
shitlunches thinks it's not the same because the name is different.
https://twitter.com/conceptualjames/status/1485018482374807556?s=21
“What you witness in Lupe’s Tale and what you will see in the lessons that follow are how classroom teachers begin to use Critical Race Theory connected to Ethnic Studies in a way to empower and create social Justice activists.”
You’re calling people stupid? Since everyone who isn’t a raving prog here is your intellectual superior, what does that make you?
That trap happened with medicine. Docs and hospitals fell for Medicare/ cade and once trapped, had to accept non payers... ( read " illegal aliens")
The only advantage public schools have had over other options has been socializing - kids go to learn how to deal with other people as much as mathematics.
With the pandemic and the unions, that's gone now. I'd love for a socially unifying experience to help people relate to any American, everywhere.
But I will not send my kids to suffer through indoctrination of any stripe. It was wrong when Texas tried to take on evolution and it's even worse with the Federal progs taking on reality.
Go fish.
Learn to deal with others as programmed by Leftist Commie- Prilog idealogy.
Bug.
As to Hone Schooling, an example of TNs horrifying on- line education:
a Teecher showing fractions with the same denominator and using language and rationalizing instead of simplification by cross multiplying.
I just sat there and shook my head...
"Next in Unit 4, how do we feel about 2+2? Are there constructs where is equals 5?"
The only thing school choice has done is just make "others" get left behind instead.
They are getting left behind if they attend a government school regardless of whether other students transfer to a private school or have caring parents switch to home schooling.
Tell me why educational outcomes are lower for minorities in Dem states again?
Also explain why personal freedom offends you.
It’s everyone else’s fault. Seriously, have you ever seen a committed leftist that ever took responsibility for their own failures? Ever?
Two children fall in the water. One is swimming to shore. The other is drowning.
A wise man rescues the drowning child.
A fool complains about the kid who knows how to swim.
Ah yes, the Marxist lie that government schools are the educational savior. School choice works far better. Shitlunches is against it because it diminishes democrat indoctrination of our youth and it instructs the teacher’s union. Which is one of Shitlunches’ masters.
end public sector unions and the close the conformity factories.
School - Student - Sponsor program
Basic idea: Private citizen can take a tuition tax credit (dollar-for-dollar) to
pay for any child to go to the private school of their choice. If my tax liability
is $10k, I can donate $10k to the private school of my choice to pay for any child
and then take the credit so I pay no tax to the government. Either way I am $10k
out of pocket, but I get to decide where the money goes.
1) Any child, not just my own children. I might not even know them.
2) Any private school, religious, non-secular, home school.
3) Pay for tuition, books, supplies, uniforms, transportation, meals, board.
4) Dollar amount for home schooling should be set at some maximum amount.
5) I pay the school directly, they give me a receipt.
6) Some top limit per child, $5k, $10k, ???
7) If my total tax liability is $3k I can give the school $3k and they bundle contributions for one kid.
8) If I owe $20k on my federal taxes I could offer two $10k scholarships or four $5k scholarships.
9) Students should know their education is being funded by neighbors, not government.
10) I could demand report cards for the kid I am sponsoring.
11) I could refuse to sponsor that kid next year if performance is not good.
12) Companies, clubs, churches could do the same.
13) Companies could combine this with an internship.
14) Continue through High School, maybe even college.
Tax credits for education is a great idea, even if it’s just for your own child.
"Dead man taken to post office to collect pension" Drudge headline.
Then take his corpse to register to vote.
Thats the Democrat way!
Fuck Joe Biden and Peppermint Psaki
The problem with school choice is quite simple but often ignored.
Pretty much any decent parents will work to ensure that their kids get the best education available. Even in low performing public schools, if the parents are involved, the kids have much better opportunities.
What about the kids who had the misfortune to have dysfunctional parents? School choice will ensure that the kids with competent parents will get their kids in better schools which have more resources (money) vis-a-vis these "choice" programs. The kids left behind in "low performing" schools that now have even fewer resources will never stand a chance.
One basic truism, for all of the weaknesses in the system, education is still cheaper than incarceration. Unless of course you just want to go all PRC on them & turn the prisons in to work camps.
But then, consider the upside. All of those Republicans running the factories that are hiring illegal aliens might switch to an all American work force. Provided of course that those workers have even fewer protections than the illegal workers (assuming that is possible?)
"The kids left behind in "low performing" schools that now have even fewer resources will never stand a chance."
They dont now.
Letting people decide how to spend their education dollars is not bad in itself but as others note it is not a long term solution to problem of publicly funded education any may introduce new problems Eg imposing new requirements on any private schools accepting government money. The problem this supposedly solves, ie fact that traditional public schools are terrible while private schools or homeschooling cost too much money or time, should be addressed instead by deregulating private education and homeschooling to make it cheaper and more accessible.
Homeschooling is inexpensive. The roadblock to some seems to be that they think others should be funding their kid’s daycare - a parent would need to give up outside of the home work to facilitate this. It is consumeristic and socialist. But this is where we are.
"These alternatives were developed and building support long before COVID-19 emerged as a viral menace in early 2020."
But didnt affect Chilrun..
Amazingly the OmniCold supposedly is.
I think someones are full of what Bidens full of, and it aint Applesauce.
FJB
Want low cost education?
Get rid of the damned SPORTS and extra curricular activities and put the efforts into education.
Country School. Bring it back
We need a separation of school and state.
1. "This conversation would have been almost unthinkable when I was in school. But the world has morphed dramatically since then, especially when it comes to our attitude towards education."
Attitudes haven't changed: The internet has enabled the activation thereof.
2. Any kids whose parents participate in their (the kid groups - and the parents) education, whether in public or choice schools, are ahead of those kids whose parents are indifferent. Prime examples: Jewish and Pacific rim Asians kids outperform every other identifiable, no matter the comparative family incomes.
School choice paid for by taxpayers is a wonderful approach that has worked in several advanced democracies, where the schools are properly funded. In the US, the schools are not properly funded now, and taxpayer funded school choice would make the inadequate funding of public schools even worse. Funding schools with property taxes also makes the problem worse, by ensuring that those who live in the poorest areas will have the poorest-funded schools. Are you prepared to tax the rich and the wealthy corporations to ensure proper funding for schools, or are you willing to simply siphon off a major portion of school funding to go into the pockets of those running schools that are ostensibly private, but publicly funded?
A country cannot fix the problems with schools by first underfunding them, then taking away much of that already-inadequate funding to go into the pockets of owners of private schools. Once we adequately fund the public schools, then it would make sense to publicly fund private schools. Otherwise, the plan is a recipe for disaster, taking a bad situation and making it worse.