Trump budget would abandon public education  for private choice
  The Trump administration has announced its  plan to transform education funding as we
  know it. The new budget proposal takes aim  at a host of elementary, secondary and higher
  education programs that serve needy students,  redirecting those funds toward K-12 school
  choice in the form of vouchers, tax credits  and charter schools. The Conversation
  Public schools that enroll a large percentage  of low-income students stand to lose significant
  chunks of their budget, as well as a number  of specialized federal programs for their
  students. At the same time, the Trump budget  will incentivize families to leave not only
  these schools, but public schools in general.
  As a scholar of education law and policy,  I note that my recent research on state voucher
  and charter programs shows that the loss of  both money and core constituents proposed
  by this new budget could throw public education  into a downward spiral.
  The proposed changes in federal funding
  Through Title I of the Elementary and Secondary  Education Act, the federal government currently
  sends US$16 billion a year to public schools  to provide extra resources for low-income
  students. While Title I is the single largest  federal grant, the federal government spends
  more than twice that amount through a multitude  of other programs. School systems like those
  in Miami, Milwaukee, Houston, San Antonio  and Detroit get anywhere from 15 to 25 percent
  of their funding from the federal government.
  The new budget proposes about $4 billion in  cuts to programs like literacy for students
  with disabilities and limited English proficiency,  class-size reduction, and after-school and
  summer programs.
  The Trump administration promises the money  is not really gone; it�s just coming back
  under different policies. The administration  plans to add $1 billion to Title I, but the
  additional money comes with a big catch: States  must spend that money on school choice. To
  access the new money, states and districts  would have to adopt student enrollment policies
  that allow families to choose their own schools  and take public money with them.
  This would fundamentally change the way states  have funded schools and assigned students
  for the past century. While choice policies  have significantly grown in recent years,
  the vast majority of districts continue to  assign students to a public school based on
  where they live. If families choose to leave  the district to attend another school (i.e.,
  a charter school), local school funds remain  with the district. A substantial chunk, if
  not all, of state and federal dollars typically  stay with the district as well.
  Trump�s proposal would have all of the local,  state and federal dollars follow the child,
  regardless of the school the student attends.  Choice advocates argue that this gets the
  government out of the driver�s seat and  brings market forces to bear on public schools.
  Competition, they reason, will improve public  schools and, thus, benefit everyone.
  The threat to low-income schools
  Studies have shown that while decreased student  enrollment does reduce some public school
  costs, other costs remain fixed. School buses  drive the same routes. Air conditioners run
  just as much. And, quite often, the school  still needs the same number of teachers. When
  states fail to account for these realities,  they can drive school districts into bankruptcy.
  Under Trump�s proposal, when a student enrolls  in a charter school, that student will take
  not only federal funding with them, but all  of the state and local funding that previously
  supported the local school. This would effectively  reduce the funding for the local school without
  reducing its costs.
  The effect on high-poverty districts could  be catastrophic. On average, school districts
  serving predominantly low-income students  already receive significantly less state and
  local funding than others. In Nevada, for  instance, predominantly middle-income schools
  spend $10,400 per pupil, whereas schools serving  just a moderate number of low-income students
  spend only $6,100 per pupil. Taking more money  away from needy schools would likely widen
  these gaps.
  States, of course, can stick with the traditional  rules for spending federal Title I money,
  but if they want additional money from Trump,  they have to agree to his choice proposal.
  History has shown that states are typically  willing to do anything to get new federal
  education money, even when it�s a bad idea.  In 2009, Secretary Arne Duncan offered even
  less money for states to adopt controversial  teacher evaluation systems and the Common
  Core. While those policies imploded within  a few years, more than 40 states were initially
  quick to take the deal.
  The threat to public schools in general
  The administration plans to go beyond the  education budget alone. Although it is holding
  back the details for now, the administration  is close to proposing an entire new tax scheme
  to fund private education. This new program  would give individuals and businesses tax
  credits for �donating� to organizations  that pay for students� tuition at private
  schools.
  In the past, states have experimented with  traditional school voucher programs, which
  are typically limited to small numbers of  low-income students. The new tax credit system,
  by contrast, could be used by states to fund  wealthier students � and could be opened
  up to enrollment at religious schools as well.
  As a result, enrollment in these programs  has risen dramatically in comparison to traditional
  vouchers. In states like Florida and Indiana,  the size of these programs quadrupled in just
  a few years.
  A wolf in school choice clothing
  On the surface, these policies are just about  moving money around � freeing up traditional
  public school funding to spur growth in charter  and private schools. Below the surface, however,
  I believe the new budget undermines confidence  in public education.
  North Carolina offers a cautionary tale. A  few years ago, North Carolina slashed its
  traditional education budget by 20 percent,  while doubling its expenditures on charter
  schools. Since then, North Carolina�s public  schools have fallen from being among the finest
  in the nation to some of the worst.
  Policies like these misunderstand why we have  public education in the first place. Our government
  institutions have long funded public schools  because they produce benefits for society
  as a whole: productive citizens, social values,  shared experiences and an effective workforce.
  Individuals surely benefit, but the pursuit  of these societal goals is the reason that
  our states provide education.
  Trump�s effort to reshape school financing  reflects a vision of education that is not
  public at all. This new vision is all about  individuals, ignoring what may happen to our
  societal values, public schools and the neediest  students who will be left behind.
     
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