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Vouchers


News & Action

Utah Voters Reject
Private School Vouchers

Utah voters delivered a loud, strong message on Nov. 6 that they want their tax dollars reinvested in public schools, not private school tuition vouchers.
Special Ed Voucher Plan
'Seriously Flawed'
An independent education think tank has released a report  describing Florida's special education voucher program as "seriously flawed."
Vouchers in the News
This is a new feature offering a frequently updated sample of news articles about private school vouchers from the country.
Tell Congress to Reject
National Voucher Plan

President Bush is proposing national private school vouchers as part of the reauthorization of NCLB/ESEA. Urge your national elected representatives to reject draining tax dollars away from public schools.
Why Not Vouchers?
Next time someone puts you on the spot about opposing vouchers, use these talking points  to debunk the most popular voucher claims.

More News & Action

Teachers, parents, and the general public have long  opposed private school tuition vouchers — especially when funds for vouchers compete with funds for overall improvements in America's public schools.

NEA and its affiliates have been leaders in the fight to improve public schools — and oppose alternatives that divert attention, energy, and resources from efforts to reduce class size, enhance teacher quality, and provide every student with books, computers, and safe and orderly schools.

The Educational Case Against Vouchers

  • Student achievement ought to be the driving force behind any education reform initiative. See what research says about the relationship between vouchers and student achievement.

  • Americans want consistent standards for students. Where vouchers are in place -- Milwaukee, Cleveland, and Florida -- a two-tiered system has been set up that holds students in public and private schools to different standards.

  • NEA and its affiliates support direct efforts to improve public schools. There is no need to set up new threats to schools for not performing. What is needed is help for the students, teachers, and schools who are struggling.

The Social Case Against Vouchers

  • A voucher lottery is a terrible way to determine access to an education. True equity means the ability for every child to attend a good school in the neighborhood.

  • Vouchers were not designed to help low-income children. Milton Friedman, the "grandfather" of vouchers, dismissed the notion that vouchers could help low-income families, saying "it is essential that no conditions be attached to the acceptance of vouchers that interfere with the freedom of private enterprises to experiment."

  • A pure voucher system would only encourage economic, racial, ethnic, and religious stratification in our society. America’s success has been built on our ability to unify our diverse populations.

The Legal Case Against Vouchers

  • About 85 percent of private schools are religious. Vouchers tend to be a means of circumventing the Constitutional prohibitions against subsidizing religious practice and instruction.

The Political Landscape

  • Each year, about $65 million dollars is spent by foundations and individuals to promote vouchers. In election years, voucher advocates spend even more on ballot measures and in support of pro-voucher candidates.

  • In the words of political strategist, Grover Norquist, "We win just by debating school choice, because the alternative is to discuss the need to spend more money..."

  • Despite desperate efforts to make the voucher debate about "school choice" and improving opportunities for low-income students, vouchers remain an elitist strategy. From Milton Friedman's first proposals, through the tuition tax credit proposals of Ronald Reagan, through the voucher proposals on ballots in California, Colorado, and elsewhere, privatization strategies are about subsidizing tuition for students in private schools, not expanding opportunities for low-income children.


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