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Georgia bill would make school choice available to all!! we need this too

Posted on 2/22/17 at 9:39 pm
Posted by I B Freeman
Member since Oct 2009
27843 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 9:39 pm
If Georgia can do it so can Louisiana

quote:

School choice is heating up faster than Hotlanta on a sunny day in July during a dry spell! Georgia would be expanding its educational choice programs from the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship Program—a voucher program with more than 4,000 students participating in 2015–16—and the Qualified Education Expense Tax Credit—a tax-credit scholarship with nearly 13,000 scholarships awarded in 2015—into a universal educational choice program. Currently, Nevada is the only state with a universal program in operation, though families there are awaiting funding for their accounts.

The potential Georgia program would operate similarly to ESAs in other states. Here’s how it would work:

Student Eligibility

Students must be residents of the state who are eligible to attend a Georgia public school (all K–12 students). Accounts will be capped at 0.5 percent of the statewide public school enrollment in 2017–18, 1.5 percent in 2018–19, and the cap will be removed in 2019–20.

Students would not be able to receive both an ESA and a voucher for students with special needs.

Student Funding

Potential ESAs would be equivalent to the state Quality Basic Education funds that would have been spent per student in public school, projected to be worth an estimated $4,500.

Allowable Uses

Funds may be used to pay for:

Tuition and fees at an eligible private school
Online learning programs
Textbooks, curriculum and other instructional materials
Tutoring services
Public school classes or educational services (as long as the student does not attend full-time)
Community college costs
Higher education expenses
Fees for testing, including nationally norm-referenced tests, AP exams and college placement exams
Services for students with special needs
Up to half of the deposited funds that are unused at the end of a school year may be rolled over to the next school year, which can continue until a student turns 25 years old.

Regulations

Parents must sign an agreement to provide an education in at least English and language arts, mathematics, social studies and science outside of a public school.

Participating private schools must be accredited or in the process becoming accredited by a state-approved accrediting organization, and they must administer a nationally norm-referenced test or a state assessment.

Participating private tutors must be accredited or certified by a regionally or nationally recognized accrediting organization or be teachers certified in the state.

What the Research Says

EdChoice has been polling the public on their views on K–12 education and school choice since 2010. Last fall, EdChoice Vice President of Research and Innovation Paul DiPerna released Surveying State Legislators. In his report, DiPerna examined the responses of 344 state legislators to questions about education policy, the profession and more.

The 97 Southern state legislators that responded to the survey were asked if they favored or opposed ESAs. More than three-fifths of the respondents in the South (63%) said they favored ESAs and approximately one-fourth (25%) said they opposed ESAs.

The below chart shows state legislators’ favorability toward ESAs and survey responses from our 2016 Schooling in America Survey, which had an entire national sample of 1,001 adults and a sample of 371 adults in the South. Nearly three-fifths of adults in the South favor ESAs (58%), which is more than the 52 percent of all adults. However, a slightly larger percentage of Southerners are opposed to ESAs (26%) compared to all Americans (24%). Although every state is unique, it is encouraging to see that Southerners are more favorable towards ESAs than the rest of the nation, and this is even more so with Southern state legislators.



Do Georgia voters support ESAs?





The Peach State has a chance to expand personalized learning options to all K–12 students in the state, and we here at EdChoice think the legislators who are paving the way for Georgia to become a leader in educational choice have a whole lot of gumption.

It’s time for all Georgia families to have the opportunity to exercise their wisdom and justice when it comes to their children’s education.
Posted by LSUTigersVCURams
Member since Jul 2014
21940 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 9:41 pm to
I love the idea in theory, but won't all the private schools that are worth a damn just not accept vouchers anyway?
Posted by CarrolltonTiger
New Orleans
Member since Aug 2005
50291 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 10:04 pm to
Won't solve anything as it is unworkable, the problem is the students, not the schools.

How can every child go to the school their parent desires? It is impractical

The best answer is to return to neighborhood schools and draw fair boundaries and insist upon desegregation, not integration. Let people live where they choose without government intervention to make the schools what the government desires rather than wht the neighborhood can support.
Posted by I B Freeman
Member since Oct 2009
27843 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 10:13 pm to
Of course it is "workable".

Why would it not be?

Who wants to continue to be at the whim of bureaucrats and politicians when it comes to making education decisions?
Posted by I B Freeman
Member since Oct 2009
27843 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 10:14 pm to
There will be new schools started.

Just watch.
Posted by BigJim
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2010
14478 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 10:36 pm to
quote:

Participating private schools must be accredited or in the process becoming accredited by a state-approved accrediting organization, and they must administer a nationally norm-referenced test or a state assessment.


Has accountability measures, so I am happy.

I hope is works and catches on. We are not too far from this. Next Republican governor it could happen.
Posted by buckeye_vol
Member since Jul 2014
35236 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 11:12 pm to
quote:

Who wants to continue to be at the whim of bureaucrats and politicians when it comes to making education decisions?
Can you show me an example education in the United States that isn't a function of the whims of bureaucrats and politicians, even if we exclude the overstated influence of the USDOE?

I mean I just read about a potential bill in here in Ohio, that would make it mandatory for re-certification for all teachers to shadow businesses. Not just high school teachers, or vocational teachers. ALL TEACHERS (kindergarten on up).

One of the primary justification for that? Businesses are having trouble filling jobs. Even the state teacher's union liked the IDEA of it being an optional criteria (it would be beneficial for many positions), but the whims of politicians seems to be for the mandatory "externship."
Posted by GurleyGirl
Georgia
Member since Nov 2015
13163 posts
Posted on 2/22/17 at 11:33 pm to
quote:

Participating private tutors must be accredited or certified by a regionally or nationally recognized accrediting organization or be teachers certified in the state.


This caught my eye. I can easily see bright college students becoming tutors and teaching at the grade school level to make extra money. Might be a way to attract better teachers.
Posted by I B Freeman
Member since Oct 2009
27843 posts
Posted on 2/23/17 at 3:27 am to
I don't know of any private school where bureaucrats sit around and draw lines on maps to define geographically areas that contain the population that must send their children to their school.
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