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School Choice

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Title: School Choice


1
School Choice
  • By Kelly Stevens, Denise Camacho, Pam Cote, and
    Amy Ebert

2
School Choice in Utah
  • Public School
  • Charter School
  • Private School

3
Public Schools
4
A look at 3 Significant Times/People/Events of
Public Education
  • 1837 Horace Mann, "The Great Equalizer
  • 1973 The San Antonio School District vs.
    Rodriquez
  • 1991 Jonathon Kozol, Savage Inequalities

5
Horace Mann
  • "Education then, beyond all other devices of
    human origin, is the great equalizer of the
    conditions of men, the balance-wheel of the
    social machinery." Horace Mann

6
Jonathon Kozol
  • 1991 - Jonathon Kozol - Savage Inequalities
    Children in America'sSchools
  • "Pick battles big enough to matter, small enough
    to win. On Being a Teacher, Jonathon Kozol

7
1973 - San Antonio School District vs. Rodriquez
  • Legal Question Presented
  • Is a states use of property taxes to finance its
    public schools, which results in disparities in
    expenditures between districts constitutional?
  • A class action suit was filed on behalf of
    Demetrio Rodriguez and other parents of the
    Edgewood School District.
  • The Texas Federal Court found that the Texas
    financing scheme was in violation equal
    protection clause of the U.S. Constitution.
  • But on appeal, The United States Supreme Court
    reversed the United States District Court for the
    Western District of Texas judgment.

8
Early Conclusions of Education in Utah
  • Latter-day Saint people were encouraged by the
    Church leaders to gain as much education as they
    could.
  • Schooling was a private matter.
  • Community interest in educating children was
    limited to facilitating private efforts. (Poor
    families leaned on the more prosperous neighbors)
  • The levying of taxes was approved for
    construction of school houses, but not for the
    payment of teachers supplies.

9
How are public schools funded (in Utah)?
  • 67.7 - State
  • 18.9 - Property Tax
  • 8.4 - Federal
  • 5.0 - Local Tuition, Fees and Investments

10
Statistics of Public Schools (in Utah)
  • Number of Students 422,384
  • Number of Public Schools 949
  • Number of Teachers 22,759
  • Student/Teacher Ratio 20.9

11
The Pros Cons of Public Education
  • Pros of Public Schools
  • The great equalizer
  • Cannot charge tuition.
  • Must admit all students (even those with special
    needs).
  • The children in most public schools reflect the
    community diversity.
  • All teachers are state certified or at a minimum
    are working towards certification.
  • Extra curricular activities.
  • Provides transportation to and from school.
  • Cons of Public Schools
  • Must follow all federal, state and local laws
  • Class size tends to be large.
  • Violence, drugs
  • Inequality of resources
  • Lack of diversity due to the community

12
Public Education in America
  • Are public schools broken?
  • As we have seen, some are and some are not.
  • How can we make public schools better?

13
Charter Schools
14
Charter Schools
  • The first charter schools opened in Minnesota in
    1991.
  • In 1996, there were 250 charter schools
    nationwide.
  • In 2007, more than 1 million students are
    enrolled in 4,000 charter schools nationwide.
  • Forty states have passed charter school
    legislation.

15
Utah
  • Utah passed its first charter school law in 1998.
  • Eight schools opened in the fall of 1999.
  • By the fall of 2005 their were 36 schools open.
  • 60 Charter Schools today

16
Charter Schools
  • Charter schools are secular, tuition-free, open
    enrollment public schools of choice that are
    freed from many local and state regulations and
    union contract constraints. They control their
    own curriculum, staffing, organization and
    budget. In exchange for this freedom, they must
    deliver the academic results that they have
    promised.

17
School of choice
  • Charter schools are established by educators,
    community organizations, and/or parents.
  • Students who attend charter schools do so by
    choice, not by assignment.
  • Most charter schools have specific educational
    missions.
  • They focusing on particular topics or students
    with particular needs.

18
Enrollment
  • The school can not charge tuition.
  • Required to enroll all eligible students who
    submit applications.
  • Utah charter schools are forbidden from accepting
    students based on merit or ability.
  • If more students apply than enrollment space will
    allow
  • Must determine admission in an equitable manner
    such as a lottery.
  • However they are allowed to give admission
    preferences
  • to students whose parents are or were actively
    involved in starting the school.
  • Those who have siblings currently enrolled
  • and to students residing nearby the school.

19
The purposes of Utah Charter Schools are to
  • Continue to improve student learning.
  • Encourage the use of different and innovative
    teaching methods
  • Create new professional opportunities for
    educators that will allow them to actively
    participate in designing and implementing the
    learning program at the school
  • Increase choice of learning opportunities for
    students

20
  • Establish new models of public schools and a new
    form of accountability for schools that
    emphasizes the measurement of learning outcomes
    and the creation of innovative measurement tools.
  • Provide opportunities for greater parental
    involvement in management decisions at the school
    level.
  • Expand public school choice in areas where
    schools have been identified for school
    improvement, corrective action, or restructuring
    under the No Child Left Behind

21
Funding of Charter Schools Vs. Public Schools
  • Utah charter schools have not achieved funding
    comparable to the public school.
  • In 2004, charter schools received 800 dollars
    less per pupil than the public schools.
  • A significant portion of the funding difference
    is caused by differing student populations.
  • Charter schools do not enroll as many
    disadvantaged students who qualify a school for
    certain types of federal aid.
  • Funding comes from debt service and revenues
    state funds that supplement local property taxes.

22
Federal Grants
  • A significant proportion of charter school
    funding is dependent on federal grants.
  • A federal grant for charter school facilities was
    meant to aid the state in creating a new
    facilities funding program, but such a program
    has not beencreated.

23
Limited Capital
  • Because of limited capital-raising capacity and
    questions about their borrowing ability
  • Most charter schools must lease their facilities
  • Raise money from the local community
  • Charter schools are paying much lower salaries
    and benefits than public schools
  • fiscal difficulty
  • younger teaching staff
  • State funding for administrative costs has fallen
    dramatically as the charter school population has
    grown.

24
Cons of Charter Schools
  • First, charter schools may preserve inequities
    among students.
  • Second, charter schools have not fulfilled their
    promise to close the academic achievement gap.
  • Third, charter schools in general present
    irreparable financial harm to public schools.
  • Money to operate the charter schools comes from
    the public schools

25
Pros of Charter schools
  • New teaching methods are implemented.
  • Greater parental involvement.
  • Small Class Size
  • Emphases on certain interests.

26
Private Schools
27
Private Schools
  • Private Schools are a nonpublic, or independent
    schools that do not receive government funding
    and are usually administered by denominational or
    secular boards. Others are operated for profit.

28
History of Private Schools
  • During the eighteenth century private academies
    for boys pioneered the teaching of modern and
    practical subjects
  • Religious schools were opened by the
  • Quakers
  • Episcopalians
  • Lutherans
  • The Jews also opened a school in New York City in
    1731
  • Roman Catholic schools were under way later in
    the eighteenth century.
  • The Free School Society opened and operated
    private schools (18061853)
  • However, it was latter taken over by the New York
    City Board of Education.
  • An independent Catholic parochial school system
    took shape in the late nineteenth century
  • The parochial schools experienced great financial
    difficulty after 1945
  • A result of judicial bans on public support
  • Many Roman Catholic institutions were forced to
    close

29
Utah History
  • In the 1850s and 1860s the schools were organized
    by The Church of Jesus of Latter Day Saints
  • The curriculum reflected LDS values
  • Used the book of Mormon and the bible as
    supplemental texts
  • Their curriculum widely varied.
  • They were controlled by LDS bishops
  • Supported in part by tuition from patrons and
    local taxes.

30
More Denominations
  • In 1900, one hundred private elementary and
    secondary schools were established by
  • Presbyterians
  • Methodist
  • Their initial aim was to
  • "Christianize" Utah's Mormon children
  • meet the needs of the growing number of
    non-Mormons who were settling in Utah.
  • Very few schools lasted

31
The Switch
  • In 1870s and 1880s The LDS Church organized a
    private secondary school system.
  • However, by 1933 the LDS Church had discontinued
    its support of private secondary schools.
  • Eventually these Ward schools became the pubic
    schools we know today .
  • The LDS church endorsed the public school system
    and implemented seminary in the secondary
    schools.
  • Private schools in Utah today are pronominally
    controlled by the Catholic faith.

32
Rise of Private School
  • Enrollment in private elementary and secondary
    schools in the United States rose to nearly 6.4
    million students in 1965
  • Today the enrollment lies between 5 and 5.7
    million students
  • Roughly 10 of children in the United States are
    in private school. While only 5 of students in
    Utah attend private school.
  • Private school and preschools have experienced a
    boom in the late twentieth century.
  • Demand for child care
  • Parents wanting morals and religion instilled in
    their children.
  • And the idea that pubic schools are failing our
    children

33
Private Schools in Utah
  • Are mostly located along the Wasatch Front.

34
Pros And Cons of Private School
  • Religion
  • Parental involvement
  • Small Class size
  • Newest and best learning equipment
  • Tuition
  • Locations
  • Closed enrollment
  • Teacher do not need to be certified by the state.

35
School Choice Activity
36
School Voucher Timeline
37
Voucher Debate
  • November 1, 2007
  • Juan Diego High School
  • Richard Eyre (pro voucher)
  • Pat Rusk (anti voucher)

38
Pro -Voucher
  • Richard Eyre

39
Anti-Voucher
  • Pat Rusk

40
Resolve to change !
  • Our proposal to reform Utah schools Equalize
    funding
  • 1. Property tax base would stay in each
    district.
  • 2. State and Federal funds would be allocated to
    each district. This would equalize funds to each
    district, thus each school.
  • This would bring all school districts up to a
    level where all children are afforded equal
    education!

41
Assessment
  • Write letter to your local Utah State
    Representative (find out who this is).
  • Dichotomizes your views of how to fund Public
    Education.
  • Voice your opinion on Public School Reform.

42
Works Cited
  • Harrington, P. (2007). Fingertip Facts 2007,
    Public Education. Retrieved October 30, 2007,
    from www.schools.utah.gov
  •  
  • Mero, P. T. (2007). Vouchers, Vows, and
    Vexations The Historic Dilemma over Utah's
    Education Identity (pp. 1-43). Sutherland
    Institute. Retrieved October 25, 2007, from
    www.thesutherlandinstitute.com
  •  
  • Kozol, J. (1991). 1. Savage Inequalities
    Children in America's Schools (Vol. NY Harper
    Perennial, pp. 1-156). NY Harper Perennial.
  • Mann, H. (n.d.). The Education of Free Men. Tenth
    Annual Report and Twelfth Annual Report, pp.
    74-78.
  •  
  • Kinchelor, J. L., Slattery, P., Steinberg, S.
    R. (2000). 4. Contextualizing Teaching
    Introduction to Education and Educational
    Foundations (pp. 111-126). New York Addison,
    Wesley, Longman, Inc.
  •  State of Utah (2007). H.B. 148 - Education
    Vouchers. Retrieved July 28, 2007, from Utah
    State LegislatureWebsite http//le.utah.gov/200
    7/bills/hbill/enr/bh0148.htm
  •  
  • State of Utah (2007). H.B. 174 - Education
    Vouchers Amendments. Retrieved July 28, 2007,
    from Utah State LegislatureWebsite
    http//le.utah.gov/2007/bills/hbill/enr/bh0174.ht
    m
  •  
  • McEwan, Patrick J. (2004). The Potential Impact
    of Vouchers. Peabody Journal of Education,
    79(3), 57-80
  •  
  • McCarthy, Martha (2007). Determining the
    Legality of School Vouchers Are State Courts
    the New Venue? Journal of Education Finance,
    32(3), 352-372
  •  
  •  
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