- Aug 21, 2007
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http://voices.washingtonpost.c...ng_dc_vo.html?wprss=44
I didn't say a reversal of position. I'm in favor of vouchers, and I think they work both theoretically and practically.
I think even a limited improvement in reading comprehension in the DOE's report is evidence enough of this, especially when considering the limited scope of the study.
Was listening to Rush talk about this during lunch. To some extent I agree with him on the following: Why on earth would you discontinue a program that works, costs less, and the children and parents themselves seem to want?
To me, I think the worst you can say about vouchers is that they make no difference, and that doesn't strike me as a compelling reason to discontinue it, since the expenditure is either the same or less. I line up with this dude's blog, for the most part:
http://jaypgreene.com/2009/02/...re-a-win-win-solution/
President Obama will seek to extend the controversial D.C. school voucher program until all 1,716 participants have graduated from high school, although no new students will be accepted, according to an administration official who has reviewed budget details scheduled for release tomorrow.
The budget documents, which expand on the fiscal 2010 blueprint that Congress approved last month by outlining Obama's priorities in detail, would provide $12.2 million for the Opportunity Scholarship Program for the 2009-2010 school year. The new language also would revise current law that makes further funding for existing students contingent on Congress's reauthorization of the program beyond its current June 2010 expiration date. Under the Obama proposal, further congressional action would not be necessary, and current students would automatically receive grants until they finish school.
Education Secretary Arne Duncan had told reporters that it didn't make sense "to take kids out of a school where they're happy and safe and satisfied and learning," but Democrats effectively terminated the program by requiring its reauthorization. Obama must now convince Democratic lawmakers to endorse a gradual phase out by continuing to include grant funding in future appropriation bills.
The voucher program was created in 2003 and is a Republican favorite, providing low-income students with a maximum $7,500 grant to attend a private or parochial school. All students come from households with incomes below 185 percent of the poverty line, and 8,000 students entered a lottery to participate. But liberal education groups, including the National Education Association, have argued that the experimental program is poorly administered and that voucher recipients have not performed measurably better in their new schools.
In a March 6, 2009 letter to Obama, the NEA president Dennis Van Roekel called the D.C. program "an ongoing threat to public education in the District of Columbia" and urged Obama to "use your voice to help eliminate this threat" by opposing "any efforts to extend this ineffective program."
The Department of Education recently issued a three-year analysis of student achievement under the program that showed limited gains in reading and no significant progress in math. But the White House concluded that moving the children back to public schools amounted to an unnecessary disruption.
I didn't say a reversal of position. I'm in favor of vouchers, and I think they work both theoretically and practically.
I think even a limited improvement in reading comprehension in the DOE's report is evidence enough of this, especially when considering the limited scope of the study.
Was listening to Rush talk about this during lunch. To some extent I agree with him on the following: Why on earth would you discontinue a program that works, costs less, and the children and parents themselves seem to want?
To me, I think the worst you can say about vouchers is that they make no difference, and that doesn't strike me as a compelling reason to discontinue it, since the expenditure is either the same or less. I line up with this dude's blog, for the most part:
http://jaypgreene.com/2009/02/...re-a-win-win-solution/