Anonymous wrote:I see no reason we shouldn’t give these programs a try in this area.
Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This only really benefits poor people.
The rich already send their kids to private school; they have no need for vouchers.
It’s the opposite. The rich families already have seats at private schools and can afford the tuition gap. Private schools can already fill their classes many times over. They aren’t adding a bunch of seats just because of vouchers.
You do NOT know that. You cannot know that. Ergo: you are a liar PP.
Take your rancid democrat lies elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:DC already has a federal voucher law. Here is the evaluation.
https://ies.ed.gov/use-work/resource-library/report/evaluation-report/evaluation-dc-opportunity-scholarship-program-impacts-after-three-years-0
The report found that the OSP had no effect on either math or reading achievement. The OSP did have positive effects on students' – but not parents' – satisfaction with their schools and perceptions of school safety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends who lived in a state (not TX) with vouchers that had a strict income cut-off. They said it made their private more economically diverse than it otherwise would have been.
This is a well-established and supported fact. It’s really ironic how people are so opposed to greater diversity in school.
Anecdote isn't data. Bring data:
https://www.epi.org/publication/vouchers-harm-public-schools/
Students in Louisiana’s Scholarship voucher program experienced declining achievement in both language arts and mathematics during their first two years in the program (Mills and Wolf 2023). Similarly, Waddington and Berends (2018) found that voucher students in the Indiana Choice Scholarship voucher program experienced declining achievement in mathematics one year after attending private school. Under the Ed Choice Program in Ohio, voucher students who previously attended high-performing public schools performed worse than they would have had they remained in public school (Figlio and Karbownick 2016).
Data about vouchers harming public school has nothing to do with vouchers creating economic diversity in private school. They're separate arguments about the same topic.
In addition to the fact that your data isn't relevant to the thread you quoted (which I started), the report you linked is arguing a decline in public school quality when more kids are given the opportunity to attend private school. Nowhere can I find in there that the kids who take the opportunity to attend private school themselves achieve less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends who lived in a state (not TX) with vouchers that had a strict income cut-off. They said it made their private more economically diverse than it otherwise would have been.
This is a well-established and supported fact. It’s really ironic how people are so opposed to greater diversity in school.
Anecdote isn't data. Bring data:
https://www.epi.org/publication/vouchers-harm-public-schools/
Students in Louisiana’s Scholarship voucher program experienced declining achievement in both language arts and mathematics during their first two years in the program (Mills and Wolf 2023). Similarly, Waddington and Berends (2018) found that voucher students in the Indiana Choice Scholarship voucher program experienced declining achievement in mathematics one year after attending private school. Under the Ed Choice Program in Ohio, voucher students who previously attended high-performing public schools performed worse than they would have had they remained in public school (Figlio and Karbownick 2016).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, they've repeatedly shown this just ends up benefitting people who were already paying for private school so it's just a transfer of wealth to those who already had money.
No, the tuition prices will rise by the voucher amount. It will just make wealthy private schools richer and take money from average and less wealthy public schools.
Repeating the same lies over and over does not make them true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends who lived in a state (not TX) with vouchers that had a strict income cut-off. They said it made their private more economically diverse than it otherwise would have been.
This is a well-established and supported fact. It’s really ironic how people are so opposed to greater diversity in school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have friends who lived in a state (not TX) with vouchers that had a strict income cut-off. They said it made their private more economically diverse than it otherwise would have been.
This is a well-established and supported fact. It’s really ironic how people are so opposed to greater diversity in school.
Anonymous wrote:Hells no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, they've repeatedly shown this just ends up benefitting people who were already paying for private school so it's just a transfer of wealth to those who already had money.
No, the tuition prices will rise by the voucher amount. It will just make wealthy private schools richer and take money from average and less wealthy public schools.