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Elizabeth Warren's Quiet Support for Public School Vouchers

A public school voucher system would radically reform education while stabilizing the housing market

January 26, 2012 RSS Feed Print

Carrie Lukas is the managing director of the Independent Women's Forum.

If all goes right for Massachusetts Democrats in November, they will fill the seat once held by liberal lion Sen. Ted Kennedy with a school voucher supporter who has proposed radically reforming public education in America.

You won't find a call for school vouchers on Elizabeth Warren's campaign website. Education is listed first among the candidate's top priorities, but the website sticks to safe, poll tested platitudes calling for "good public schools, good public universities, and good technical training" as the key to a having a competitive workforce.

Yet in her 2003 book, The Two Income Trap, Warren and co-author Amelia Warren Tyagi cite the traditional public schools system, in which children are assigned to a school based on their residence, as a key source of economic pressure for families with children. Warren and Tyagi call for system-wide reforms to break the link between where a child lives and where they go to school, and specifically make the case for a fully-funded voucher program that would enable children to attend any public school.

[Read: Scott Brown and Elizabeth Warren Rebel Against Super-PACs]

Written during the housing-value boom, Warren identifies the competition for slots in "good" public schools as fueling the rise in real estate prices. While home prices were rising across the board, families with children were outpacing the rest of the public in paying more for homes, because, Warren argued, a home in the right location was the price of getting into that coveted school. Over-paying for houses required great financial sacrifices from families, and created the potential for severe hardship if housing prices fell—which of course they did, effectively wiping away the savings of millions of Americans.

Warren aptly exposed the lie behind the concept of public schools as a great equalizer: "Schools in middle-class neighborhoods may be labeled 'public,' but parents have paid for tuition by purchasing a $175,000 home within a carefully selected school district." How to relieve the pressure on families? "At the core of the problem is the time-honored rule that where you live dictates where you go to school. Any policy that loosens the ironclad relationship between location-location-location and school-school-school would eliminate the need for parents to pay an inflated price for a home...A well-designed voucher program would fit the bill neatly."

[Check out the U.S. News housing market blog The Home Front]

Warren might have also noted how changing the structure and incentives faced by school officials could also lead to better quality schools. If administrators could no longer count on a captive clientele of neighborhood children, they would have to compete to attract students. Current road blocks to reform—such as the tenure system and inability to fire bad teachers—might be tackled more aggressively if school officials had to fear that they would lose students, and therefore lose funding, if counter-productive policies remained in place.

Research confirms what is considered common sense in every other aspect of life: Competition among schools leads to a more efficient use of resources and better outcomes. According to a meta-analysis conducted by Dr. Greg Forster, 18 of 19 empirical studies measuring the competitive effect of school vouchers found that offering families vouchers spurred public schools to improve. Forster similarly reported that most studies show that choice improves student performance. For example, the U.S. Department of Education's analysis of the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship program revealed that vouchers boosted students' test scores and graduation rates.

[Read: On 10th Anniversary, a Look Back at 'No Child' Legacy]

Warren may now be reticent to discuss her critique of the public school status quo. After all, teachers unions are a key part of the Democratic base, big party funders, and have vigorously fought proposals to give parents more schooling options. However, prominent Democrats—from reform-minded mayors like Cory Booker to power-brokers like Sen. Dianne Feinstein—have already blazed the trail by publicly backing vouchers.

This week is what's known in education reform circles as National School Choice Week. Reformers across the country are holding events to raise awareness about the need for and benefits of policies that give parents, rather than the education bureaucracy, control of their children's education. Candidate Warren should use this opportunity to discuss her research on this critical issue and demonstrate to Massachusetts voters that she will serve as a true leader and stand up for policies she believes in, even those that challenge her party bosses.

Tags:
school vouchers ,
Elizabeth Warren,
public schools,
education

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I think this is a great article. I also think there are more voters in the general public than in the teacher unions. Elizabeth Warren should be proud of the very progressive policy. I still admire her tremendously.

chumlee of MA 9:27AM November 02, 2012

Vouchers have some merit, of course, but they are over-rated. Years ago, parishioners found materials from a candidate supporting vouchers. Because of this ad, many parents assumed that the voucher would assist pay for their child/children's education. Not so, it was only for new enrollments.

At the same time, the parish published the number of places by grade that were available. Parents who wanted their child in the school, with or without a voucher, had to pounce on an opening that matched the grade-level of their child, if one was available. At this school, there were less than 10 places in kindergarten through eight grades.

I was raised by a single parent who made huge, huge sacrifices so my sister and I could attend a school in the Catholic school system. Vouchers would not come to her although she had earned one through her sacrifices.

I often hear that children who remain is public schools will be disadvantaged if left in place. That is sad and immoral.

We all benefit from students who receive good educations in public schools and we should contribute to education whether or not we have a child in school. Virtually everyday, we meet graduates of the local district. If that graduate is inadequate, we should look to ourselves, the student and then the teacher. Education is an important part of the infrastructure of this country.

Finally, it is outrageous to attribute difficulties to poor teacher and they do exist. as do poor doctors, electricians, bankers, and every other profession. In my experience in public education, I was a member of a group of union representatives observing a very poor teacher. We in the unionagreed that significant remediation or dismissal was warranted. However, it was the school board, not the union, that chose retention of the teacher despite evidence that the teacher was very poor.

Rather than, or even in addition to, choice we must support our public schools. When we don't provide sufficient resources to schools we end up with children studying very old books, using texts assigned to a desk rather than the student, reading old books for the library, and not developing knowledge of music, art, PE,etc. that will be part of the recreation of our adulthood. Somecriticize teachers based on so little information (most parents think their child attends a very good public school system). The Bible admonishes parents not to be overly critical of children less they lose heart. How would you feel if you and your profession were constantly criticized. Teachers still have lots of heart and commitment.

Like we get the government we deserve, we surely get the public schools we deserve and pay for.

Many the public school near you, could use some support you would provide through volunteering, donations, purchase of books, or even just saying thanks.

Susan Vess of TN 6:54PM October 05, 2012

Just when I thought I had found a politician I could support. Heartbroken & disillusioned.

edg of NY 3:24PM April 01, 2012

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