…public and private educational resources. Under this ruling, rich parents, whose children attending public schools fail to thrive, will pay to send their children to private schools; low-income parents or…
…the state is no longer involved. The parent’s subsequent choice of a private school, whether religiously affiliated or secular, is attributable to the parent, not the state. Zelman affirmed that…
…transportation with parents in need of assistance. That could look like anything from public transportation vouchers to connecting parents for carpooling to reimbursement for gas/mileage. In the end, if proximity…
…said. ESAs leverage that maxim by allowing parents to save unused funds for their children’s future K–12 and college educational expenses. Conveniently, by making parents more cost-conscious of their children’s…
…an “A” (12 percent) than public school parents (6 percent). The survey sample included an overweight of parent respondents, with this group representative of the city’s private and public schooling…
…10 teens feel supported by their parents (73%) and friends (69%). Academically, teens feel most supported by their parents (68%) and teachers (65%). When looking for support for mental health,…
…is there any reason why parents—all parents—should not have the final say in where their children are educated? We readily recognize that parents in a pluralistic society like ours have…
…of charter schools, for example, parents in our poll reported 74 percent favorability, where only 43 percent of parents offered support in the EdNext poll: When asked about school vouchers,…
…school choice no longer can play games with the parents wanting different and better learning options for their children. 4. Pro-school choice governors elected, re-elected “Walking Dead” fans learned to…
…percent of public school parents rated their children’s district schools as an “A” or “B.” Just a third of parents said they’d pick a traditional public school if location and…