Will Congress decide to serve DC children?
Any day now, the District's overseers, members of the United States Congress, will
decide whether to continue funding the DC Opportunity Scholarship program. That
program, which was put in place in 2003, provides 12 million annually in federal dollars
that now funds approximately 1,900 DC children to attend private school. Each child
receives a federal voucher for up to 7,500.00 that can be used to pay tuition and fees at
participating private schools in the District. This program is part of the three sector
initiative included in the original federal appropriation signed by President George Bush
in 2003. The other two sectors include 13 million in federal dollars dedicated to support
DC public charter schools and 13 million dollars allocated for DC Public Schools. These
are all new dollars that do not impact on the DC budget.
At present, Congress is debating whether to continue the funding for the program. Since
this is a presidential election year, Congressional Democrats want to be sure to validate
their party bona fides. As such, many dems on the hill see the DC scholarship program
as an easy target to kill, all in the name of saving public education.
Well, with all the politics swirling around on this issue, I thought it was important to
share the most important perspective in this whole debate: the children and families
involved who benefit from the program.
A study released by Georgetown University in 2007 demonstrated that scholarship
parents are significantly more satisfied across all areas: safety, class size, academic
quality, discipline, and relationship with teachers. Parents are more involved in their
child's education and are becoming better education consumers.
But let's not focus on studies. Let's focus on Tiffany Dunston. Tiffany was one of the
first students to benefit from the DC Opportunity Scholarship program. During the first
year of the program, Tiffany entered Archbishop Carroll, a highly regarded catholic high
school in Northeast DC. Tiffany told me that the scholarship allowed her to "reach her
full potential".
Apparently, Tiffany did reach her full potential at Carroll. She graduated this spring as
the class valedictorian and is attending Syracuse University in the fall.
When I asked Tiffany what she would say to members of Congress who may end the
program, she said that such a move would be "tragic". Tiffany told me that she just
wasn't learning at her previous school. But Tiffany was determined. As she emphasized,
her scholarship allowed her to fulfill the dream of her cousin, who had planned to go to
college on a basketball scholarship, before being shot and killed at age 17.
Tiffany said she couldn't imagine why anyone would want to get rid of the scholarships.
It "just wouldn't be fair if other students didn't get the chance to prove themselves as I
did", Tiffany said.
Tiffany is right. It wouldn't be fair if the program ended. But, that decision is not
Tiffany's to make.
Maybe the answer lies in the words of Cheryl Hall. Ms. Hall has 2 children in the
Opportunity Scholarship program. She told me that both of her children have benefited
enormously from their attendance at the Ambassador Baptist Church Christian School, a
participating school in the DC program.
Ms. Hall's daughter Kayla, a rising 6th grader and son Winston, a rising 2nd grader, are
in an educational environment that meets their needs and both are thriving.
Ms. Hall supports public schools and the reform efforts of Mayor Adrian Fenty and
Chancellor Michelle Rhee. That being said, Cheryl Hall strongly believes that while
Mayor Fenty and Chancellor Rhee are doing all they can to change the system, she has
found the school that works for her kids and she is not going back. "I support the Mayor
and hope his efforts make a difference, but I am so, so thankful that I had the right option
for my kids. I just couldn't lose them to a bad system. My kids are staying where they
are".
Members of Congress: It really does make sense to listen to the real life experiences of
the children and families in the program rather than the political know-it-alls. After all,
who do we really serve?
Kevin P. Chavous, a former member of the D.C. Council, is a partner at Sonnenschein
Nath & Rosenthal and a Distinguished Fellow with the Center for Education Reform.
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