FL districts say they can't afford the rising costs of AP courses. That story and more school news in our #FLroundup: http://t.co/jQbSDWHhMO48 mins agoReplyRetweet
@AAEteachers @DFER_News Former teacher shares her family's struggles to make #schoolchoice work: http://t.co/bT9cywZsfu2 hours agoReplyRetweet
@cdurkinrobinson @MagnetSchlsMSA Great personal story about #schoolchoice and making it work for your family. http://t.co/bT9cywZsfu2 hours agoReplyRetweet
@joblacketor1 @frobrien @RickyatACE So honored to be with you at #ACESymposium2013 I look forward to working w you & learning from you3 hours agoReplyRetweet
@ACEatND @HowardLFuller I can't stop thinking about what I've learned over the last 5 days. Thank you for #ACESymposium20133 hours agoReplyRetweet

School choice on the school board

In our Florida roundups this week, we neglected to mention a significant and promising development – the election of a pro-school-choice candidate to the board that oversees one of the biggest school districts in Florida and the 22nd-largest in the country.

Jason Fischer, 29, easily won a seat on the Duval County School Board with a platform that included strong support for charter schools and private-school vouchers. His victory is all the more significant because he faced a strong, well-funded challenger in a 125,000-student district that has been more resistant than most to expanded school choice.

“I used the word vouchers. I used the word charter schools. I didn’t shy away from it,” Fischer told redefinED today. “I was bold about who I was and what I wanted to do.”

That message resonated in his conservative district, and Fischer has an opportunity to build on it and reach folks of all political persuasions. As a school choice advocate on a big-city school board, he can help bring a new approach to public education – one that doesn’t get hung up on outdated dividing lines that often obscure what matters most.

“I don’t care if it’s a traditional neighborhood school down the street. I don’t care if it’s a magnet school, or a charter school, or a private school,” Fischer said. “If it works best for the kid, let’s do it.”

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