@JasonBedrick Your chart rocks!4 hours agoReplyRetweet
RT @JasonBedrick: #Schoolchoice tax credits grow more popular once implemented. Legislators, be not afraid! http://t.co/I2aOwqnOAm4 hours agoReplyRetweet
RT @PEFNC: Critical Vote on Tuesday!:Tap here http://t.co/8oo1ZuVFyq to contact your legislators & show your support for Opportunity Schola…4 hours agoReplyRetweet
@LisaLeslie Thanks for the RT! And thanks for speaking at #AFCPolicySummit. We're honored to be on the same #schoolchoice team with you.4 hours agoReplyRetweet
RT @PEFNC: Opportunity Scholarships are being debated now by NC legislature. ACT NOW!: Text SOS to 52886 and ask your legislator to support…1 day agoReplyRetweet
RT @HispanicCREO: Congratulations to the 2013 National Charter Schools Hall of Fame Inductees http://t.co/gZLwqm0fSA1 day agoReplyRetweet
@TXparentsunion Thank you!1 day agoReplyRetweet

Highlighting the value of faith-based schools – and the void when they close

Image from uscatholic.org

Image from uscatholic.org

“I am heartbroken,” was Supreme Court Justice Sonya Sotomayor’s response upon hearing that her Catholic alma mater, Blessed Sacrament School in the Bronx, would be among the 24 latest Catholic schools to close in an impoverished area. She continued in her New York Times interview to describe it as “symbolic of what it means for all our families, like my mother, who were dirt poor … It was a road of opportunity for kids with no other alternative.”

In this country, we unquestionably have a shortage of quality schools, particularly those that serve urban poor families. So why do we continue to watch as hundreds of quality faith-based schools close because the financial deck is stacked against them?

Families would eagerly choose them. They have served their communities for decades. They’ve been effective. As Sotomayor noted, their dropout rates are lower and their college attendance rates are higher than comparable public schools, not to mention the significant output of distinguished civic and corporate leaders. U.S. government surveys show parents are consistently highly satisfied with them – at even higher rates than parents in chosen public schools.

The continuing closure of nearly all types of faith-based schools is a disturbing trend. And raising awareness with the public and policymakers about it is why the American Center for School Choice launched its Commission on Faith-based Schools. At its second meeting, recently held in Jacksonville, Fla., this ecumenical group with representation across the spectrum of faith-based communities decided to organize a national conference in Austin, Texas in the May/June time frame. It will focus on the peril these schools face, and draw attention to how much will be lost in American education if families who wish to choose faith-based schools cannot continue to do so. The target audience will be religious leaders, media, the research community, and legislators and staff.

In the past two years, impressive progress has been made in expanding school choice to include these schools. We now have 32 private school choice programs in 16 states and Washington, D.C., with the enactment of five new programs and the expansion of six existing ones in 2012.

The commission believes that with a focused effort and call to action, these programs can and need to grow at a faster rate to preserve the opportunities faith-based schools bring to urban communities in particular.

Texas, for example, will be considering omnibus education reform legislation this year that will include a tax credit scholarship program. Holding the national conference there will further bring attention to the need for this legislation in one of the nation’s largest states.

The commission also retained Vicki Murray & Associates last fall to assemble the evidence on the value and contribution of faith-based schools to American education, and to review the progress to date. This project is building a web site that will go live at the conference, enabling visitors to gather data on schools by state, as well as to access a library of more than 4,000 records, research reports, books, journal articles, quantitative data and evaluations on faith-based schools dating back to the 1970s. Eventually, this library will be searchable.

The commission will also issue a report that highlights the issues and opportunities faith-based schools have in 2013, based on the key findings and conclusions from this project.

The commission will announce the exact date and venue of the conference within the next few weeks. So keep watching for details on how to participate.

Peter H. Hanley

About Peter H. Hanley

Peter H. Hanley is executive director of the American Center for School Choice. In 2007, he organized and directed the California Charter School Association’s Oakland Charter School Collaborative. Working to improve operating conditions for the 33 charter schools serving Oakland’s neediest students, he helped develop a more transparent approval and evaluation system, gain a share of future parcel tax money for charter schools, founded the first charter high school athletic league, and obtained a federal grant to improve emergency preparedness. In addition, he has monitored school quality closely, working with struggling schools to improve or close. His long held interest in education (five years teaching high school economics as a Junior Achievement business volunteer) culminated in his election in 2001 to the Board of the San Mateo Union High School District, where he has twice been board president. He was also executive director for California Parents for Educational Choice, an organization dedicated to exploding myths about the current education system and promoting increased choice for families.

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