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Arizona's new approach for foster kids
Opponents of school choice excel at finding reasons to
deny disadvantaged children expanded educational opportunities. But even
the fiercest partisan may shy from blocking the latest school choice
proposal. Arizona lawmakers have proposed an opportunity scholarship
program for the state's 7,000 or so foster children. The plan would
offer $5,000 scholarships to children in foster care to attend a school
selected by their guardians. The measure passed the Arizona House of
Representatives last week and awaits consideration in the Senate.
This targeted school choice plan would benefit some of
the most at-risk children in Arizona. Adults formerly in foster care are
more likely to be homeless, incarcerated, and dependent on state
services. They're also more likely to abuse drugs and alcohol and to
have poor physical and mental health. Girls in foster care are more
likely to have early pregnancies and see their own children enter the
foster system.
Early warning signs of these problems are found in the
classroom, where foster children lag behind their peers. The National
Conference of State Legislatures reports that foster children exhibit
"high rates of grade retention, lower scores on standardized tests; and
higher absenteeism, tardiness, truancy and dropout rates." The American
School Board Journal reports that "foster children often repeat a grade
and are twice as likely as the rest of the population to drop out before
graduation." Too often, schools are part of the problem. Low
expectations at school play a role. One survey of older youth in foster
care conducted found that foster children "have high educational
aspirations" and "resent the fact that more is not expected of them."
Another problem is instability. About half of all
foster children spend at least one year in the foster system, and 20
percent remain there for more than three years. Frequent out-of-home
placements lead to regular school transfers, learning disruptions, and
emotional insecurity. One survey of adults formerly in foster case found
that they "strongly believed they had been shifted around too much while
in care, and as a result, they suffered, especially in terms of
education."
The U.S. Department of Education estimates that
students lose 4 to 6 months of progress each time they transfer to a
different school. Not surprisingly, researchers studying foster
children's educational attainment have found that frequent school
transfers cause serious setbacks. No less devastating, school transfers
mean breaking off friendships with fellow students-relationships that
are critical to children without strong family ties. As a response to
these problems, scholarships make a lot of sense. For a foster child, a
scholarship could provide critical stability, allowing him or her to
stay in the same school even when switching homes. And a scholarship
could provide access to a better learning environment than may be
available in the local public school.
Research of existing school choice programs suggests
that students benefit from the new options that choice allows. School
choice leads to higher family satisfaction, improved academic
achievement, and higher rates of parental involvement. According to Jay
Greene of the University of Arkansas, students in the Milwaukee voucher
program are about twice as likely to graduate from high school as their
public school peers. Dozens of studies confirm that school choice
benefits participating children. With so much upside, what's the risk of
a new voucher program for foster children? Critics will find it hard to
come up with a downside: Arizona’s scholarship program for foster
children would be voluntary. Children who are happy with their current
schools would not be affected. The program would just provide new
options for some of the state's most vulnerable children who are ill
served by the current system. The strange politics of education aside,
this seems uncontroversial-or at least, it should be. Potential critics
should remember that foster children are charges of the state, relying
on the state for opportunities their families could not offer. And for
too long, state directed education has failed them. After decades of
learning what doesn't work in foster child education, Arizona is poised
to try a new approach. Do anti-choice stalwarts really want to stand in
the way of that?
Dan Lips
2 May 2006
http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=14445
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