An experimental study I led for the U.S. Department of Education of the D.C.
Opportunity Scholarship Program found that using a voucher increased the likelihood of high - school graduation by 21 percentage points, representing a 30 percent boost.
Not exact matches
Find an accredited culinary school
program, apply for
scholarships or explore apprenticeship
opportunities.
The latest blow to the 5 - year - old
Opportunity Scholarship program was dealt Nov. 12 by the full panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee, which voted 8 - 5, with one abstention, to uphold an August decision by a three - member panel of that court that
found the
program unconstitutional.
Last week, several news outlets circulated a report by the U.S. Department of Education's research division that
found negative results for students who participated in the District of Columbia's
Opportunity Scholarship Program (OSP), the only private school choice program for low - income children in Washington, D.C. Predictably, opponents of school choice descended on the report to tout it as evidence that school choice does no
Program (OSP), the only private school choice
program for low - income children in Washington, D.C. Predictably, opponents of school choice descended on the report to tout it as evidence that school choice does no
program for low - income children in Washington, D.C. Predictably, opponents of school choice descended on the report to tout it as evidence that school choice does not work.
How serious a defeat was the
finding that the
Opportunity Scholarship Program was unconstitutional?
And this attainment benefit is consistent with the
findings of the U.S. Department of Education's official evaluation of the DC
Opportunity Scholarship voucher
program, led by my colleague Patrick Wolf, which
found:
A 2010 evaluation of the District of Columbia
Opportunity Scholarship Program that I led for the U.S. Department of Education
found that students offered private - school choice by winning a random lottery graduated from high school at the rate of 82 percent, compared with 70 percent for the control group.
The positive
findings in the Education Department's recent evaluation of the D.C.
Opportunity Scholarship program provide more evidence that high - quality private and parochial schools can have invaluable benefits for low - income, minority students.
But the state Supreme Court overturned Judge Hobgood's temporary stay, and as the state's administrative office handling
Opportunity Scholarships rushes to get the vouchers into the hands of families and private schools before a final court ruling could
find the
program unlawful, Rep. Stam has been working hard to expand the voucher
program to nearly double its intended size in time for the start of the school year.
But a report released Thursday
found largely negative results for students who participated in the District of Columbia's
Opportunity Scholarship Program, suggesting that many of the program's beneficiaries might actually fare better if they turn down the private - school
Program, suggesting that many of the
program's beneficiaries might actually fare better if they turn down the private - school
program's beneficiaries might actually fare better if they turn down the private - school money.
The Institute of Education Sciences (IES)
found largely negative results for students who participated in D.C.'s
Opportunity Scholarship Program.
In 2010, an evaluation of the D.C.
Opportunity Scholarship Program — based upon a random assignment analysis, i.e. «the gold standard» —
found that vouchers in D.C. «raised students» probability of completing high school by 12 percentage points overall.»