In Louisiana, we have seen many life - saving schools
accept students using vouchers, just as we have seen a small number of fiscally or academically irresponsible schools accept such students.
Not exact matches
Because they were more interested in promoting equality of opportunity than simply consumer choice, sociologist Christopher Jencks and law professors John Coons and Stephen Sugarman proposed placing some constraints on how
vouchers could be
used: Disadvantaged
students would receive larger
vouchers, and regulations would prevent any school that
accepted vouchers from imposing tuition and fees beyond the value of the
voucher.
Cleveland's Saint Martin de Porres High School
accepts students who
use state - issued
vouchers to escape failing public schools.
Douglas County requires that sectarian schools
accepting vouchers must let
students opt out of religious services, making any distinction between religious status and
use less relevant.
Private schools that elected to participate by
accepting vouchers as payment also had to administer the Louisiana state assessment to
voucher - receiving
students and were graded by the state
using the same A-F scheme the state
used for its public schools.
A chronically failing
voucher school may not
accept new
students using vouchers for three years after being identified and only after reapplying to participate.
Lighthouse Christian
accepts students using taxpayer funded
vouchers.