Nevertheless, while Detroit's district schools are so bad that it's not a very high bar, Detroit does show how even a significantly
regulated system of school choice can outperform the government's system of district schools.
Policymakers continue to wrestle with the question of how best to
regulate systems of school choice.
Not exact matches
A recent series
of articles by the Orlando Sentinel highlighted problems at some
schools that participate in the program, describing Florida's
choice system as «so weakly
regulated that some
schools hire teachers without college degrees, hold classes in aging strip malls and falsify fire - safety and health records.»
Policymakers who might consider
regulating or constraining one
of these factors — educational
choice and financial responsibility for parents; freedom, competition, and the profit / loss
system for
schools — must consider the impact that such a policy would have on the other factors and the
system in general.