A 2013 study of a Georgia
tuition tax credit program found that «at least 115 private schools [participating in the program] have explicit anti-gay policies or belong to associations that condemn homosexuality.»
The Tribune's own investigation into Arizona's long - running
tuition tax credit program found that an untold number of STOs, schools and parents are using the tax credits in ways that violate federal tax laws governing charitable donations.
Not exact matches
The Urban Institute study
found that students who attended
tuition - based schools as a result of Florida's scholarship
tax credit program were 15 percent more likely to attend college than their similar peers.
This study looked at students in Florida's
tuition tax credit program and
found that there were no gains in reading or math test scores, compared to students nationally.
The study
found that Georgia's
tuition tax credit program was funneling taxpayer dollars into private schools that were «condemn [ing] homosexuality on religious grounds; [p] unish [ing] gay students by excluding them from admission and scholarships or expelling and disciplining them because they are gay; [u] s [ing] textbooks and curricula that are harshly anti-gay — some even comparing gays to rapists and murderers; and [e] xpel [ling] or disciplin [ing] students in some cases for simply tolerating homosexuality.»