VOA Special English
Survey: Fewer Americans Like Charter Schools

    2017/8/23

    American's support for charter schools has dropped significantly in the past year. But there is less opposition to other kinds of school choice, including vouchers, according to a new survey by Education Next.

    Education Next is a journal published by Harvard's Kennedy School and Stanford University. For many years, it has taken a survey of public opinions about education issues.

    This year, the report says that only 39 percent of people who took the survey wanted to see more charter schools – a roughly 12 point drop from last year.

    FILE - Education Secretary Betsy DeVos reads to students at Eagle Academy Public Charter School in Washington, Friday, June 2, 2017. DeVos is a long time proponent of charter schools and school choice (AP Photo/Maria Danilova)
    FILE - Education Secretary Betsy DeVos reads to students at Eagle Academy Public Charter School in Washington, Friday, June 2, 2017. DeVos is a long time proponent of charter schools and school choice (AP Photo/Maria Danilova)

    The report also notes that opposition to vouchers has dropped from 44 percent to 37 percent.

    School choice and charter schools

    School choice allows public education funds to pay for schools or services that fit the needs of students. It refers to the idea of giving parents and students more choices about where to study.

    A charter school is a school that receives a special charter, or written rules, from a state government. These schools, a type of school choice, are publicly funded but operate independently from school districts.

    President Donald Trump campaigned on a promise to expand school choice. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has made school choice a top issue for the department. But some charter school supporters have feared that Trump's arguments for school choice could actually hurt the movement.

    The authors of the Education Next study say the decline in support for charter schools does not have a direct connection to Trump. They say that support for charters fell almost equally across party lines. Support for charters dropped 11 percent among Democrats and 13 percent among Republicans.

    Martin West is an associate professor of education at Harvard University and one of the authors of the report. "We can't say definitively what is responsible for the decline," he said.

    West added that opposition from teachers unions and Democrats may have played a role. In addition, debates over the usefulness of charters may have hurt charters' image. "These developments may have led to a souring of the charter brand," he said.

    Public debates about charter schools

    The results of the survey have not discouraged charter school proponents.

    Nina Rees heads the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools. She said that more than 300 public charter schools opened last year. And there are now over 6,900 charter schools serving 3 million students across the country.

    "The opinions about charter schools that matter most are the opinions of parents and students who have chosen charter schools," Rees said.

    Some experts say that Trump has had an effect on the public debates about charter schools.

    Robin Lake heads the Center on Reinventing Public education, a research and policy organization. She said the Trump administration's statements have deepened partisan tensions around charter schools.

    Lake explained that she had heard from many people that "schools have a lot of conversations with parents that they didn't use to have about why charter schools are public and why they are not a partisan issue."

    Rick Hess is a director of education policy at the American Enterprise Institute. He said Trump and DeVos may have turned school choice into a much more divisive issue than it needed to be. He noted they may have been too critical of public schools.

    "Sometimes the way these things get talked about, you can wind up alienating people who might be with you," Hess said.

    I'm John Russell.

    Maria Danilova reported on this for AP News. John Russell adapted it for Learning English. Hai Do was the editor.

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    Words in This Story

    voucher – n. a document that gives you the right to get something (such as a product or service) without paying for it

    survey – n. an activity in which many people are asked a question or a series of questions in order to gather information about what most people do or think about something

    sour – v. to become unpleasant or unfriendly

    discourage – v. to make (someone) less determined, hopeful, or confident

    partisan –adj. strongly supporting one leader, group, or cause over another

    alienate – v. to make (someone) unfriendly : to cause (someone) to stop being friendly, helpful, etc., towards you