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Poll: Support for School Choice Increases by 10 Percentage Points in Four Months

A RealClear Opinion Research poll of 2,020 registered voters in August saw a 10-point increase in support of school choice policies since its last poll in April, from 67 percent to 77 percent.

The American Federation for Children describes school choice as the right for parents to use the tax dollars designated for their child’s education in a school of their choice. The tax dollars would follow the child, not be tied to a nearby school system. Funding could be used for public, private, charter, or homeschool education, whichever method the parents believes provides the best learning environment for their child.

Since the RealClear Opinion Research poll began in 2015, support for school choice has always been high among the likely registered voters it has polled. In 2018, 63 percent said they supported school choice; last month, 77 percent said they support it.

“This polling data shows one of the most astounding short-term jumps in support for educational choice policies,” John Schilling, president of the American Federation of Children, said. “Clearly, families are incredibly frustrated at the district schools’ response to this crisis and are tired of the months and months of fumbles. … families are desperate for other options and will support governors and other policymakers as they pursue policies that let them control their child’s education funding.”

Respondents across racial and political lines expressed overwhelming support for school choice, including: 69 percent of Blacks, 70 percent of Latinos, 63 percent of Democrats and 79 percent of Republicans.

As state shutdowns continue and parents look for alternative methods to educate their children, 80 percent of public school parents (72 percent of Democrats, 76 percent of Republicans, and 73 percent of Independents) said they would support the state government giving them a portion of the money allocated for public school to use for home, virtual, or private learning if public schools did not reopen for in-person instruction.

Among those polled, 78 percent of public school parents and 79 percent of non-public school parents support their governor giving federal education funding directly to families to allow them to choose how to use these funds to best support their child’s education.

An overwhelming majority of respondents polled by RealClear Opinion in April and by Beck Research in January support the Education Freedom Scholarship. The scholarship works through a federal tax credit that allows individuals and businesses to donate to in-state non-profit scholarship granting organizations that provide scholarships for students to attend public, private or career and technical schools of their choice.

Of the 2,122 registered voters polled by RealClear Opinion and 1,275 likely voters polled by Beck Research, 69 percent and 78 percent expressed support, respectively.

Last year, a Mason-Dixon poll administered in Florida, Virginia, Georgia and Kentucky found that respondents overwhelmingly supported school choice, expressing support ranging from 71 percent in Virginia to 79 percent in Georgia.

 

Originally posted on The Center Square. Republished with permission.

Bethany Blankley
Bethany Blankley
The Center Square Contributor

2 COMMENTS

  1. We talk about the teacher’s unions and how they impede education and they do, but in NY City as an example the teacher is paid about $80,000, per student funding is $25,000, class size 26 or $650,000 per class and $570,000 less the teacher or about 85% of the funding. So where does the rest of the funding go? No new schools I would guess. So the education establishment gets a huge windfall for doing nothing. So why would they want to change? Mr. Woodson says the welfare establishment sees to it that they get 70% of the welfare money. School choice is the only answer. No wonder the education establishment votes Democrat. But I don’t think many people realize this. What do you think?

  2. I think that you have it just right, Mr. Peterson. The money gets soaked up by a variety of special interests–such as education bureaucrats, construction companies, and transportation companies–while the students and their parents are treated not as valued customers but as the pretense under which this vast crony-money system is perpetuated. Real choice is the only way to break that stranglehold.

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