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How to Make School Choice Happen in Mississippi – Commentary

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"Mississippi State Flag Mural" by jimmywayne is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.

A school choice revolution is sweeping America. Mississippi is now sandwiched on either side by states that give families control over their child’s share of state education dollars.

In Arkansas and Alabama, the state government will pay between $7,000 – $9,000 into a dedicated Education Savings Account for each individual child. Mom & dad will then be able to allocate that money to a school that best meets the needs of their child.

Almost a dozen states have done something similar, but not Mississippi. Why?

Despite having a solid Republican majority for over a decade, Mississippi has made ridiculously little progress towards school choice.

Right now our state has a total of nine Charter Schools, less than 0.8 percent of the total, and fewer than one might find in a single suburb of New Orleans. Our school choice program for Special Needs students has hardly grown at all.

According to one of the leading figures of the school choice movement, Corey DeAngelis, whose new book “The Parent Revolution” has just been released, COVID lockdowns were the great catalyst for change in other states.

Before COVID, many parents meekly assumed that education meant sending their kids to whichever government school people in their ZIP code were assigned. Along came the lockdowns, and millions of Americans got to see how many government schools are run in the interests of teacher unions and school board bureaucrats, rather than their kids.

Teacher Unions were quick to call for schools to be closed, and fought to keep things that way. They attacked suggestions schools reopen as “rooted in sexism, racism and misogyny”. The vice president of the Chicago Teacher Union attacked proposals to return to in-person teaching – while on vacation in Puerto Rico!

So why didn’t COVID lockdowns help shake things up in our state? Lots of government schools in Mississippi were closed for extended periods. How come that didn’t lead to more pressure for school choice in the Magnolia state?

The biggest barrier to change in our state is that fact that not enough of our elected politicians see the need for change. Many prefer to believe that standards in government schools are better than they are, and if things aren’t bad, they reason, why change?

Advocates for school choice need to be prepared to present some uncomfortable facts about education standards in our state:

If you want young Mississippians to get a better start in life than this, you need to support fully fledged school choice.

School choice advocacy organizations, like MCPP, have often made the case for change in terms of social justice. School choice, we like to say, would give every American child opportunities that today only rich families have. This isn’t enough.

Nor is it enough to keep publishing white papers nobody reads and drafting legislation that never gets passed.

We need to demonstrate that school choice is the only effective response to the “woke” takeover of government-run classrooms by the ideological left.

Many government schools in America have clearly been promoting Critical Race Theory, an offshoot of Marxist academic theory. Often this has been done innocuously, under the banner of promoting equity, diversity or inclusion.

Sometimes the mask slips. We know, for example, that here in Republican-run Mississippi, our own Department of Education has recommended that teachers use social studies resources calling for the abolition of Christopher Columbus Day and the payment of racial reparations.

There are no shortage of vested interests – teacher unions, education bureaucrats, federal officials – determined to do everything they can to keep your kids captive in government-run classrooms.

To overcome that opposition, we must first address the anti-school choice politicians who indulge them.

In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbot was a fully throated champion of universal education savings accounts. He threw his weight behind change, only to have a dozen or so “conservative” members of the legislature scupper the plan.

When Texas voters saw those anti-school choice “Republicans” vote to deny them school choice, they helped make these “Republican” lawmakers ex-lawmakers. School choice, I suspect, will sail through the Texas legislature in the next session.

Either you are a conservative and support school choice, or you aren’t.

Originally published by the Mississippi Policy Center. Republished with permission.

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