Many D.C. students went back to school last week, including
Mayor Adrian Fenty's twin sons, who began their first day as fourth
graders in the D.C. public school system. In so doing, Fenty
fulfilled a promise to send his children to District public schools
once they reached fourth grade. However, the Washington Post reports that the Fenty family
declined to enroll their children in West Elementary - their
assigned public school - instead opting for Lafayette, which is,
according to the Post, "one of the District's most coveted
elementary schools."
If by enrolling his children in the D.C. Public School System
Mayor Fenty wanted to send the message that the system is good
enough for his children, and therefore, good enough for all D.C.
children, exercising a choice denied to most District families was
not the way to do it. Many D.C. families attempt to send their
children to a public school other than their assigned school every
year by wading through a daunting out-of-boundary placement process
for a spot in a higher-performing public school. But the
competitive nature of the process means most families are
unsuccessful at securing an alternative.
No one faults the Mayor for wanting to make the best choices
possible for his children - especially when it comes to education.
A quick look into the performance records of West Elementary (the
Fenty children's assigned school) and Lafayette Elementary (their
chosen public school), paints a clear picture as to why the Mayor
chose the later. Nearly 90 percent of children at Lafayette scored
proficient in reading on the D.C. Comprehensive Assessment System
(D.C. CAS) test, compared with just 55 percent at West Elementary.
The children at Lafayette are also clearly receiving better math
instruction, with a full 88 percent scoring proficient in math,
compared with a mere 38 percent of children at West.
While Mayor Fenty values choice for his own children, he has
stood by silently while choice was taken away from the less
affluent residents of his city. Fenty has remained more or less
quiet on the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship program, and the plight
of 216 children who had their scholarships rescinded this spring.
Since 2004, the scholarships, worth up to $7,500, have meant an
effective education in a safe environment for District children -
at half the cost of an "education" in the D.C. public schools. Yet,
liberals in Congress, encouraged by the Obama administration's
acquiescence, have taken steps over the past several months to
effectively kill the successful program.
Fenty is not alone however in practicing school choice for his
own children while doing little to offer such an opportunity to
less affluent District parents. Forty-four percent of Senators and
36 percent of Representatives have at one time sent a child to
private school. President Obama's children are enrolled in the posh
Sidwell Friends School, and Education Secretary Duncan famously
declared in Science when asked about his choice to live in
Arlington, Virginia instead of D.C., "I didn't want to try to save
the country's children and our educational system and jeopardize my
own children's education."
It's not only academics but school safety that likely informed
the Mayor's decision - and the decisions of numerous members of
Congress, the President, and the Secretary of Education - to
opt-out of the D.C. public schools. A recent report by The Heritage
Foundation and the Lexington Institute revealed that police
responded to more than 900 calls to 911 reporting incidents of
violence at D.C. schools during the 2007-2008 school year, the vast
majority of which took place in the public schools.
According to the report, 22 of the students who had their
scholarships rescinded will now be attending four of the most
dangerous schools in the District.
It's no wonder that the Mayor worked to ensure his children
would be enrolled in the best school possible - within the confines
of his promise to send them to a public school in the District. But
it is little solace to the 216 students who have had that
opportunity blocked. Many of them have been forced to return to
dangerous schools devoid of academic rigor. The families of the
D.C. Opportunity Scholarship program will continue to fight for
their chance to receive a quality education this fall. Perhaps now
that Mayor Fenty has navigated - albeit successfully - the
tumultuous waters of D.C. public education, he will be more eager
to lend a supportive voice the other families hoping for the same
opportunity at a bright academic future.
Lindsey Burke is a Research Assistant in Domestic Policy Studies
at The Heritage Foundation, www.heritage.org.