How each state gives parents the ability to choose a safe and effective school for their children.
School Choice
in America
Summary:
Florida is a leader in providing parental choice in education.
Public School Choice:
Florida also offers families school choice options within the public school system. The Education Commission of the States reports that Florida has two open enrollment policies. The aforementioned "Opportunity Scholarship" program allows students assigned to failing public schools the opportunity to transfer into a different public school (though private school choice is no longer allowed). In 2007-08, 1,304 students took advantage of the public school choice option. In addition, school districts can offer controlled open enrollment on a voluntary basis. The state also has a thriving charter school network. According to the Center for Education Reform, approximately 106,000 students were enrolled in the state's 388 charter schools, thanks to having one of the strongest charter school laws in the country.
Private School Choice:
The state has two expansive private school choice programs. Since 2000, Florida has offered tuition scholarships to children with special needs through the McKay Scholarship Program. The Florida Department of Education reports that 19,852 children participated in the program in 2005-06. In 2001, Florida enacted the Corporate Scholarship Tax Credit program to offer businesses a dollar-for-dollar tax credit for contributions to non-profit organizations that fund tuition scholarships for children who are eligible for the free and reduced-priced school lunch program. In 2007-08, 21,493 students received scholarships through the program.
In 2006, the Florida Supreme Court ruled that the state's Opportunity Scholarship Program was unconstitutional. This program provided tuition scholarships to children who were enrolled in public schools that failed state testing requirements. In 2005-06, 734 children had been receiving scholarships through this program.
Online Learning:
Florida is a pioneer in K-12 online learning. Its state-led program, known as the Florida Virtual School (FLVS), is the largest supplemental program in the United States. According to Keeping Pace with K-12 Online Learning, Florida also offers another K-8 statewide program as well as district programs and franchises. The Florida Virtual Academy and the Florida Connections Academy are two full-time online schools enrolling students in grades K-8. The Florida Virtual School had more than 120,000 registrations in 2007-2008.
Recent Developments:
In 2008, Florida Governor Charlie Crist signed legislation to increase the amount that can be contributed in the Corporate Scholarship Tax Credit program by $30 million per year. As many as 6,000 low-income students could receive scholarships thanks to the increase.
Click here for detailed information about Florida's public schools. See below for Florida school choice contacts and a detailed history of school choice in Florida.
Want to join the fight to improve education in Florida through school choice programs? You can:
- Contact your elected officials
- Call talk radio
- Write a letter to the editor
- Support education groups in Florida
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Association of Christian Schools International
David Ray, M.A., Director Florida Region 461 Plaza Drive Suite C Dunedin, FL 34698 Phone: (727) 734-7096 Fax: (727) 734-3666 Website: www.acsi.org E-mail: david_ray@acsi.org |
Family First
Mark Merrill, President 609 W. DeLeon Street Tampa, FL 33606 Phone: (813) 222-8300 Fax: (813) 222-8301 Website: www.familyfirst.net E-mail: info@familyfirst.net |
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Florida Catholic Conference
Larry Keough, Associate for Education 201 West Park Avenue Tallahassee, FL 32301-7715 Phone: (850) 222-3803 Fax: (850) 681-9548 Website: www.flacathconf.org E-mail: lkeough@flacathconf.org |
Florida Charter School Resource Center
Sherle Edwards, Director 4202 East Fowler Ave, fao199 Tampa, FL 33620 Phone: (813) 974-3858 Fax: (813) 974-7823 Website: www.charterschools.usf.edu E-mail: fcsrc@iirp.coedu.usf.edu |
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Florida Coalition of Christian Private Schools Association
Albert Daniel, President P.O. Box 13227 Fort Pierce, FL 34979 Phone: (772) 461-9776 Website: www.fccpsa.org E-mail: lhca9776@bellsouth.net |
Florida Consortium of Charter Schools
Robert Haag, President/CEO 1500 Cordova Road Suite 210 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316 Phone: (954) 463-9595 Fax: (954) 463-9594 Website: www.floridacharterschools.org E-mail: r.haag@floridacharterschools.org |
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Florida Department of Education
John Winn, State Commissioner of Education Turlington Building, 325 West Gaines Street Suite 1514 Tallahassee, FL 32399 Phone: (850) 245-0505 Fax: (850) 245-9667 Website: www.fldoe.org/commissioner/commissioner.asp E-mail: commissioner@fldoe.org |
Florida Department of Education Office of Independent Education & Parental Choice
Virginia Gentles, Executive Director Turlington Building, 325 West Gaines Street Suite 522 Tallahassee, FL 32399-0400 Phone: 1-800-447-1636 Fax: (850) 245-0875 Website: www.floridaschoolchoice.org |
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Florida Federation of Catholic Parents
Joe Magri, President 550 North Rio Street, Suite 301 Merkle and Magri PA Tampa, FL 33609 Phone: (813) 281-9000 Fax: (813) 281-2223 E-mail: jmagri@merklemagri.com |
Florida Parent-Educators Association Inc.
Pam Venezia, Executive Director 7682 Municipal Drive Orlando, FL 32819 Phone: (877) 275-3732 Fax: (407) 363-9241 Website: www.fpea.com E-mail: office@fpea.com |
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Florida State CAPE
Dr. Ken Wackes, President, Florida Association of Academic Non-Public Schools PO Box 1764 Crystal River, FL 34423 Phone: 954-593-4787 E-mail: kwackes@earthlink.net |
FloridaChild
Dr. Patrick Heffernan, President P.O. Box 530568 Miami Shores, FL 33153 Phone: (800) 805-4485 Fax: (305) 757-6878 Website: www.floridachild.org E-mail: heff@floridians.org |
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Learning is for Everyone, Inc. (LIFE of Florida)
Theresa Willingham, President 5910 Hammock Woods Drive Odessa, FL 33556 Phone: (813) 792-7411 Fax: (813) 792-7411 Website: www.LIFEofFlorida.org E-mail: info@lifeofflorida.org |
Miami Inner City Angels (MICA)
Michael Carricarte, Founder 7001 SW 97th Avenue Miami, FL 33173 Phone: (305) 275-1412 Fax: (305) 275-1454 E-mail: mica@amedex.com |
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National Home Education Network (NHEN)
Laura Derrick, President P.O. Box 1652 Hobe Sound, FL 33475 Phone: 512-345-4895 Fax: 413-581-1463 Website: www.nhen.org E-mail: info@nhen.org |
Step Up For Students
Doug Tuthill, President P.O. Box 1670 Tampa, FL 33601 Phone: (813) 258-2700 Website: www.StepUpForStudents.org E-mail: dtuthill@stepupforstudents.org |
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Tampa Black Alliance for Educational Options
Samuel Walton, Board Chair PO Box 360025 Tampa, FL 33673 Phone: (813) 716-3836 Website: www.baeo.org E-mail: saxque@yahoo.com |
The James Madison Institute
J. Robert McClure, President P.O. Box 37460 Tallahassee, FL 32315 Phone: (850) 386-3131 Fax: (850) 386-1807 Website: www.jamesmadison.org E-mail: jmi@jamesmadison.org |
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Urban League of Greater Miami, Inc.
T. Willard Fair, President 8500 NW 25th Avenue Miami, FL 33147 Phone: (305) 696-4450 Fax: (305) 696-4455 Website: www.ulmiami.org E-mail: twfair@bellsouth.net |
View Archived History, Pre-2006
In 1973, the
School choice did not become a significant issue until 1996, when the state enacted a charter school law. House Bill 403 allowed for the creation of three to seven charter schools per district, depending on the size of the district. It also required school districts to develop limited open enrollment among their public schools.[2] The plan was subject to desegregation plans. The state did not require the districts to implement their school choice plans.[3] Districts were limited to 12-28 new charter schools, depending on the size of the districts. An unlimited number of traditional public schools could convert to charter schools.
Subsequent reauthorizations have strengthened the law and eliminated the restriction on the number of charter schools in each district. Each school receives 100 percent of the funding minus administrative services fees, not to exceed 5 percent of the total funding. Teachers do not have to be certified.[4]
In June 1999, Governor Jeb Bush signed the A+ Plan for Education, which offers state-paid tuition scholarships to children in failing public schools to attend a public, private, or religious school of choice. The Florida House approved the A+ plan by a vote of 70 to 48, and the Senate approved it by a vote of 25 to 15.[5] The legislation set up a grading system for
The day after the governor signed the A+ plan into law, People for the
In October 2000, the Florida First District Court of Appeals ruled that the school voucher program was constitutional and may remain in effect. The decision reversed the March ruling by the Leon County Circuit Court judge that the Opportunity Scholarships violated the state constitution, which bars aid to sectarian institutions. The appellate court found that lawmakers experiment with different ways of working "for the common good" and that the state constitution "does not unalterably hitch the requirement to make adequate provision for education to a single, specified engine, that being the public school system."[8]
No other schools received a failing grade during the 1999-2000 school year; all of the schools that had received an "F" the prior year had made substantial progress on the writing part of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.[9]
A 2000 survey of more than 750 public school teachers found significant support for the possibility that the availability of vouchers caused a dramatic improvement in test scores at some of
In late October 2000, the Pinellas School Board approved a public school choice plan. According to the plan, students entering the district's schools for the first time in fall 2003 will have to choose a school within the attendance area. Some students will be "grandfathered" into the system and allowed to attend their original neighborhood school. Black students who have been bused will be able to choose a school closer to their homes.[11]
On the private scholarship front, in 1998,
In April 2000,
During the 2000 legislative session, H.B. 1127 was introduced to give tax credits for contributions to scholarship organizations or public schools. Individuals would have received a credit of 65 percent of their contribution. The bill died in committee.[15]
In 2001, Jay P. Greene, Ph.D., released an analysis of the Florida A+ program. He found that during 1999-2000, the 76 failing schools had improved an average of 17.59 points in reading and 25.66 points in math on the state assessment (the FCAT), which uses a scale of 100 to 500, compared with 10.02 points in reading and 16.06 points in math for schools that had received a "D" rating.[16]
In July 2000,
In 2001, the governor signed into law Senate Bill 1180, which expanded a pilot voucher program enacted in 1999. Under the original pilot program, two disabled students received vouchers to attend private schools. The new law made all special-needs students eligible. Parents who are dissatisfied with their children's academic progress may transfer their children to another public or private school using a publicly funded McKay Scholarship.[18] The McKay Scholarship was named after the bill's sponsor, then-State Senator John McKay, who has a child with a disability. In 2001, 4,000 students participated at an average cost of $6,000 per student; in 2002, 8,082 students participated.[19]
The governor also signed a bill to provide tax credits to corporations that donate to organizations that award scholarships to children from low-income families. A corporation can receive a dollar-for-dollar tax credit up to 75 percent of its state income tax liability. The state may award a maximum of $50 million in credits a year.[20] The scholarships, available to recipients who meet income eligibility thresholds, are worth $3,500 or the cost of tuition plus books and transportation, whichever is less. As of December 2002, 14, 520 students had received scholarships funded through the tax credit program.[21]
Finally, the School Crowding Relief Intervention for Parents and Teachers Act, H.B. 303 and its companion bill (S.B. 504), was introduced to give each student in schools where enrollment exceeds 120 percent of capacity a $3,000 grant to use toward tuition at a private school. The House passed H.B. 303 by a vote of 63 to 54 on March 22, 2001. The Senate bill died in committee.[22]
On April 26, 2001, the Florida Supreme Court declined to review the October 2000 appeals court ruling to allow public funds to flow to private schools under the Opportunity Scholarship Program. The case was sent back to the Leon County Circuit Court, to consider the union's other claims.[23]
During the 2002 legislative session, H.B. 1587, the No Strings Attached Act, was introduced to enable all students to participate in the state's voucher program. Under the program, a school district could have opted to have more flexibility within the state accountability plan in exchange for offering its students Freedom Scholarships. The bill died in committee.[24]
The number of students using Opportunity Scholarships jumped from 45 in 2001 to 575 in 2002. In 2002, 80 schools received failing grades; for 10 of these schools, it was their second "F." Of 9,000 students affected, 900 have transferred to other public schools, and 577 have transferred to private schools. The number of students receiving McKay Scholarships surged to 9,000.[25]
The state's accountability plan has also produced systemwide improvements. On September 6, 2002, Governor Bush held a press conference to announce the release of four-year student FCAT gains in reading. Since implementation of the A+ plan in 1999, reading scores have improved significantly in three grade levels and among African-American, Hispanic, and white students. Steady gains were also noted for students in exceptional education programs.[26]
In July 2002, opponents of vouchers urged Leon County Circuit Judge P. Kevin Davey to rule against the Opportunity Scholarship program because they believe it violates the
In June, the Supreme Court of the
On August 5, 2002, Judge Davey struck down the Opportunity Scholarship program, saying that the state constitution is "clear and unambiguous" in prohibiting the state from sending public funds to sectarian institutions.[28] The state has appealed the decision, and the judge has allowed the program to continue while the case makes its way through the courts.[29]
Higher courts could reverse the decision on federal constitutional grounds, finding that the exclusion of religious institutions in a publicly funded voucher program violates the First Amendment. Even if the Florida Supreme Court supports the circuit court's ruling, the decision could be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. According to Eugene Volokh, a
In 2003, several voucher and tax credit proposals were introduced. At the beginning of the year, Governor Bush proposed vouchers as a way to meet the mandate for smaller class sizes that was passed by referendum in November 2002. The cost of enabling students to transfer from overcrowded public schools to private schools would be lower than the cost of building additional public school capacity. In a statement to the Miami Herald, Governor Bush said, "It's a cost-effective way of dealing with this issue. Many [districts] won't take it, but so what? That option should be there for them to consider."[31]
The legislature reacted with the introduction of several bills. S.B. 1646 would have allowed public school districts to implement vouchers to lower class sizes. Under the program, interested parents would have received a Florida Learning Access Grant to send their child to a school of choice. On March 13, an Appropriations Subcommittee removed the grants from the bill. S.B. 2532 and H.B. 213 would have created the Reduce Class Size Scholarship Opportunity Program, which would have provided vouchers for low-income children. H.B. 45 would have provided scholarships to students to attend a private school if their public school district did not comply with the class size mandate. The bills died in committee.[32]
Other efforts were directed at expanding
In June 2003, H.B. 55-A was signed into law and removed the cap on the number of charter schools that can exist per district. The bill also stipulates that community colleges can charter schools that offer students the option of receiving an associates degree upon graduation.[35]
Superintendent of Catholic Schools for the Diocese of Pensacola-Tallahassee Sister Mary Caplice reported that the 34 students attending Catholic schools in the Diocese under
In March 2004, the Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation released a scorecard rating school choice programs around the nation, and the report rated
Several charter applications were approved in July 2004. Five applications were approved for
In August 2004, the state's 1st District Court of Appeals ruled against
S.B. 2882 was introduced in the 2004 session to place regulations on the McKay Scholarship program. The bill would have required more student testing and for each participating school to register with the state. The bill passed in the Senate but died in the House.[40]
Companion bills S.B. 1544 and H.B. 549 were introduced in the 2004 session to create a voucher program for students of veterans and active members of the military.[41] Eligible students would have been able to attend another public school within or outside their district or a private school, using a voucher worth up to $3,600.[42] S.B. 1544 died in the Senate Education Committee. H.B. 549 passed in House but died in the Senate.[43]
A study of Florida's school choice programs released in the summer of 2004 reported that between the 2001-2002 and 2002-2003 school years, "voucher-eligible schools" (schools where students could transfer out) improved more than other public schools. Using FCAT scores as their measure, Manhattan Institute researchers Jay P. Greene and Marcus A. Winters found that voucher-eligible schools improved by 15.1 scale score points more in mathematics than other public schools.[44]
S.B. 3000 was signed into law in the summer of 2004. This bill provides for an expanded appeals process for charter applicants whose application has been denied or not renewed, and the bill also states that building requirements for charter schools cannot be more stringent than requirements in the state building code.[45]
In November 2004,
On January 2, 2005 Governor Jeb Bush signed H.B.1A, creating a pre-kindergarten voucher program. The legislation meets the requirements of the constitutional amendment enacted by voters in 2002 that the state establish a pre-kindergarten program for four-year-olds. Families may use the voucher at public or private institutions for a three-hour-a-day program during the school year or a summer program. Under the Governor's proposed budget the voucher will be worth $2,500.[48]
In February of 2005, State Representative Anthony Traviesa (R-56) introduced H.B. 1021. This bill would create the Reading Compact Scholarship Program, which would provide vouchers to students who have low scores on the FCAT for two consecutive years.[49] The House Choice and Innovation Committee approved the bill on March 15. Some 350,000
State Representative Frank Attkisson (R-79) introduced H.B. 1323 in March 2005. This bill would create a new chartering authority for charter schools in the state called the "Florida Charter School Accountability Authority." The bill would also revise the provisions for charter applications and review.[52] The bill was tabled on April 26.
In the 2005 session, Representative Attkisson also introduced H.B. 439, which would create a voucher program for children of parents serving in or retired from the military. The vouchers would be worth the lesser of $3,600 or the cost of tuition at the school of choice. H.B. 439 is now with the full House for consideration after passing three committees (Choice and Innovation Committee, Education Appropriations Committee, and the Education Council).[53] The bill died in the House on May 6.
In January 2006, the Florida Supreme Court ruled the state's Opportunity Scholarship Program unconstitutional, saying the program "diverts public dollars into separate private systems parallel to and in competition with the free public schools." The court ruled the program violated the state constitution's "uniformity clause" and did not reach the issue of the state's Blaine Amendment.[54] Some 700 students are participating in the program.[55] Governor Bush said he would "explore all legal options and ask the Florida Legislature to enact any available legislative fixes or amend the Florida Constitution once again" to allow the program to continue.[56]
[1] See
[2] The
[3] FloridaChild, "Public School Choice," at www.floridachild.org/aapubscochoice.html.
[4] Center for Education Reform, "Charter School Legislation: Profile of Florida's Charter School Law," 2001, at http://edreform.com/charter_schools/laws/Florida.htm.
[5] Jessica L. Sandham, "
[6] See Florida Department of Education Web site at www.myflorida.com/myflorida/education/learn/aplusplan/youKnow.html.
[7] Institute for Justice, "Florida School Choice Case," at www.ij.org/cases/index.html; "Private School Choice Target in New Round of Court Challenges," Education Week, August 4, 1999.
[8] George A. Clowes, "Court Upholds
[9] Analisa Nazareno, "School Voucher Storm Settles into a Lull," The
[10] Chris Prawdzik, "Florida Teachers Concede Vouchers Spurred Improvement," Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, August 30, 2000.
[11] Kelly Ryan, "School Choice Debate Goes Into Morning," The
[12] See Children's Scholarship Fund Web site at www.scholarshipfund.org.
[13] Jacqueline Charles, "Schools Offered $2 Million to Accept Voucher Students," The
[14]
[15] See National School Boards Association Web site at www.nsba.org/novouchers.
[16] Scott S. Greenberger, "Voucher Backers Tout
[17] Diane Rado, "
[18] See National School Boards Association Web site at www.nsba.org/novouchers.
[19] Lisa Goldstein, "Election Results Boost Special Ed. Vouchers," Education Week, December 4, 2002.
[20] See National School Boards Association Web site at www.nsba.org/novouchers.
[21] Kimberly Miller, "Corporate Tax Breaks Are Voucher Boon,"
[22] See National School Boards Association Web site at www.nsba.org/novouchers.
[23] Ibid.
[24] Ibid.
[25] Alan Richard, "
[26] Press release, "Governor Bush Announces Latest FCAT Reading Scores Show Rising Student Achievement," MyFlorida.com, September 6, 2002.
[27] Jim Saunders, "Voucher Uproar Rages On," The
[28] Michael A. Fletcher, "
[29] Richard, "
[30] Christine Hall, "
[31] Joni James and Steve Harrison, "Vouchers Proposed to Reduce Class Sizes: Governor Says It's Cost Effective," The
[32] See
[33] Ibid.
[34] George A. Clowes and Laura J. Swartley, "Friedman Report: School Choice Roundup," School Reform News, July 1, 2003, at www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=12442#Florida.
[35] Education Commission of the States, "
[36] Jenny LaCoste, "Discipline, Success, Acceptance, and Inspiration," Pensacola News-Journal, December 21, 2003, at www.pensacolanewsjournal.com/news/122103/Local/ST002.shtml.
[37] Robert C. Enlow, "Grading Vouchers," School Choice Issues in Depth, The Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation, March 2004, at www.friedmanfoundation.org/resources/rankings.pdf.
[38] Center for Education Reform, Newswire, July 20, 2004.
[39] Wire Reports, "Vouchers Face Court Review," Orlando Sentinel, September 18, 2004, at www.orlandosentinel.com/news/local/state/orl-locstbriefs18091804sep18,1,6830835.story?coll=orl-news-headlines and Florida Legislature, S.B. 2882, at www.flsenate.gov/session/index.cfm?BI_Mode=ViewBillInfo&Mode=Bills&SubMenu=1&Year=2004&billnum=2882.
[40] Associated Press, "Senate Bill Aims to Curb Voucher Abuse," The
[41] Florida Legislature, S.B. 1544, at www.flsenate.gov/session/index.cfm?BI_Mode=ViewBillInfo
&Mode=Bills&SubMenu=1&Year=2004&billnum=1544.
[42] Robert Fanger, "Friedman Report: School Choice Roundup," School Reform News, The Heartland Institute, June 1, 2004, at www.heartland.org/Article.cfm?artId=15067#Florida.
[43]
[44] Jay P. Greene and Marcus A. Winters, "Competition Passes the Test," Education Next, Summer 2004, at www.educationnext.org/20043/pdf/66.pdf.
[45] Florida Legislature, S.B. 3000, at www.flsenate.gov/cgi-bin/view_page.pl?Tab=session&Submenu=1&FT=D&File=sb3000er.html&Directory=session/2004/Senate/bills/billtext/html/.
[46] Leslie Postal, "
[47] See Supreme Court of Florida, "Documents in Jeb Bush v. Ruth Holmes," available at www.floridasupremecourt.org/pub_info/voucher/index.shtml.
[48] See Florida House of Representatives at www.myfloridahouse.gov/ and Steve Harrison,
"Pre-K Schools: State Subsidies Too Low,"
[49] Florida Legislature, 2005 Session, H.B. 1021, available at www.myfloridahouse.gov/bills_detail.aspx?Id=16706&
iSessionSelectedIndex=0&sBillSubjectText=&sBillNumberText=1021&iSponsorSelectedIndex=0
&iBillListSelectedIndex=0&sStatueAmendedText=&iBillTypeSelectedIndex=0&iReferredToSelectedIndex=0
&iChamberSelectedIndex=0&iBillSearchListPageIndex=0.
[50] Linda Kleindienst, "Legislative Panel OKs Private School Vouchers," The Sun-Sentinel, March 16, 2005.
[51] Carrie Johnson, "House Okays New Vouchers," The
[52] Florida Legislature, 2005 Session, H.B. 1323, available at www.myfloridahouse.gov/bills_detail.aspx?Id=16996&iSessionSelectedIndex=0&sBillSubjectText=&sBillNumberText=&iSponsorSelectedIndex=8&iBillListSelectedIndex=0&sStatueAmendedText=&iBillTypeSelectedIndex=0&iReferredToSelectedIndex=0&iChamberSelectedIndex=0&iBillSearchListPageIndex=0.
[53]
[54] Sam Dillon, "
[55]
[56] Florida Department of Education Office of Independent Education and Parental Choice, "Opportunity Scholarship Program," at www.floridaschoolchoice.org/Information/OSP/parent.asp (January 6, 2006).
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