The District of Columbia is a leader in providing school choice options for parents.
In January 2004, Congress passed the District of Columbia School Choice Incentive Act of 2003, which created the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship program that offers private school scholarships to disadvantaged students. Under this program, students from families with an annual income that is below 185 percent of the poverty line are eligible to receive scholarships worth up to $7,500 to attend private schools in the District. In 2008, approximately 1,900 children are receiving scholarships through the program.
The Washington Scholarship Fund, the non-profit organization that administers the program, reports that participating families have an average annual income of about $23,000 per year. (This is well below the cap of 185 percent of the poverty line, or $38,200 for a family of four.) In all, more than 7,200 students have applied for scholarships since 2004--roughly four applicants for each available scholarship.
According to the Center for Education Reform,
Click here for detailed information on the District of Columbia's public school system and see below for school choice contacts and a history of school choice legislation in the District of Columbia.
State Contacts
|
American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
Fredrick M. Hess, Resident Scholar 1150 17th Street, NW Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 862-5800 Fax: (202) 862-7177 Website: www.aei.org E-mail: rhess@aei.org |
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)
Matt Warner, Director, Education Task Force 1129 20th Street, NW Suite 500 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 466-3800 Fax: (202) 466-3801 Website: www.alec.org E-mail: mwarner@alec.org |
|
Black Alliance for Educational Options
Virginia Walden-Ford 1710 Rhode Island Avenue, NW Floor 12 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 429-2236 Fax: (202) 429-2237 Website: www.baeo.org E-mail: gfwalden@aol.com |
Capital Partners in Education
Khari Brown, Executive Director 650 Pennsylvania Ave, SE Suite C-100B Washington, DC 20003 Phone: (202) 675-8433 Fax: (202) 675-8443 Website: cpfe.org E-mail: info@cpfe.org |
|
Cato Institute
Andrew J. Coulson, Director of the Center for Educational Freedom 1000 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20001 Phone: (202) 842-0200 Fax: (202) 842-3490 Website: www.cato.org E-mail: acoulson@cato.org |
Center for Education Reform
Jeanne Allen, President 1001 Connecticut Avenue, NW Suite 204 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 822-9000 Fax: (202) 822-5077 Website: www.edreform.com E-mail: cer@edreform.com |
|
D.C. Parents for School Choice, Inc.
Virginia Walden-Ford, Executive Director P.O. Box 29219 Washington, DC 20017 Phone: (202) 832-3895 Fax: (202) 832-3897 E-mail: WDCparentschoice@aol.com |
D.C. Public Schools
Clifford B. Janey, Ed.D., Superintendent 825 North Capitol Street, NE Washington, DC 20002 Phone: (202) 724-4222 Website: www.k12.dc.us/dcps/home.html E-mail: callcenter@k12.dc.us |
|
District of Columbia CAPE
David Shapiro, Head, Edmund Burke School 2955 Upton St, NW Washington, DC 20008-1107 Phone: 202-362-8882 E-mail: david_shapiro@eburke.org |
Family Research Council
Peter Sprigg, Vice President for Policy 801 G Street, NW Washington, DC 20001 Phone: (202) 624-3013 Fax: (202) 393-2134 Website: www.frc.org E-mail: https://www.frc.org/get.cfm?c=CONTACT_FRC&step=2&iss=ED |
|
Fight for Children
Michaela English, President and CEO 1825 K Street NW Washington, DC 20006 Phone: (202) 772-0400 Fax: (202) 772-0401 Website: www.fightforchildren.org E-mail: michaela.english@fightforchildren.org |
The Brookings Institution
Tom Loveless, Ph.D., Director, Brown Center on Education Policy 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 797-6000 Fax: (202) 797-6004 Website: www.brookings.edu E-mail: tloveless@brookings.edu |
|
The Heritage Foundation
Dan Lips, Education Analyst, Domestic Policy Studies 214 Massachusetts Avenue, NE Washington, DC 20002 Phone: (202) 546-4400 Fax: (202) 675-1754 Website: www.heritage.org E-mail: info@heritage.org |
Washington Scholarship Fund
Gregory M. Cork, President and CEO 1100 17th Street, NW Suite 330 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 222-0535 Fax: (202) 222-0543 Website: www.washingtonscholarshipfund.org E-mail: questions@washingtonscholarshipfund.org |
Archived History, Pre-2006
In 1993, Douglas D. Dewey and George A. Pieler founded the Washington Scholarship Fund to provide low-income students with partial scholarships to attend private schools. In 1994, 30 children received scholarships averaging $850. Currently, the WSF provides scholarships averaging $1,700 to students from 672 families.[1]
Also in 1993, Ambassador Henry D. Owen and Theodore A. Schwab founded Capital Partners for Education (CPE), which provides scholarships and mentoring for low-income high school students. CPE has grown from serving six students in its first year to supporting more than 85 young people. Ninety-eight percent of CPE graduates go on to college. Mentors are drawn from the local professional community.[2]
On November 2, 1995, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a voucher proposal for students in the
Representative Gunderson's voucher proposal died in the U.S. Senate following a filibuster led by Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA), but a charter school plan that Gunderson sponsored was passed. The strong law set up two chartering authorities, the D.C. Board of Education and a Public Charter School Board, which could approve as many as 20 charter schools each year. Any entity interested in opening a charter school could submit an application, and the school, if its application was approved, would receive an automatic waiver from most District education laws.[4]
Consideration of a D.C. school choice plan was revived when then-Senator Dan Coats (R-IN) and Senators Sam Brownback (R-KS), Joseph Lieberman (D-CT), Mary Landrieu (D-LA), and Judd Gregg (R-NH) introduced the D.C. Student Opportunity Scholarship Act of 1997 (then-Representative Richard Armey (R-TX) introduced similar legislation in the House). The legislation would have provided scholarships of up to $3,200 for the District's poorest students in kindergarten through 12th grade to attend a public, private, or religious school of choice in the metropolitan area. The Senate approved the bill by voice vote on November 9, 1997, and the House passed it by a vote of 214 to 206 on April 30, 1998. However, President Bill Clinton vetoed the measure in May 1998.[5]
Three days after the President's veto, The Washington Post published the results of a May 1998 poll of District residents that found significant support for using federal dollars to send children to private or religious schools: 65 percent of the District's African-Americans surveyed who had incomes under $50,000 favored the option. Overall, 56 percent of District residents supported school choice.[6]
A 1999 Heritage Foundation analysis of African-American students in Catholic and public schools in the District found that, when demographic and socioeconomic factors were held constant, the children in Catholic schools performed better in mathematics on the national assessments than did their public school counterparts. In fact, the performance gap increased considerably as higher grade levels were considered: While 4th grade students in Catholic schools scored 6.5 percent higher than their public school peers, 8th grade students in Catholic schools scored more than 8.2 percent higher than their public school counterparts. The average 8th grade black Catholic-school student outscored 72 percent of students in public schools.[7]
A 2000 study of 810 students who received the Washington Scholarship Fund scholarships found that, after one year, African-American students in grades 2 to 5 who transferred to private schools outperformed their public school counterparts by 7 percentage points on math tests and 3 points on reading tests. The study also found that, while nearly half of private school parents gave their children's schools an "A," only 15 percent of public school parents did.[8]
A 2000
In October 2001, the D.C. Board of Education considered opening charter schools for students with special needs to rein in special education costs. Throughout the preceding school year, the District had educated 1,830 special-needs children in private schools at an average public expense of $36,000 per pupil per year.[10]
Within days of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision supporting the use of vouchers in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. Senator Judd Gregg (R-NH) and then-U.S. Representative Richard Armey (R-TX) introduced the D.C. Student Opportunity Scholarship Act of 2002 (H.R. 5033/S. 2866) to provide vouchers worth up to $5,000 for students to enroll in a public, private, or parochial school. "The Supreme Court has spoken on educational choice," Representative Armey declared when he introduced his bill. "Now it's time for Congress to do its part on behalf of low-income parents that simply want a better education for their children. Needy children in the District and across the country have waited long enough."[11] The bills were referred to committee but progressed no further. Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) supported the initiative, saying that "I remain convinced that private school choice, while clearly not the solution to what ails our public schools, is a reform idea worth testing, particularly while we are waiting for the No Child Left Behind Act to take hold, and could be a temporary lifeline for poor students who would otherwise be trapped in chronically failing schools."[12]
According to a study released in October 2002 by New American Schools, students at the KIPP DC:
In early 2003, President George W. Bush proposed that funds be included in the FY 2004 budget for a pilot voucher program in the District. Several prominent D.C. leaders voiced their support, including D.C. Mayor Anthony A. Williams (D) and D.C. School Board President Peggy Cooper Cafritz. In an interview with The Washington Post, the mayor explained, "We've got a model we've been using for 140 years. I think it's time to try something else." Kevin P. Chavous (D), D.C. Council member and chairman of the Committee on Education, Libraries, and Recreation, backs vouchers as part of a proposal to increase support for charter and traditional schools. According to Chavous, "No school bureaucracy will reform itself internally. It only comes through pressure. And the most effective form of pressure is choice."[14]
Congress passed legislation creating the District's first publicly funded scholarship program on January 22, 2004. Similar to a program proposed in 2003 by Representative Jeff Flake (R-AZ) and Senator Gregg (H.B. 684 and S. 4, respectively), the $13 million program provides low-income students with vouchers to attend a private school of choice. Students from families whose annual income is at or below 185 percent of the federal poverty line are eligible. The vouchers is worth up to $7,500, more than half of the approximately $12,000 spent per pupil in public schools. Researchers from
D.C. officials reported in July that over 260 students were attending District charter schools while residing in neighboring
Despite the number of charter schools in the District and the new voucher program, students had few schools to transfer to for the 2004-2005 school year. Over half of District students (about 33,000) are eligible for transfers under the No Child Left Behind Act, but there are fewer than 1,000 available seats, all in elementary schools.[18]
As Congress considered FY06 appropriations, several leaders, including Senator Sam Brownback (R-KS), also considered expanding the District's voucher program. In June, senators reviewed proposals to increase the voucher amount and allow students to use the vouchers at private schools outside of the District.[19]
In May, D.C. Superintendent Cliffored B. Janey announced that 10 District schools would be closed in the fall. The closings come as District enrollment has decreased significantly in the past half-decade. The D.C. School Board will vote on the closings at the end of June.[20]
[1] "WSF History," Washington Scholarship Fund, at www.washingtonscholarshipfund.org/history.asp.
[2] See Capital Partners for Education Web site at www.cpfe.org/index.htm.
[3] Mark Pitsch and Peter Schmidt, "D.C. Bill Stirs Debate Over Federal Policy," Education Week, November 15, 1995.
[4] Center for Education Reform, "Charter School Legislation: Profile of the
[5] S. 1502, the District of Columbia Student Opportunity Scholarship Act of 1997, sponsored by Senator Daniel Coats, was vetoed on May 20, 1998.
[6] Sari Horwitz, "Poll Finds Backing for
[7] Kirk A. Johnson, "Comparing Math Scores of Black Students in D.C.'s Public and
[8] Paul Peterson, William Howell, and Patrick Wolfe, "School Choice in Washington, D.C.: An Evaluation After One Year," February 2000; prepared for Conference on Vouchers, Charters, and Public Education, sponsored by the Program on Education Policy and Governance, Harvard University, March 2000.
[9] Paul Peterson, "Test-Score Effects of School Vouchers in
[10] Vaishali Honawar, "D.C. Seeks Charters for Special Education," The
[11] Editorial, "Vouchers for D.C.," The
[12] Center for Education Reform Newswire, July 3, 2002, at www.edreform.com.
[13] Jay Matthews, "Test Scores Are Up at KIPP Schools," The
[14] Craig Timberg, "Williams Sheds Light On Vouchers Stance," The
[15] Press Release, "Scholars Help Evaluate DC School Choice Program" at http://lumen.georgetown.edu/explore/documents/?DocumentID=1033(September 20, 2004).
[16] Washington Scholarship Fund Press Release at www.dcscholarship.org/090104.php(September 20, 2004).
[17] Sean Salai, "Hundreds Study Illegally in District," The
[18] Karla Scoon Reid, "D.C. Students Find Few Options for Transfers," Education Week, September 1, 2004.
[19] Spencer S. Hsu and V. Dion Hayes, "Voucher Plan Expansion Considered," The
[20] V. Dion Haynes, "Anxieties, Criticisms Precede Janey Decision," The Washington Post, May 14, 2006, p. C07, at www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/13/AR2006051301063.html (May 15, 2006).










