DeVos pushes school choice, gives no specifics

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is proposing “the most  ambitious expansion” of school choice in American history, Education  Secretary Betsy DeVos announced Monday while giving few details on how  the program would work.

“We must offer the widest number of quality options to every family  and every child,” DeVos said in a speech in Indianapolis. “We stand on  the verge of the most significant opportunity we have ever had to drag  American education out of the Stone Age and into the future.”

DeVos gave few specifics other than to say that the state of Indiana  could serve as a model. Indiana has one of America’s largest and  fastest-growing school voucher programs to give low-income families  scholarships to help pay private school tuition.

DeVos insisted that decisions on school choice must be left for  states, not the federal government, to make. But she also warned states  against boycotting reform.

“If a state doesn’t want to participate, that would be a terrible  mistake on their part. They will be hurting the children and families  who can least afford it,” DeVos said at an event hosted by the American  Federation for Children, the school choice advocacy group she used to  lead. “If politicians in a state block education choice, it means those  politicians do not support equal opportunity for all kids.”

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump asked Congress to work  with him on expanding charter and private school voucher programs  nationwide, but he gave no specifics. School choice advocates are  divided over whether to push charter schools and vouchers on the federal  or state level.

Voucher and charter school programs are facing fierce criticism from  teachers unions and many Democrats, who believe they drain resources  from already underfunded public schools while failing to produce clear  academic gains.

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