The Daily Signal - Florida Again Earns Top Spot on Heritage Foundation's Education Freedom Report Card
Episode Date: November 13, 2023Florida has once again been ranked No. 1 among the states on The Heritage Foundation's Education Freedom Report Card, which was released at an event Thursday in Des Moines, Iowa. "They have univers...al education choice in that state. Any child who wants it can exercise school choice," says Lindsey Burke, director of The Heritage Foundation's Center for Education Policy. (The Daily Signal is the news outlet of The Heritage Foundation.) "You'll notice I say 'education choice' more often than 'school choice,' because we're at a point now in the movement where states are adopting education savings accounts largely, although it's great if a state adopts a voucher or a tax credit, but these education savings accounts, ESAs, are much more flexible," Burke says, adding: So, Florida took [its] education savings account program universal so every child now can exercise education choice. [It has] radical academic transparency to families. Families know what is taught in their public schools.There's some movement on teacher freedom to make it easier for professionals to enter the classroom without having to go through woke colleges of education in order to get there.Burke also notes that Arizona was once again in the No. 2 spot, and Utah clinched the No. 3 spot. "Arizona is actually first in the country for education choice, but overall came in second on the report card. And then rounding out our top three was Utah," Burke says. "Utah, also, this year adopted a universal ESA style account, where pretty soon every single child will be able to exercise education choice." Iowa, which hosted the event at which the report card was released, was ranked "most improved." Burke joins today's episode of "The Daily Signal Podcast" to further discuss the Education Freedom Report Card, which three states ranked the lowest, and her advice to parents who might see the report card and want to make a change in their state. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We're at a point now where nine states now have universal education choice on the books.
This is unbelievable. That number was zero two years ago. And all of a sudden now we have
nine states with universal school choice. It is unbelievable.
This is the Daily Signal podcast for Monday, November 13th. I'm Samantha Sherris,
and that was Lindsay Burke, director of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Education Policy.
On Thursday, the Heritage Foundation held an event in Des Moines, Iowa, to release its Education Freedom Report Card for 2023.
On today's show, Lindsay breaks down what the Education Freedom Report Card is, the top three and bottom three states for this year's report card, and which state improved the most.
We'll get to our conversation with Lindsay Burke right after this.
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Lindsay Burke is joining today's episode of The Daily Signal podcast.
Lindsay is the director of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Education Policy.
Lindsay, thanks so much for joining us today.
Thanks for having me, Samantha.
Now on Thursday, the Heritage Foundation held an event in Des Moines, Iowa on its second Education Freedom Report Card.
Before we talk more about the report card, though, and this year's results, can you tell us what exactly the report card is?
Yeah.
So this report card is unique for a few reasons.
I think the name in and of itself gives you an idea of why it's unique.
This is the Education Freedom Report Card.
It is not just your old standard ranking of how much states spend and where students stand.
Usually when you see these report cards, that's what they measure.
How many dollars are states spending?
How much are they relying on taxpayers?
And then where do students stand academically?
Well, ours goes much deeper than that.
And in fact, is unique because we actually look at ROI, return on investment.
How much does the state spend?
But how much does every dollar get you in terms of your academic?
improvement. So it's not inputs-based. It's actually outcomes-based, which is unique in that regard.
But what is, I think, the most important aspect of this report card is we look at genuine education
freedom. How much of an opportunity does a family have to exercise school choice, education
choice, to craft an education experience that fits the unique needs and aspirations of their
individual child. That is one of the most important factors that we measure in this report card.
But it is comprehensive in nature and that we look at education choice. But we also look, like I said,
at return on investment. We look at teacher freedom. How easy is it for a professional who decides
they want to teach to actually enter the classroom or does a state put up barriers to entry? Like
these what we know empirically to be useless teacher certification requirements,
And then we look at transparency, which has become such an important factor.
In recent years, in particular, parents really acknowledging, waking up to the fact that the content
that has been taught in public schools across the country for too many years now does not reflect
their family's values, their community's values, and unfortunately, too often it's been
wholly captured by the left.
So we look at transparency.
How much transparency does a parent have into the content that's taught in their local
schools, how much leverage do they have over something like their school board? Is their school board
election on cycle, which is a really important measure of how much input and control a community has
in shaping their local public schools? So again, it's comprehensive. It goes much further, I think,
than any other education ranking, certainly, that's out there. But really importantly, I think,
looks at your return on investment as a taxpayer, your return on investment as a parent and your ability
to actually exercise choice for your child, which is the number one accountability measure that a family has.
Absolutely. And for our listeners, we'll be sure to leave a link to this year's report card in the show notes
so they can take a look at where their state stands. Before we get into this year's results, though,
I wanted to just take a step back and ask, you know, why was it important for the Heritage Foundation
to create this Education Freedom Report card? Yeah. Well, education is one of the,
most important public policy issues that is, I think, really has really risen to the top of
public consciousness today. You look around the country, there are so many issues afflicting
all American families. So many of those issues, though, are tied back to education. If you
are worried about a public school that your child is assigned to, for instance, calling your child
by a name other than the name that you as a parent gave them when they were born, education
is a policy issue that is important to you. If you are worried about critical theory or critical
race theory or any sort of radical critical theory offshoots that are out there, be it gender ideology
or radical feminism, fill in the blank, critical theory writ large. If you are worried about
these issues, education policy should be a front and center issue of concern for you, an area of
involvement for you. If you're just worried about sort of your, for lack of a better word,
standard academic performance of your child's public school, you're going to be concerned about
ed policy. If you're worried about student safety, we've interviewed families for years and years,
and I'm sitting here in Washington, D.C., where this is a paramount concern. But so many families,
that is their number one issue. First and foremost, when I send my child to school for seven or
eight hours a day, are they going to be safe? If schools can't answer that basic question
to the satisfaction of a family, nothing else matters. And so if safety is an issue for you,
you're going to care deeply about education policy. I think at the end of the day, though,
where we are right now is education policy is a vehicle for values alignment, which is where
school choice comes in in a way that it really hasn't before. It's almost cliche at this point to
say it, but COVID school shutdowns, and they weren't COVID school shutdowns, right? They were
teachers' union-induced school shutdowns where COVID was sort of the ruse long after we knew
it was safe to reopen schools, but these teachers' union-induced school shutdowns had at least
the positive effect of opening the eyes of a lot of families to this content that was taught
in their children's schools when they all became accidental homeschoolers looking at the curriculum
and the lessons that were being taught virtually to their children. That became such an issue
for families where they were able to see firsthand that there was a misalignment too often in the
values that their families held dear and what was being taught to their children for those
eight hours during the day. And so what I think has happened over the past two years or so is that
we had a wonderful and have a wonderful school choice movement where the focus had largely been
improving academic outcomes for kids who were participating in programs and
students who chose to stay in the public system. We also had a really strong focus on the economic
imperative of choice, where if you want to see a better ROI, school choice is an answer for you.
But in a lot of ways, that values-based case for school choice was absent from the conversation
until a few years ago. And COVID really shifted that narrative. All of a sudden it became
for families who were seeing too often radical content on schools, hey, there's a solution.
it's called school choice. School choice is an answer for you as well. And so all of that to say,
the report card is unique and that it captures all of these factors that are really motivating
families right now. And motivating, I would say, not just families, but all Americans, right? All
American taxpayers, American grandparents, in addition to parents, anybody who, you know, is living in
this country right now is touched by education policy. And I think the past few years have demonstrated that
in a really profound way. Absolutely. And now just to shift into this year's results for the report card,
which states were in the top three and why? Yes. Well, our top three drum roll, do you have some sort of,
you know, electric drum roll we can play? But our number one state, which was also our number one state
last year was the state of Florida. Florida came in number one. They have universal education choice
in that state, any child who wants it can exercise school choice. You'll notice I say education
choice more often than school choice because we're at a point now in the movement where states
are adopting education savings accounts largely, although it's great if a state adopts a voucher
or a tax credit, but these education savings accounts, ESAs are much more flexible. So Florida took
their education savings account program universal, so every child now can exercise education choice. They
have radical academic transparency to families. Families know what is taught in their public schools.
There's some movement on teacher freedom to make it easier for professionals to enter the
classroom without having to go through woke colleges of education in order to get there.
So Florida retained their number one ranking this year. Arizona came in second place.
Arizona retained its number two ranking. Arizona is actually first in the country for
education choice, but overall came in second on the report card.
And then rounding out our top three was Utah. Utah also. This year adopted a universal
ESA-style account where pretty soon every single child will be able to exercise education
choice. And this is what has been, I mean, it's an exciting time for ed policy. I tell
people all day long, I don't know why people aren't on the rooftop shouting about how amazing
it is, that we're at a point now where nine states now have universal education choice on the books.
is unbelievable. That number was zero two years ago. And all of a sudden now we have nine states
with universal school choice. It is unbelievable. It is such a welcome development for families. And I
think pretty soon we're going to be at a tipping point. We're all eagerly awaiting Texas to see
if anything comes out of Texas with regard to school choice this session. But pretty soon,
we're inching toward 40 percent of kids across the country now having access or at least being eligible
for a private school choice program.
So exciting to see.
But those are our top three, Florida, Arizona, Utah.
And then what about the bottom three?
Who are those states?
Right.
And this is interesting.
And I think demonstrates what makes our report card different from a lot of report cards
you would see from, say, education associations or more establishment,
education organizations, because some of these states will often end up being at the top.
And on our report cards, they're on the bottom.
and that is Rhode Island, Connecticut, and at the very bottom, number 51, because we count D.C., but Oregon.
Oregon's at the very bottom.
And that is largely due to extremely poor, completely absent for that matter, education choice.
Families are assigned to their local government-run district school, whether they like it or not, whether or not it's safe, whether or not it works well for their child, whether or not it aligns with their values.
That's your public school.
That's where you attend.
so no education choice. Transparency, they rank really poorly on transparency as well. It is
nearly impossible for parents to see what is being taught in schools in Oregon. And in fact, now,
you know, breaking over the past week or so, we're seeing Oregon make this push for so-called
equitable math, which is what it sounds like, not traditional math instruction that we all came to
know, but really just left-leaning, you know, woke sort of nonsense dressed up as math instruction.
Oregon also did really poorly on teacher freedom.
You have to jump through a lot of hoops in order to become a teacher.
Hoops that don't matter in the long run.
I should add for our listeners that we know empirically there is no association between
someone having a state teacher certification, state teacher certification,
licensure and their ability to be an effective teacher as measured by how much they're able to get
students to learn. We know there's no correlation between teacher certification and student academic
achievement. And then finally, on return on investment, Oregon did terribly on that measure as well.
39th overall. They're spending a lot of money per pupil in Oregon and student outcomes are
middling to say the least. So, you know, much of the same story.
story for our numbers 49 and 50 for Rhode Island and Connecticut, little to no education choice,
lack of transparency, lack of teacher freedom, and poor return on investment.
Now, in terms of the state that improved the most, Iowa, what improvements did they make
to earn them that, you know, ranking of most improved?
Yeah, so Iowa really had just wonderful improvement over our initial, last year was our inaugural,
the 2022 report card. So this is our second year, as you mentioned. So from 2022 to 2023,
Iowa jumped 13 spots in the ranking, which was just a massive improvement. And that is
largely a reflection of the fact that Governor Reynolds leadership, Senate President Amy Sinclair's
leadership, they were able to get a universal ESA-style program in place. So in the course of the
next three years, every single child in Iowa, if they want it, will be able to access an ESA-style
account. So instead of being assigned to their public school, can instead exercise choice and
attend any private school that fits their needs or create a customized education experience
for themselves. They can hire private tutors, do online learning, whatever it is that fits their
unique learning needs. So that was really the number one reason. And Iowa was actually first out of the
gate this year in 2023 at getting a universal school choice program in place.
I mentioned earlier that we now have nine states with universal education choice.
Two of those happened in 2022.
Seven happened this year.
I mean, this is why I'm saying, 2023 has been a phenomenal year for education freedom.
Seven states just this year got universal school choice in place.
So Iowa led out of the gate this year.
They were the first state to get it done this year.
and then we had six other states follow.
And I would add importantly that they didn't stop with education choice.
They also put in strong transparency protections for families.
They put in provisions that prevent teaching on sexual orientation and gender identity until it is age appropriate, similar to what we saw in Florida in recent years.
School libraries have to put their card catalogs online so parents can see what school libraries are carrying there.
And then there is also a provision as part of their parental bill of rights that looks similar to something known as a given name act.
So with the given name act, which we've seen several states adopt, a school is prohibited from changing a child's name or pronoun absent written parental consent.
So they didn't get quite that far, but they made a really good step in the right direction, which is to say, if a child is trying to change their name at school during the school day, the school has to notify parents.
So they put that provision in there as well.
So they did a whole just sort of basket of reforms, but chief among them was that universal
education choice policy that's now in place.
And in addition to Iowa, Arkansas also made some major gains moving up to number four from number 13.
So what happened there?
Yeah.
Again, fantastic leadership, Governor Sanders there.
We saw a similar move with a universal ESA account put into business.
place in Arkansas. And I should say, I mean, we don't have to delve into the boring methodology. I mean,
I think it's exciting, but all the methodology behind the report card rankings. But you do, so states are
obviously awarded on the extent of their school choice landscape. And we do that in a number of ways.
We look at the proportion of students who are eligible, the proportion of kids actually utilizing
the accounts. But we also look at things like, is it an ESA versus a voucher? Again, we love a good school
voucher. However, ESAs at this point do everything a voucher does and then provide additional
flexibility for a family. Like I mentioned, you can also hire a private tutor by textbooks,
curricula, online learning, in addition to paying that private school tuition. And so we do award
bonus points for ESAs over, I guess we could now call it traditional school choice mechanisms.
We also look at how regulated or over-regulated a particular school choice program.
is an estate. One thing the research community has long been interested in, to put it nicely,
is an unfortunate occurrence in Louisiana where in the state of Louisiana, we have the only
negative evaluations of school choice, a school choice program in the history of school choice
programs. And so this was a randomized control trial evaluation that found that students
who exercised choice in the Louisiana Voucher Program did worse than so.
students who did not. And it was, you know, RCT equivalent to a double-line medical trial. So
rigorous evaluation. But what the research suggests is that the reason that that happened was because,
in the name, ironically, of accountability, they over-regulated their voucher program so much that
high-quality private schools said it wasn't worth it to them to participate. They set it out.
We think lower-quality private schools ended up participating more than the high-quality private
schools. And therefore, we think, that explains why we got negative outcomes in Louisiana, again,
unique to every state with a school choice program. Long way of saying, that is why it's important
that as part of our school choice measure, we look at if a school choice program is over-regulated.
We're seeing so much education choice in the states now. It is wonderful. But we can now be,
I think, is a movement a little pickier about how we evaluate these programs.
are they free from overburdensome regulations?
How well is implementation going with these programs?
That's something that I think observers are really going to have to pay attention to moving forward.
Are these programs being implemented with fidelity in a way that they're going to serve the most families the best they can for the long term?
And then making sure that we actually talk to families in the states that these programs are out there,
that they now have the choice to go to a private school if they want.
And so making sure that we educate families on their options and get those enrollment numbers up.
So yes, again, long explanation to your question about Arkansas.
But Arkansas has done phenomenal as well.
We saw them shoot up to fourth place this year, which was great.
Lindsay, just before we go, I wanted to ask if you had any advice, you know, to parents who might see this report card
and want to make a change in their state.
what would you tell them?
Well, that is our hope is that families and legislators see this report card,
and maybe they get a little angry about where their state ranks if they're toward the bottom
and why their state doesn't offer education freedom,
or why, for example, the proportion of their unfunded teacher pension liabilities
is a huge percentage of their state GDP.
Maybe that will make them mad, right?
We want this to animate families and policymen.
in such a way that, you know, they do go to their school boards or they talk to their
policymakers in their state and try to see improvements. And so in order for them to do that,
we've actually developed model policy that's on the report card website. So if you're in a state,
for instance, that does not have a school choice program or doesn't have a universal program or an
ESA option, we have model legislation linked on the website for a universal ESA. We have model
bills for almost everything that we measure on this report card. And so that's kind of the idea, right?
People want to see their rankings improve policymakers, governors, want to see their states move up in
the ranking. And it is plug and play. You know, here's some model policies that can help you
hopefully achieve that goal. Well, great, Lindsay, thank you so much for joining us today. It was great
to have you on, as I mentioned, leave a link to the report card and the show notes. And yeah,
thank you so much. Thanks for having me.
And that's going to do it for today's episode. Thank you so much for listening to my interview with Lindsay Burke, director of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Education Policy. Be sure to check out the link in today's show notes for this year's Education Freedom Report Card.
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