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Scale matters: It’s time to pass ESAs to expand Idaho choice

I have been a teacher since 1989. Over the last 33 years, I have taught every grade level from kindergarten to college in traditional, private, charter and home schools. The best and worst schools I ever worked for were charter schools, and this broad and diverse option is an important part of school choice. I am delighted that Idaho has it.

But it would be a crucial mistake to claim that charter schools are proof that “Idaho has enough choice,” as some have begun to do. No single option can meet every family’s needs, whether district or charter schools. It is time for Idaho to take the next step in improving education for its children by passing Education Savings Accounts legislation.

In my experiences, the best and most customizable form of education was homeschooling, but this option is not viable for many families, for a variety of reasons. As a result of the education innovation demanded by the catastrophe of pandemic school closures, parents have new education options for their children that may prove to be even more customizable than homeschooling: Micro-schools and learning pods.

Because I am a teacher, I hope readers will indulge my bringing some extra history into this discussion. In the late spring of 1940, Allied troops were cut off and surrounded by German forces after the six-week Battle of France. It was a colossal disaster, and Winston Churchill ordered all ships and boats to evacuate the soldiers from Dunkirk. In nine days, over 900 fishing and pleasure boats, yachts and lifeboats aided in rescuing 340,000 British and French soldiers. The small and nimble craft could get much closer to the shore where shallow waters prevented access for larger vessels. It was a catastrophe averted. Today, countless children are facing educational catastrophes, and the “small vessels” of customized education can save them, too.

In education, size matters. Smaller classes and institutions mean flexibility when it is urgently needed. Whether it is spending more time for math because some foundational content is missing, or more time for reading because the students are so engaged that they can’t bear to put the book down, the teacher of a micro class has far more flexibility than he or she ever had in a traditional classroom.

Smaller also equals customization. No longer bound to the district’s selection of curriculum, the parents can work with their pod coordinator to choose from the remarkable array of curriculum they never dreamed was available.

Smaller institutions are often more efficient, too. Homeschoolers routinely complete their daily assignments in four hours or less. Micro schools and pods can easily duplicate that efficiency, resulting in more time for volunteer work, job shadowing, apprenticeships, sports, music, or creative pursuits.

Smaller schools also allow students to avoid the serious bullying and behavior issues that are becoming common in too many traditional schools.

Simply put, smaller is frequently better, which is why attempts are made to reduce class sizes. To return to our Dunkirk metaphor, reducing class sizes from thirty to twenty students is akin to switching from an aircraft carrier to a destroyer when a fishing boat is the best option. Micro schools and pods, which could be funded by Education Savings Accounts, provide parents who lack the time and resources the opportunity to recreate the conditions that I saw make homeschooling such a success during my experience.

Winston Churchill once said, “You can always count on Americans to do the right thing — after they’ve tried everything else.” Rather than argue that Idaho already has sufficient choice, while promoting conventional policies, our leaders should realize how much more opportunity can come to our state and acknowledge that ESAs have a role to play, too. It’s high time Idaho students get the full range of options they need.

Laura Fischer is a veteran educator, founder of Math with Mrs. Fish and the chapter leader of Independent Women’s Network Boise, Idaho Chapter.

Share Your Story About Being Hit With a Shocking Medical Bill

You have the right to know what your health care will cost, and providers have the responsibility to tell you.

Health care is one of the largest sectors of our economy. Yet, it’s the least transparent. In no other industry but health care are Americans compelled to pay for a service without seeing the price upfront. 

Federal law requires hospitals and insurers to display prices upfront so patients can shop for healthcare services, tests, or procedures, just as you shop for anything else on the market.

But that isn’t happening. Americans are still getting hit with surprise medical bills, when it’s too late to negotiate. Nearly 60% of people report receiving a medical bill they weren’t expecting. 

We would never buy anything without knowing how much it is going to cost upfront. Prices in health care should work the same way. 

Help us ensure that happens by sharing your story. Has the American healthcare system ripped you—or someone you know—off? We want to hear what happened.

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NOTE: You do not need to submit private, medical information to share your story. Simply send us a short summary of what happened.

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Did you know that over 90% of healthcare spending is on non-emergency health care: meaning, with the right information, patients can plan and shop around for their services and treatments in advance.

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‘Equity’ at work in Fairfax County, VA

In light of the recent awards scandal afflicting northern Virginia’s high schools, we have to wonder if Fairfax County’s school board and Superintendent Michelle Reid are concerned at all with fulfilling their basic responsibilities to educate our children. Plummeting test scores and so-called equitable grading have forced parents to wake up to the fact that equity fervor eclipsed merit long ago. Even in once revered schools such as the Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology (TJ), achievement has given way to leftist ideology.

At a town hall meeting hosted by a Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) “Equity Officer” and the Irving Middle School Principal Cynthia Conley earlier this month, I posed the question: Is FCPS going to admit children to TJ based on merit alone next year, or will their ethnic backgrounds and skin colors be considered as factors in their applications as well?

FCPS Region 4 Equity Officer Michell Cottrell Williams, one of many of the county’s administrators on the equity indoctrination gravy train, was visibly taken aback by my direct question, but didn’t refute its premise. She awkwardly answered, “I, uh, I don’t [uncomfortable laughter], uh, know what any future plans are for changing any of the current TJ admission policies. I know TJ, uh, um, uh, is a big issue right now … uh, that, that many people in the county are aware of.”

Unlike the region’s equity officer, I’m actually aware of how the policy works and how it negatively affects high-achieving students, especially Asian applicants. My family is in the middle of the TJ application process. I was naively optimistic that the pushback Virginia’s education officials have received because of their corrupt withholding of Commended Student awards might force TJ admissions back toward merit, at least a little. But it has not.

In Fall 2022, FCPS notified eighth-grade students of the continued low-bar academic prerequisites for the nation’s top-rated high school. Students need at least a 3.5 GPA, must have completed Algebra 1, and be enrolled in honors English and Science courses. Many applicants have much higher GPAs and will already have completed honors Geometry by the time they enter high school, but that is not relevant to their TJ application under the equity system.

Instead, after students meet the basic requirements, they are assigned a date and location to take their equity essay test. Last year, only one of the five questions was STEM-focused. The others were about overcoming adversity, advocating oneself, achieving goals, and methods for solving problems. Arguably, the best route into TJ under this subjective assessment system after making the cutoff is to seem politically liberal and emphasize victimhood.

Lowering the bar for admittance to our nation’s top-rated school seems bad enough, but the motive is even worse. Multiple conversations in school board meetings and work sessions demonstrate that the FCPS board initially changed the admissions process to engineer the racial composition and decrease the number of Asian-American students at TJ. Their plan worked. In its first year of implementation, Asian student admittance fell by almost 20% from 2020 to 2021. In February 2022, Federal Judge Claude Hilton ruled that TJ admissions policies racially discriminated against Asians.

In September 2022, FCPS appealed Hilton’s decision at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, with counsel from Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP the same law firm that fought to maintain school segregation in Brown v. Board of Education. Hunton seems to have a history of fighting on the wrong side of important matters.

While the Fourth Circuit decides the case, it placed a stay on Judge Hilton’s order, meaning that FCPS is free to use its “ patently unconstitutional ” TJ admissions policy until the verdict is in.

At the FCPS Budget Hearing on Jan. 23, 2023, I asked school board members, “Have you already determined your racial quotas for the incoming class?” No answer, of course.

As a mother to an applicant of Asian descent, I am livid that my son might be rejected from TJ for racist reasons. If not for being the wrong race, they might even reject him for being the son of a woman with the “wrong” political inclinations. He deserves a fair shot, just like every other student and family, regardless of race, background, or income status. That is true equality.

Stephanie Lundquist-Arora is a mother in Fairfax County, an author, and a member of Independent Women’s Network.

National School Choice Week Celebration In Arlington, VA

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A Nation at War: Equity vs. Merit in Public Education

Parents are waking up to find that we’re in the middle of a war of equity versus merit within our nation’s borders. Left-wing radicals have usurped public education, especially school boards, with the goal of indoctrinating our children.

Real skills like tying shoes, writing cursive, typing, and balancing checkbooks have been replaced with exploratory lessons on the importance of demographic identity and intrusive surveys. Teachers follow inappropriate lesson plans and tell white children that they are the oppressors and their black classmates, that they are the oppressed.

Meanwhile, standardized test scores plummet and flags with political messages line classrooms, even in elementary schools.

The objectives of public education have regressed over time from academic achievement to “equal outcomes,” bringing down all boats.

The awards scandal in Fairfax County, Virginia, is just another symptom of the equity cancer plaguing our country. In order to avoid hurting the feelings of the students who didn’t earn prestigious Commended Student Awards in the National Merit Scholarship Program, eight high schools in Fairfax County failed to notify students of their achievement.

This gross negligence will likely cost the recipients scholarships and admissions to colleges, prompting an investigation from Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares.

Sadly, this recent scandal is merely the tip of the iceberg for equity activism.

Across the nation, school districts have eliminated advanced math and implemented “equity grading” systems in order to ensure equal outcomes, to the great detriment of quality education.

Illinois parents were disappointed to learn that administrators at Oak Park and River Forest High School implemented an equity grading system for the 2022-2023 academic school year. In order to increase GPAs, students under this system start their assignments with half-credit and effectively have no due dates.

Ideological proponents of the “equal outcomes” approach to education erect smokescreens. They gaslight critics and claim there’s nothing to see behind the brick and mortar. They deny the integration of critical race theory in the curriculum. They tell us books like Gender Queer are appropriate reads for middle-schoolers.

For them, withholding prestigious awards is accidental or otherwise just fine. That’s because they don’t want conscientious objectors to pursue merit and academic excellence in public education – to fight against them for the future of our nation.

In an interview on January 21, 2023, Virginia Lt. Governor Winsome Sears summarizes it best when she says,

They’re playing chess. And apparently, we’ve been playing checkers, but no more.

Stephanie Lundquist-Arora is a mother in Fairfax County, Virginia, an author, and a member of the Independent Women’s Network.

Submit Your Price Transparency Story

The New Hampshire state legislature is considering legislation that would require greater healthcare price transparency so patients can make informed decisions about health care — but legislators need to hear from you!

Tell us about your experience being hit with a surprise medical bill or learning too late that you are paying too much for a procedure.  We will make sure that your story is heard by New Hampshire legislators so they make informed decisions about the future. 

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