Doug Ducey on Budget Cuts, School Choice, and Arizona's Weird Politics
"Governors don't get to print money," the former Arizona governor tells Reason.
"Governors don't get to print money," the former Arizona governor tells Reason.
Gov. Katie Hobbs hates that families are guiding their own children’s schooling.
Who benefits from supporting students instead of schools? Everybody.
The Colorado governor finds common ground with many libertarians. But does he really stand for more freedom?
Corey DeAngelis of the American Federation for Children debates libertarian author Stephan Kinsella.
Corey DeAngelis of the American Federation for Children debates libertarian author Stephan Kinsella.
Josh Shapiro campaigned on a promise to increase funding for schools and expand school choice. Only one of those two things made it into the state budget.
The Florida governor has a history of using state power to bully Florida schools over speech he doesn't like. H.B. 1 may accomplish his goal while ceding power to parents.
The governor wants to roll it back, but she doesn't have the votes.
"There's a new special interest group in town: parents."
The school-choice scholar and activist explains why "backpack funding" is here to stay, why Texas is terrible on school choice, why CRT bans are a bad idea, and why even non-parents should care about radical reform.
Educational freedom is good for everybody but unions, bureaucrats, and the education establishment.
Despite such attacks, school choice programs find broad support from American parents.
It's not supporting “parents’ rights” to censor topics at private schools that families decide to send their children to.
From school shutdowns to insane teachers union demands to frustrated parents, the pandemic has made radical education reform a reality.
Inflation-adjusted revenue per student in public schools is up 68 percent in the Empire State—and 24 percent nationally—over the past two decades. Time for School Choice.
The bill could provide much-needed assistance to students who would otherwise fall through the cracks.
What the author gets right—and wrong—about educational freedom
School closures are the best thing to happen to educational choice.
Virginia Walden Ford talks about her role in integrating schools in the 1960s and leading a movement to escape failing public schools four decades later.
Former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels' totally insane, very practical ideas about how to fix college debt, reform entitlements, and redefine social justice
School choice is about extending the privileges of the upper middle class to everyone else.
Seattle's vouchers, passed to give outsiders a leg up, instead act as campaign welfare for well-established candidates.
The alleged fraud highlights the ways in which the controversial program has failed to help outsider candidates.
Tell it to all the minority children in charter schools across the country.
ChoiceMedia's Bob Bowdon vs. Teachers College's Samuel Abrams in New York City last night.
Reason TV visited the capitol building in Austin during National School Choice Week for the Texas School Choice Rally.
By analogy, food stamps recipients shouldn't be forced to shop at state-run supermarkets.
The new fight to bring school choice to the Cornhusker state.
Obama tried to kill the program in 2009 and 2012.
The high priests of the House of Fail do not approve
No educational improvement for poor kids if it takes money out of the pockets of public schools.
With NYC's per pupil spending at $20,000, why can't public schools afford pens?
The sad fact is that the public schools have spent more than $600 billion a year with little to show in terms of science education for public school students.
Opponents of school choice sincerely believe that if you make everybody stay on the Titanic, then maybe it won't sink as fast.
But is still requesting the courts allow a federal review of program
To ensure integration, yadda, yadda...
Administration fights school choice for the poor in Louisiana
Wants to stop it in schools with still operational desegregation orders