Boardbuzz

Private school spending myth busted

A major argument often heard by BoardBuzz from proponents of private school vouchers is that it’s less costly to educate a student in private school than in public school.  The bad news is they can no longer cite that as a reason for supporting vouchers.  This article in the Washington Post talks about a new study that found non-religious private schools actually spent almost twice as much per pupil as their public school counterparts.  In addition, Catholic schools (nonparochial) tended to spend about the same as public schools.

Bruce Baker,  author of the [independent] study by  [using data from] the National Center for Education Statistics, said in the article:

“There are a lot of urban legends that drive the policy discussions,” he added that ”private schools tend to be costlier than the commonly accepted figures in policy debates, especially conversations about school vouchers.”

The study dispelled just one of the many myths surrounding the perceived effectiveness of private school vouchers.  For more information on why vouchers are bad public policy, see NSBA‘s Voucher Strategy Center .

Katherine Shek|August 31st, 2009|Categories: Boardbuzz, Educational Legislation, Governance, Privatization|

Comments

  1. Bruce Baker says:

    Please fix your above note: My study is not a study for the National Center for Education Statistics. It is an independent study, which does make use of some NCES data.

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