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Roy Cooper delivers a speech in Raleigh, N.C. on Dec. 21, 2016. News & Observer photo. Roy Cooper delivers a speech in Raleigh, N.C. on Dec. 21, 2016. News & Observer photo.

Roy Cooper delivers a speech in Raleigh, N.C. on Dec. 21, 2016. News & Observer photo.

By Will Doran February 2, 2017

NC Gov. Roy Cooper makes questionable claim about private school vouchers lacking accountability

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper says that even though the state gives millions of dollars to hundreds of private schools, it has no sense of how students at those schools are performing.

And the day lawmakers returned to Raleigh to start crafting the state budget, Cooper said he would like to see funding for private school vouchers re-routed to public schools.

"I am very concerned and have opposed vouchers because of the lack of accountability," Cooper said at a breakfast with education leaders Wednesday. "We really don’t know what these schools are doing or how they are performing. Instead, we need to invest in our public schools."

The state began offering "Opportunity Scholarships" for families to leave public schools for private schools in 2014. In this school year North Carolina will spend $45 million on the program. Legislators plan to triple that in the next decade, to $145 million by 2027. The state’s public school budget in 2015-16, for comparison, was $8.9 billion.

Cooper was critical of vouchers throughout his campaign for governor. And he was endorsed by the powerful teachers group N.C. Association of Educators, which also opposes vouchers. But vouchers are popular with supporters of the school choice movement and with Republican politicians, who have the final say in the state budget.

What are vouchers?

North Carolina allows qualifying parents to receive up to $4,200 annually in state funds per child for private school tuition. It’s one of 13 states (and the District of Columbia) with such a program.

Qualifications include being disabled, being from a low-income family, living in a foster home or having a parent in the military.

Supporters say it gives many students an option that was previously reserved for wealthier families.

Critics question its accountability, or point to the many religious schools that receive taxpayer dollars (which was found constitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2002). In North Carolina last year, more than 90 percent of voucher money went to Christian or Islamic schools.

Regulations and accountability

Darrell Allison, president of the pro-voucher Parents For Educational Freedom in North Carolina, said Cooper is wrong.

"When you hear critics say ‘They don’t have accountability; they don’t have testing,’ what they're really saying is ‘They don’t have the same accountability and testing,’" Allison said.

An expert in education policy agreed with him, at least in part.

"There is some accountability attached to the opportunity scholarship program," said UNC-Chapel Hill professor Eric Houck.

For instance, every voucher student has to take a standardized test and have the results reported to the state.

But Houck said Cooper also has a good argument in his favor, in part because the overall results don’t have to be made public – and many of the traditional accountability measures on public schools don’t apply to voucher schools.

"Accountability is a big word," Houck said. "If the governor is talking about accountability in the way that the General Assembly has been talking about accountability since the 1980s, he's right. But there are other ways of defining accountability."

Accountability was one factor in a North Carolina Supreme Court case that challenged the constitutionality of the voucher program. The plaintiffs in the case, arguing against vouchers, made a claim similar to the one Cooper is making now.

They were backed up by a group of education scholars who filed a brief saying the voucher program "has virtually no accountability system whatsoever."

However, the Supreme Court was not swayed by those and other arguments and allowed vouchers to continue. So let’s look at the program as it stands now.

Testing

Public schools must use standardized tests to gauge if students are at grade level. Private schools only have to give standardized tests to students attending on vouchers. They also must use a nationally standardized test, not a state test.

Allison said the state will use the results to measure academic gains or losses of voucher students compared to students from similar backgrounds in public schools.

But Houck said due to the differences between the tests we’ll eventually know how voucher students compare to their peers in other states, but not whether they’re reading at North Carolina’s definition of grade level or know the content required of public school students.

Performance data

The test results must be sent to the state. A legislative committee must then use the data to make recommendations "regarding improving administration and accountability."

But the results aren’t automatically made public, as public schools’ test results are. And furthermore the oversight committee isn’t expected to give the General Assembly its 2015-16 report until this fall, Allison said.

By that time the legislature will already have approved the state budget for the next two years.

So Cooper is correct that state leaders don’t have performance data. It’s also worth noting the data for these few hundred private schools is lagging behind the state’s thousands of public schools, which published their 2015-16 testing data in November 2016.

Comparing schools

While the statewide data isn’t public, some of the largest individual recipients of vouchers will have to make their performance results public. But the law applies an enrollment cutoff that meant, in 2015-16, that more than 90 percent of the schools were exempt.

The opposite is true of the public school system, where almost every school makes its results public.

Allison said the cutoff that keeps most individual schools’ results secret is in place to keep from releasing information that might identify individual students. However, public schools use a cutoff of 5 students, while voucher schools use a cutoff of 25.

In terms of non-academic accountability, voucher schools also fall short of public schools in several ways.

Only three schools that received vouchers in 2015-16 received enough to trigger a financial review. The hundreds of other, unaudited schools accounted for 95 percent of the $25 million spent that year.

Public schools also have stricter measures for how much education teachers must have, and for conducting employee background checks. And that’s despite the fact that North Carolina’s public schools received an "F" in a 2016 USA Today report on teacher background checks.

Our ruling

Cooper said, regarding private schools receiving public funds, "we really don’t know what these schools are doing or how they are performing."

While private schools do have much less oversight and accountability than public schools, it isn’t entirely lacking. Schools do have to give voucher students standardized tests and report the results to the state for oversight.

But there are many areas in which voucher recipients don’t face the same oversight and public reporting requirements as public schools, or have a lesser standard.

We rate this claim Half True.

https://www.sharethefacts.co/share/088bcd03-e7cf-4e20-9c7d-690b64ce562e

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NC Gov. Roy Cooper makes questionable claim about private school vouchers lacking accountability

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