Cleveland Voucher Program

The Cleveland Scholarship and Tutoring program, enacted by the Ohio Legislature in 1995, was the nation's first publicly funded voucher plan that included religious schools. In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the program. Approximately 5,264 students enrolled in the program in the 2010-2011 school year, with vouchers worth up to $3,450 per student for students entering grades K-8. The program diverts up to $19 million a year from a Cleveland public school fund aimed at educating disadvantaged students.

Research has indicated no overall differences in the academic achievement of public school students and voucher students, though recent evaluations have indicated that public school students made larger test score gains than voucher students who started out ahead of their public school counterparts. The research also has shown that African-American students and low-income students are underrepresented in the program compared to the city's public school population. Despite no credible evidence of academic achievement because of vouchers in Cleveland, the Ohio Legislature, in 2005, approved a statewide voucher program (EdChoice) that began in the 2006-07 school year.

In June 2011, Gov. John Kasich passed a budget that increases by $800-$1,550 per student in Cleveland vouchers and opened eligibility to high school grades.
 

Additional Resources

Ohio Vouchers Fail to Raise Student Achievement
State data showed students using a voucher to attend private school did not benefit academically compared with their peers in the public schools, February 2011.

Cleveland Study: Evidence Undercuts Voucher Claims
NSBA reviews a 2003 evaluation of the Cleveland voucher program

Cleveland Vouchers Background (Ohio Department of Education

New study on Cleveland voucher program from CUNY (January 2006)
Researcher Clive Belfield examines the Cleveland voucher program in this 31-page study.

House urged to tighten voucher rules (Toledo Blade, 4-27-05)
Ohio Legislature considering voucher expansion beyond Cleveland.

 
 
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