School switch.Puerto Rico's voucher program LAST FALL, WHILE EDUCATION REformers focused on California's (unsuccessful) school-voucher initiative, a more radical program began in Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla. . It may serve as a model for public and private school-choice measures nationwide. On September 3, Puerto Rico's legislature passed the Education and School Choice Program. The plan provides a $1,500 voucher to WARRANTY, VOUCHER TO, practice. A warranty is a contract real, annexed to lands and tenements, whereby a man is bound to defend such lands and tenements from another person; and in case of eviction by title paramount, to give him lands of equal value. 2. any student who wants to transfer from a public to a private school. It also gives a $1,500 voucher to a public school for any student who wishes to transfer from one public school to another or from a private to a public school. To qualify for a private-school voucher, the student's family income must be less than $18,000 a year. Any school that is either licensed or accredited accredited recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria. accredited herds cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g. can receive vouchers. (To receive a license, a school simply has to satisfy health-and-safety codes.) Puerto Rico spends $5,574 per K-12 student. As a percentage of per-capita income, that's four times as much as the U.S. average. Puerto Rico's schools have twice as many teachers per student as those on the mainland, but the graduation rate is only 46 percent. Although the legislature approved the bill less than two weeks before the school year began, more than 1,800 students signed up for vouchers. Nearly two-thirds of them transferred from one public school to another. Interestingly, 317 students switched from private to public schools, compared with only 311 who went from public to private. The first $10 million in voucher funding came from privatization privatization: see nationalization. privatization Transfer of government services or assets to the private sector. State-owned assets may be sold to private owners, or statutory restrictions on competition between privately and publicly owned of the island's long-distance telephone company. Secretary of Education Jose Arsenio Torres has said any additional money will come from cuts in the Department of Education's $1.5-billion annual budget. Both the massive bureaucracy and the atrocious performance of the public schools led to passage of the voucher plan. The local teachers' union (with the assistance of the American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), nonpartisan organization devoted to the preservation and extension of the basic rights set forth in the U.S. Constitution. ) has challenged the plan in court. The Institute for Justice in Washington, D.C., will represent the parents of students who have received vouchers. Director of Litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute. When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. Clint Bolick Clint Bolick (born December 26,1957 in Elizabeth, New Jersey[1]), is the director of the Goldwater Institute Center for Constitutional Litigation in Phoenix, Arizona. , who successfully defended low-income voucher recipients in Milwaukee, says, "This is the most important |school-choice~ litigation ever." While Bolick expects the commonwealth courts to rule on the case this spring, he says the U.S. Supreme Court may ultimately settle this dispute. |
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