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Research & Commentary: Bills Expanding Eligibility to ESA Program and Lexie’s Law All Help Provide Great Education Options for Arizona Children
February 5, 2021
Bills Would Expand ESA to Low-Income, Bullied, and Military Children; Expand Budget For Lexie s Law
The Arizona Legislature has seen a flurry of school choice legislation introduced this session that could provide tremendous help to families looking for better educational options for their children.
Three bills involve expanding the scope of the state’s Empowerment Scholarship Account Program, the nation’s first education savings account (ESA) program. In the Senate, SB 1452 would open the program up to students from low-income families or students who attend a district public school that has a high percentage of low-income students. Meanwhile, SB 1513 would open the program up to the children of first responders, health care workers, and militar
January 29, 2021
Program Would Be Open To All Children K-5
Legislation in the North Dakota House of Representatives has been recently introduced that would establish an education savings account (ESA) program for all North Dakota children in grades K–5. If passed, the ESAs would be available to parents of public school children to pay for tuition, curriculum, and fees at private and parochial schools. The funds could also be used to pay for textbooks, tutoring services, computers and other approved hardware, instructional materials, and educational therapies and services. The ESAs could also be used to cover the fees required to take national standardized achievement tests, such as the SAT or ACT.
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BOSTON, Jan. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ Catholic schools in Massachusetts must focus on the characteristics that make them academically successful and distinguish them from traditional public schools, but must also seek new models and governance structures that will help them achieve financial sustainability, according to a new book published by Pioneer Institute.
At the same time, barriers to public support of the schools should be eliminated. Catholic school parents pay tuition as well as taxes to support schools their children don t attend, saving state and local taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
The book, A Vision of Hope: Catholic Schooling in Massachusetts, will be the topic of a webinar co-sponsored by Pioneer and the Catholic Schools Foundation to be held on Wednesday, January 27 at 2:00 pm. It will feature co-editors Cara Candal and Chris Sinacola, Archdiocese of Boston Superintendent Thomas Carroll, University of Arkansas Distinguished Profes
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Never lose a debate with a global warming alarmist!
January 27, 2021
Roughly 10,000 Students Would Be Eligible For Program
Legislation making its way through the Iowa Senate would, among other things, establish the Student First Scholarship Program, an education savings account (ESA) program open to children attending a “public school identified for comprehensive support and improvement under the federal Every Student Succeeds Act [ESSA].”
These accounts would pay for “tuition and fees at a nonpublic school, textbooks, fees or payments for educational therapies, including tutoring or cognitive skills training, curriculum fees and materials for a course of study for a specific subjectmatter or grade level, tuition or fees for nonpublic online education programs, tuition for vocational and life skillseducation approved by the department of education, education materials and services for pupils with disabilities, including the cost of paraprofessionals and as