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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This is a 9 page paper that provides an overview of voucher programs and charter schools. Research is cited in an analysis of their value to the educational system. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: KW60_KFedu002.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
as being integral to economic growth, competitiveness, and sustainability at the national level. It is easy to understand, then, why education remains one of the most hotly contested points within
the American political discourse. Reforms to education have been the subject of much controversy over the years, due to clashing ideologies regarding whether competition or egalitarianism should reside at the
root of the educational system. This issue has never been more pressing than in the last few decades, as the rise of charter schools and vouchers has proven to be
one of the most contentious and divisive educational reforms in history. There are many dimensions to the issue of charter schools and vouchers, which shed light on its positive benefits,
as well as its potential negative impacts upon the education system and indeed, the country as a whole. This paper will explore the ongoing controversy surrounding charter schools and vouchers
in the United States, with a view towards whether or not they are ultimately detrimental to the value of the educational system. This paragraph helps the student introduce the concepts
of charter schools and vouchers, to set up the rest of the essay. Charter schools began to emerge in the United States around the end of the 20th century, as
something of a middle ground in the traditional dichotomy of public and private institutions of learning. One commonly held definition of a charter school is that it is an "independent
public school of choice" (Finn, 2008). It is fair to question how a school can be both independent and public. Essentially what is meant is that charter schools are independent
in that they are actually privately owned and run, but public in that they accept the use of financial aid schemes such as government vouchers, a "publicly financed mechanism which
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