The New York Post: The Dismal Data On Test Scores Proves Trump And Congress Must Pass Nationwide School Choice Now

The New York Post, January 31, 2025

The timing couldn’t be more providential.

We celebrate Catholic Schools Week each year at the end of January, as families and neighborhoods throughout the nation highlight the importance of Catholic schools.

National School Choice Week coincides with it this year, emphasizing the importance of empowering parents and their children by allowing them to have educational options and by expanding school choice across the country.

And data released this week by the National Assessment of Educational Progress proves just how important it is to expand education freedom to all 50 states.

We know school choice is a vital means to financially enable parents to send their children to Catholic and other schools of their choosing.

School choice simply means that regardless of economic means or ZIP code, families should have access to the highest-quality school that best meets their children’s academic needs while supporting the values and beliefs most important to them. For the families of nearly 1.7 million children nationwide, the choice is a Catholic school.

But that choice for many families is in jeopardy, as working- and middle-class parents continue to struggle to make ends meet.

For President Trump and the new Congress, the moment is now to pass meaningful school choice legislation to reach families in all 50 states.

Legislation in Congress, the Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA), is the ideal way to improve and expand educational opportunity to families who lack the financial capacity for a private or religious education — and build a more equal and just society. 

The ECCA would add a federal income-tax credit to generate private charitable donations to nonprofit scholarship granting organizations that distribute scholarships to children for K-12 education expenses, including private-school tuition or supplemental education services if they remain in a district government school.

Read the full article by The New York Post here