America First Policy Institute: The Educational Choice for Children Act

Laurie Todd-Smith & Julia Butch, America First Policy Institute, February 4, 2025

The Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA) would allow individuals a credit against the tax imposed equal to the aggregate amount of qualified contributions made to non-profit scholarship-granting organizations. This contribution would fund scholarships for students in need and could be put towards various educational costs such as tuition, books, and tutoring. The federal opportunity would offer $10 billion in annual credits, individual and corporate giving. Eligible students include members of a household with an income which is below 300 percent of the area median gross income and those who are eligible to enroll in a public elementary or secondary school. The ECCA would complement state programs by expanding options for students, empowering parents, and saving taxpayer money.

Expanding Options & Improving Outcomes:

School choice expansion is key, as just 31 percent of fourth graders performed at or above the National Assessment for Educational Progress proficient reading level in 2024, 2 percentage points lower compared to 2022. Just 28 percent of eighth graders performed at or above the proficient mathematics level in 2024. According to Invest in Ed, these expanded schooling options would enable 85-90 percent of students in the Nation to receive an education that meets their needs regardless of family income or zip code, resulting in higher student achievement.

Empowering Parents

Expanded school choice will give more parents the power to choose an alternative to a public school that no longer meets their child’s needs. School choice programs that enable families to choose private, charter, or homeschool have proven to increase parent satisfaction.

Saving Taxpayer Money

The goal of the ECCA is to make educational choice a reality for more American families without increasing the fiscal burden. Many state-level programs, such as Arizona’s Empowerment Scholarship Program, have saved taxpayer money and come in under budget.

Read the full article by The America First Policy Institute here.