Content area

Abstract

Education Savings Accounts (ESAs) offer parents a publicly funded, government-authorized savings account they can draw on for certain K-12 educational expenses. As these programs have expanded in recent years, they have become a flashpoint in education policy debates. For some, ESAs are an extension of existing private school choice programs' potential to help families seek alternatives to the public school system. For others, they undermine the public education system by siphoning funding from community institutions. But these arguments often oversimplify or misrepresent key details about how ESAs work--which students are eligible, how much funding they receive, what kinds of expenses the programs can pay for--and the evidence of their impact to date. This report aims to establish a common fact base about ESA programs that can inform all sides of the policy debate. It describes how ESAs have emerged in state policy, how they are designed, the common critiques of ESAs, and what other government programs that provide payments directly to families reveal about the design of ESAs.

Details

1007399
Sponsor
Walton Family Foundation
Title
Public Money, Private Choice: The Components and Critiques of Education Savings Accounts. Beta by Bellwether
Corporate/institutional author
Publication title
Publication date
2025
Printer/Publisher
Bellwether
650 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20001
https://bellwether.org/
Tel.: 877-636-0909
Source type
Report
Summary language
English
Language of publication
English
Document type
Report
Subfile
ERIC, Resources in Education (RIE)
Accession number
ED674245
ProQuest document ID
3237400625
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/reports/public-money-private-choice-components-critiques/docview/3237400625/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2025-08-07
Database
2 databases
  • Education Research Index
  • ProQuest One Academic